Blogs The Gradient

Walker Magazine, Redesigned.

If you receive our bi-monthly magazine, you might have noticed that things look a bit different. We just sent the second issue of our redesign to the printers and it should be in your mailbox later this month! The push for a redesign was prompted by a need to better understand how our communications work [...]

If you receive our bi-monthly magazine, you might have noticed that things look a bit different. We just sent the second issue of our redesign to the printers and it should be in your mailbox later this month!

The push for a redesign was prompted by a need to better understand how our communications work in concert: what purpose should our printed magazine serve in relationship to our website, email blasts, marketing fliers, radio ads, billboards, TV spots, blogs, tweets, etc.? As our communication streams become more fragmented, how do we tell the story of the Walker as a whole? We’ve also conducted various surveys of how our members and others use and value the magazine, the types of stories they like to read, and the kind of information that may be missing that they would like to know.

We undertook this project as a collaborative venture with our editors, photographers, and marketing staff to produce a more substantive magazine (so much for the death of print!).

The new design more closely resembles a typical magazine, with a front section that focuses on shorter stories, items of interest, and other Walker news, followed by a more in-depth feature-well, which contains articles and essays written by both Walker staff and guest authors. Information about the variety of Walker programs follows the feature well, with a monthly calendar and visitor information at the rear. We’ve set a consistent page count of 40 for each issue, allowing for more content and images.

CONTENTS AND INSIDE COVER

Each issue begins with a visual table of contents previewing the main stories. We’ve constantly debated whether we need (or someone might use) a table of contents for a publication only 40 pages long. This debate between designers and editors was happily resolved for both as the contents page took on a more visual look. Taking inspiration from our recent salon style hanging of the paintings collection at the Walker, we are able to create a visual tableaux that gives the reader an immediate impression of the variety of programs on offer in the next two months. Opposite, on page 3, is what we call a second or inside cover—a different featured program with a beautiful image accompanied by an extended caption—a little story behind the image. This also solved an internal problem of which program would get front cover treatment when we switched to a bimonthly edition back in 2005—not an easy or democratic task when we have a full schedule of exhibitions, film screenings, and performances to showcase each month.

BITS & PIECES

The newest addition to this redesign is a section we call Bits & Pieces, a reference to the Lawrence Weiner text-based artwork that hangs outside our building (see our Lawrence Weiner piece). This section is composed of shorter stories on various topics related to the Walker: our community partnerships, recent acquisitions of artworks, calls for entries to competitions, special initiatives, behind-the-scenes anecdotes, coined terms and museum lingo, blog excerpts, etc. It’s our opportunity to present the inner workings of an active cultural institution, update members and visitors on recent developments, and highlight people and programs that populate and support it. It’s our corral for bite-sized content that had no place in the old magazine. This section supports our readers desire to know more about the Walker at large and behind the scenes as well as for us to tell the public about interesting new things, whether our new bike rental station or that teens can now get in free to the Walker galleries on any day of the week (except Mondays when we are closed!).

FEATURE WELL

Having a larger page count allows for more developed stories, larger images, and the opportunity for more dramatic layouts. Our resulting design gives images more room, stories more white space, and a distinct look from the rest of the magazine as a whole. Feature stories are complemented by extended captions for images and pull quotes highlighting the artist’s or author’s voice. Editorially, we are experimenting with developing new types of articles, bringing in outside authors, re-purposing content from other Walker publications and initiatives (this month features Art on Call excerpts from From Here to There: Alec Soth’s America), and featuring the artists themselves (last issue, we focused in on a perplexing diagram from Ralph Lemon). We’ve also streamlined some elements of the copy, notably the time/date/price of events, related events, related products, and sponsors/funding for a particular program, which have been placed into an info-bar at the end of each feature, serving as a one-stop resource for more information about particular programs. Designing a spread to act as a feature story that you want to read, yet allowing for the massive amounts of practical event information that we have to get across is perhaps the biggest challenge. It was also a key illustration of the tension of switching models from more of a newsletter like we had before, which is dedicated to promoting individual events to an editorial magazine, which tries to balance story content with event information. We are very enamored with language, the poetic nature of words, which is something we try to highlight through the typographic treatment of the headlines (we are particularly fond of “Earth, Wind, and Fire, or to Overcome the Paradox of Yves Klein, the Molecular Child Who Wrote to Fidel Castro on His Way to Disneyland” !)

EVENT LISTINGS

Following the feature well are the event listings, which provide information on featured programs and related events. We’ve made the information in this section more easily accessible, both within the context of the magazine as a whole (by placing it consistently in the same place every issue), and on the page itself. On the top of the page, an info box contains the program’s metadata: date, time, location, and ticket pricing. Below is a description or story about the particular event. The grid in this section is flexible enough to feature as many as four listings on a spread, or to accommodate more events with more complex data that require two full pages, like in this month’s Brits spread (pictured above).

CALENDAR GRID

The last spread of the magazine features a complete event listing for two months. This listing by day format is a major change from the gridded, month-view design of the previous magazine. In the past we struggled greatly to fit the content of two month’s worth of Walker programming into an ever-diminishing grid of smaller and smaller boxes. However, as a bonus, we added a feature set of 4 programs that are recommended by various Walker staff. Like the staff recommendations at your favorite wine shop, we hope that readers will begin to follow and trust the advice of various Walker staff. (And no, we don’t allow staff from a particular program area to recommend their own programs!)

COLOPHON

Typographically, we’ve moved on from Avenir, our de facto house typeface, and are now using Fox, a robust geometric sans developed by former senior designer Chad Kloepfer, paired with Mercury, by Hoefler-Frere Jones.

We’d like to acknowledge everyone that’s made this publication possible: our photographers Cam Wittig and Gene Pittman and our digital imaging expert Greg Beckel; Joe Avery and Laura Nelson at Shapco, our printers; our editors Kathleen McLean, Pamela Johnson, and Julie Caniglia; Chief taskmaster Andrew Blauvelt; publications director Lisa Middag; and Ryan French, our marketing director.

And that’s it for now! It’s a young design, and we’re eager to see how it develops once we have a few more issues under our belt.

LoR/E, the Library of Readings & Essays—A Comprehensive Index of Keywords & Defining Subject Matters

Had I been asked, I might’ve described LoR/E, a recently developed and continually in-progress project of mine, in its earliest stages as something like an online, text-based Cabinet of Curiosity for the designer. LoR/E began and still is, much like the Cabinet of Curiosity (also known as a Wunderkammer), largely an encyclopedic collection. Only LoR/E [...]

Had I been asked, I might’ve described LoR/E, a recently developed and continually in-progress project of mine, in its earliest stages as something like an online, text-based Cabinet of Curiosity for the designer.

LoR/E began and still is, much like the Cabinet of Curiosity (also known as a Wunderkammer), largely an encyclopedic collection. Only LoR/E is an indexed collection of keywords, ideas, names, places, topics, and subject matters that can be searched and/or browsed with the end goal being to discover related readings and essays. As LoR/E has begun to grow more, new ideas for the long-term have emerged, but I’m also developing, for the short-term, more refined and concrete ideas of the direction that I hope to take LoR/E as its potential is realized.


Illustrations from the book Wondertooneel der Nature depicting two of Levinus Vincent’s many large Wunderkammern (Cabinet of Curiosities) in Holland during the early 1700s

One thing that has always been apparent is that LoR/E will continue to be driven by the idea of the free sharing of knowledge and information. After all, like the definition of the word that the LoR/E acronym references, a body of knowledge on a particular subject (in the case of LoR/E, subjects mostly pertaining to certain enclaves of design, contemporary art, media, and visual culture) is inherently apt to be shared and studied. Admittedly, these subjects and their information are intended for a very niche audience. But, the fact of the matter is that much of the information that is available (and that will soon be available) within LoR/E is, otherwise, not very easy to find online. So the question has become: will LoR/E be filling a gap? Or will it only be contributing to some form of information overload?

LoR/E is not simply concerned with acquiring masses of searchable information though. One of the larger aims is that, at its height, users (especially inquisitive students of art, design, media, et al.), in having access to such an extensive index, will discover useful readings that they never knew existed or that, because the reading came from an author or publication in a discipline area different from theirs, they did not expect to discover. Of course, LoR/E can barely compare to an art/design school’s well-stocked, physical library. But, I do hope to establish a very complete, wide-ranging, and rigorously assembled repository of knowledge and information—a unique and purposeful repository which helps to expose thoughts and ideas, where certain patterns reveal themselves, as well as where relationships between varying subjects become apparent.


LoR/E allows users to view all of its entries within drop-down-menu lists where (to name just a few) searches for keywords, defining subject matters, authors, and publishers can be refined and quickly filtered (the above example shows search results for each filed reading that speaks about “authorship”)

Looking forward, in an attempt to turn LoR/E into something more than just an encyclopedic collection, I hope to convert the project into a highly functional and easily-searchable database that can exist autonomously (outside of its current home with Google Docs) on its own website. With the intent for LoR/E to become a definitive site that designers, artists, media theorists, and others can utilize as a tool for their independent or professional research, I also hope to integrate spaces that will allow for discussions to occur about the readings, authors, specific topics, etc.

Since the inception of LoR/E, I’ve also become more aware and interested in movements such as the Free Cultural Works movement. As such, I suspect that LoR/E, in its focus on the free sharing of knowledge and information, could, in addition to its function as a database, also become a site that supports and acts as a springboard for authors and independent publishers (especially in such worlds as design, contemporary art, or media) who are supportive of the Free Cultural Works mindset and who, in licensing their work under similar movements like Creative Commons or Copyleft, would like to utilize LoR/E as a means of presenting their writing by offering free PDF downloads of select texts to an audience of interested LoR/E users.

It may sound too idealist, but I hope to see LoR/E become a site that is able to accomplish a number of things. Most notably, being a site that insightfully informs those seeking specific information that cannot be found with the help of other libraries or databases (or, even with a tool like Google), that poses relevant questions to users about design, art, media, visual culture, film, et al., and that encourages any user (be they a designer, artist, writer, student) to make critical thinking and research a part of their practice.

As blogs like FormFiftyFive and Manystuff make it apparent to us almost everyday, developing formal skills seemingly demands less and less experience. Anyone who wants it can access the tools and know-how to “make something pretty.” Yet, from what I can tell, there’s not nearly enough emphasis placed on the importance of reading and personal discovery. And not just reading to be able to say that you’ve read this or that, but reading as a sincere means of building a knowledge base for oneself which will then eventually lead to one being able to more confidently create a personal ideology or a set of informed principles to work by.

Six months in, LoR/E is nearing 5,000 filed entries of keywords and defining subject matters with plans to file, at this gradual rate, thousands more.

To read more about LoR/E, the project’s impetus and primary objectives, as well as for instructions on accessing and tips for viewing LoR/E in Google Docs, visit here.

Enhance the Space of a Nonprofit Serving Homeless Youth in Minneapolis

has a to help end homelessness in Minneapolis. Help them make it a reality by giving them your vote!

has a to help end homelessness in Minneapolis.

Help them make it a reality by giving them your vote!

IFS, Ltd. — The Book Trust Prospectus

Investment Futures Strategies, Limited (IFS, Ltd) The Book Trust Prospectus Investment Futures Strategy, Ltd. is pleased to announce The Book Trust, a site specific collaboration and publication to be presented at the New York Art Book Fair, 5–7 November, 2010. The semi-fictional IFS, Ltd., comprised of five graduate students from the Department of Graphic Design [...]

Investment Futures Strategies, Limited (IFS, Ltd)

The Book Trust Prospectus


Investment Futures Strategy, Ltd. is pleased to announce The Book Trust, a site specific collaboration and publication to be presented at the New York Art Book Fair, 5–7 November, 2010. The semi-fictional IFS, Ltd., comprised of five graduate students from the Department of Graphic Design at the Yale School of Art – Benjamin Critton, Harry Gassel, Brendan Griffiths, Zak Klauck, and Mylinh Nguyen - will offer an original publication for trade in a series of barters executed by its authors during the three days of the NY Art Book Fair.

The Trust and the accompanying Book Trust Prospectus speak to matters of micro-economies and distribution, as well as prescribed and perceived value. The project suggests a new currency specific to the setting of the Book Fair, a context in which a distinct set of commodities is exchanged by like-minded vendors in a finite space and time. It is only in this setting that a book could be posited as capital—a literal stand-in for the money that commonly exchanges hands at the Fair. Perceived worth is no longer dictated by edition or price, but instead by a potential traders’ subjective notion of the values they assign to each book.

The book, produced in a fixed quantity of 500, will vary in value as each negotiation determines and redetermines its worth in the marketplace. With each transaction, the Prospectus will assume the value of the book for which it was exchanged. The traded commodities will ultimately comprise The Book Trust, a value-appreciating book bank. By trading with IFS, Ltd. participants acquire a single theoretical share of the bank, the Prospectus a document of the transaction.

In framing the project in a format similar to that of a stock exchange, the performance emphasizes the tenuous and abstract value of the book as a designed object, as a medium for content, as a traded commodity, and as a symbol of participation in the project itself.

Previews, November 4th; opening bell, November 5th. Online at http://IFS-L.BIZ.

BUY YOUR SHARES IN THE BOOK TRUST PUBLICATION TODAY!

BUY YOUR SHARES IN THE BOOK TRUST PUBLICATION TODAY!

BUY YOUR SHARES IN THE BOOK TRUST PUBLICATION TODAY!

5–7 November 2010
NY Art Book Fair, MoMA PS1, New York