Thursday, June 21, 2007

90's


The 90's was all about outrageous mixes of colour, punk-retro aesthetics, camp, and kitsch. concert posters of the 1990s became so wildly popular that they were said to have taken on a life of their own. Sometimes even outshining the rock bands they were created to promote. Not only are they collected today, but an annual two-day convention known as Flatstock now exists to celebrate the works of the leading artists and designers. Most of the designs from this time were exploding with color and bold graphics, this was an important movement in graphic design. designs of this era were all about the music! and how to portray its feel and the type of music.
posters of this time could also have been considerd as funny, but also crude and abnoxious at times. the picture i chose acknowledges this by the imagery of a bare bottom which is seen by all. The 90's was a good time for people to experiment with colour and tones and the designers of that age did just that!
my picture came from this link here:
http://www.powells.com/cgi-bin/biblio?show=Trade%20Paper:Sale:0810991152:13.98

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Michelle
1980's - 1990's

Neville Brody












The British designer and art director, has now been at the forefront of graphic design for over two decades.

Initially working in record cover design, Brody made his name largely through his revolutionary work as Art Director for the Face magazine (1981 - 1986).























Other international magazine directions have included City Limits, Lei, Per Lui, Actuel and Arena, together with London's The Observer newspaper and magazine.

Brody has consistently pushed the boundaries of visual communication in all media through his experimental and challenging work, and continues to extend the visual languages we use through his exploratory creative expression.
Brody won much public acclaim through his highly innovative ideas on incorporating and combining typefaces into design. Later on he took this a step further and began designing his own typefaces, thus opening the way for the advent of digital type design. His pioneering spirit in the area of typography manifests itself today in such projects as FUSE, a regularly published collection of experimental typefaces and posters which challenges the boundaries between typography and graphic design.













In 1988 Brody published the first of his two monographs , which became the world's best selling graphic design book.
He still remains very active as a typographer, particularly as founder and partner of FontShop International in Berlin and FontWorks in London, initiator of FUSE, and as a member of FSI's international Type Board. His contributions to the world of graphic design and digital typography are absolutely invaluable.

Michelle
1970's

Andy Warhol

Andy Warhol (August 6th 1928 – February 22nd 1987) was an American artist who became a central figure in the movement known as pop art. After a successful career as a commercial illustrator, Warhol became famous worldwide for his work as a painter; an avant garde filmmaker, a record producer, an author and a well respected public figure.

A controversial figure during his lifetime (his work was often derided by critics as a hoax or "put-on"), Warhol has been the subject of numerous retrospective exhibitions, books and documentary films since his death in 1987. Though he is generally acknowledged as one of the most influential artists of the twentieth century.

Compared to the success and scandal of Warhol's work in the 1960s, the 1970s would prove a much quieter decade. This period, however, saw Warhol becoming more entrepreneurial. Warhol devoted much of his time to rounding up new, rich patrons for portrait commissions — including:

Mick Jagger












John Lennon










Michael Jackson



















Warhol was not just a painter...But rather a designer of paintings.

Sources:
http://en.wikipedia.org

Punk Rebellion

The punk subculture during the 1970s exuded many graphic interpretations that all reflected the ideologies behind it, which often had direct messages concerning political issues such as social injustice and economic separation. The general idea of the movement was revolutionary and was therefore inspired by art movements of the early 1900s that had a revolutionary feel; Dada’s social anarchism, the abstraction of Suprematism and Constructivism, the harmonious De Stijl and the Bauhaus.
Punk graphic sensibilities are essentially of a Do-It-Yourself nature reflecting their rebellion from the mainstream; mass production and capitalist society which is why, “The saftey-pin thus became a succinct symbol for all the socio-cultural ramifications of such a modus operandi - safe yet dangerous; stuck together but hanging apart; repaired and impaired.” To represent these ideologies, the characteristics and techniques of punk design include political photomontages and mass media imagery manipulation using typography and images cut out of newspapers with an attitude of fierce juxtaposition and defamatory appropriation. Stencil art, collage, cartoons and bright green, pink and yellow were prolific elements used in punk design yet also at times would undertake a nihilistic appearance depending on the personal interests of the artists. Some punks would themselves hand paint a bands album cover onto the back of a leather jacket.
As the punk subculture revolved greatly around music, much of the graphics were found on album covers and band posters, brochures and album advertisements as well as on associated paraphernalia like t-shirts, stickers and badges. Zines were also prolific in punk culture. These are underground mini magazines consisting of poetry and prose, news, gossip, cultural criticism, interviews and visual art. Inspired by the early 20th century underground magazines that published stories by unknown authors and were printed on cheap newsprint therefore were of low cost and readily accessible, punk zines were usually black and white and contributors would network to make and distribute them by selling commercially through small enterprise or often by just leaving them in public places or library books as the essence of them was to express yourself and communicate ideologies and to counteract corporate culture by avoiding the control of large corporations and their methods.

Some designers from the punk rebellion include Jamie Reid, Winston Smith (collage), John Holmstrom (cartoonist), Joseph Nechvatal (dark), Malcom Mclaren and Vivienne Westwood (clothing boutique), Jamie Reid (worked with McLaren for the Sex Pistols). Punk aesthetics also inspired the Stuckism art movement.

IMPORTANT NOTICE CLOSE OF POSTINGS FOR THIS BLOG 4.00 FRIDAY 22 JUNE


I CANNOT FIND THE FOLLOWING POSTS FOR THE LISTED. I NEED TO LODGE MARKS.
THAT MEANS NO POSTS NO MARKS.
POST 1: 1900/10
KIM
BRANDON
BRITTANY
DAVID
POST 2: 1920/30
KIM NEED 1/5 PLUS SEM1
JACQUI
DAVID
BRITTANY
BRANDON
POST 3: 1940/50
LUCY
JACQUI
DAVID
BRITTANY
POST 4: 1960
MICHELLE
JACQUI
DAVID
BRITTANY
POST 5: 1970
PAULA
MICHELLE
JACQUI
GENVIEVE
FEONA
EMILY
DAVID
BRITTANY
POST 6: 1980/1990
PAULA NEED 1/5
MICHELLE NEED 2/5
LUCY NEED 1/5
JACQUI NEED 4/5
GENVIEVE NEED 1/5
FEONA NEED 1/5
DAVID NEED 5/5
EMILY NEED 2/5
CATHY NEED 1/5
BRITTANY NEED 5/5 PLUS ALL SEM1
BRANDON NEED 2/5
YOUR MARK IS DERIVED FROM YOUR 5 BEST POSTS

Sunday, June 17, 2007

Fe. Alex Steinweiss 40’s

Updated Steinweiss
www.eisnermuseum.org/_albums/albmcovers.swf
a nice site with a flash programme running.



In 1939, at the age of 23 graphic designer Alex Steinweiss was the first art director for Columbia Records, where he revolutinized the way records were packaged and marketed by inventing the concept of album covers and cover art; previously, recorded music was sold in plain, undecorated packaging out of plain cardboard and displayed only th title of the work and artist. "They were so drab, so unatractive," says Steinweiss, "I convinced the executives to let me design a few." For what he saw as 12-inch by 12-inch canvasses, he envisioned original works of art to project the beauty of the music inside. Surrealism as well as contemporary French and German posters, influenced Steinwiess' style. He established the foundation for what the genere of album covers would become. Steinweiss saw his album covers as visual representations of the music.
Steinweiss was active in record cover design from its inception in 1939 until 1973, when he semi-retired to devote himself to painting. By his own admission, he has designed roughly 2500 covers.
From 1939 to perhaps 1945, he designed all the covers for Columbia. During this period, he developed the entire graphic “language” of album cover design.
The second period is from 1945 to roughly 1950, during which he was no longer the sole designer for Columbia. He also began designing for other companies. This period is sometimes described as the “First Golden Age” of the album cover.
Steinweiss claims to have invented the LP cover, which first appeared in 1948.

Thursday, June 14, 2007