Design

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Author: Emmet Byrne


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Email: emmet.byrne@walkerart.org
My Website: http://tasknewsletter.com


 
by Emmet Byrne at 9:41 pm 2007-12-02
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A poster show curated by Zak Kyes for the Architecture Association in London “emerges from a desire to draw attention to a number of recent developments in the field of graphic design that highlight its increasingly fertile relationship with architecture. Broadly, this involves a loose network of fellow-travellers whose work mobilises graphic design as a specifically critical activity.”

The results are “sometimes utterly bewildering,” says Brett Steele. There’s also a nice publication which you can see here.

 
by Emmet Byrne at 4:57 pm 2007-11-16
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Uta Eisenreich, Network (Teamwork), 2002

Kyle’s post at Arkitip about Maurice Scheltens triggered a happy memory of seeing photographer Uta Eisenreich’s work for the first time. Since the last time I checked she’s apparently designed a sweet website that’s structured like a pin-up board. Uta sets up conceptual situations often based on meticulously contrived (though loosely executed) human interaction, and then photographs the results. Her projects include kidnapping a group of foreign business travelers in a small bus with darkened windows, creating a spatial representation of a computer desktop, directing incoming cars to park chromatically, and participating in breakdancing duels where instead of breakdancing, she and her opponent get in the circle and create towering arrangements of ordinary objects, trying to outdo each other in height and beauty. That performance is called Close to the Edge.

Some of my favorite photographs of hers are from a series called Network (Teamwork) in which she creates physical sociograms by asking kids questions about each other and mapping the connections. Which 3 kids would you invite to your birthday? Who do you know least well in your class? These and other “schoolyard mandalas” the kids created are an interesting take on the visual language of education and schools. I imagine Steven Willats would enjoy them too.

 
by Emmet Byrne at 1:35 am 2007-11-06
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Nobel Peace CenterMuseum of Contemporary Art Denver

Join us this Thursday night (November 8) at 7:00 pm for the newest installment of our Drawn Here series, a lecture by architect David Adjaye. Adjaye founded London-based Adjaye/Associates in 2000, and has since garnered international acclaim for designs that explore the dualities of "private retreat and public engagement." Known for his residential and studio designs for international actors and artists (check out his project with Olafur Eliasson, and his project with Chris Ofili) the architect's civic buildings--libraries, multiresidential housing developments, and museums--explore the conditions of their public nature, providing answers to the architect's own query, "What is a public building in the twenty-first century?" Through projects such as the Nobel Peace Center in Oslo, Norway (2005), the new Museum of Contemporary Art in Denver (2007), and a planned five-star hotel and residences for downtown St.Paul, Adjaye addresses the challenges of designing multipurpose spaces for diverse communities.

Buy tickets.

Also, (landscape) designers Mike and Matt of Minneapolis firm Rolu Dsgn have a great design/art blog that I’ll be checking out regularly, with a nice post about the Adjaye lecture (that just happens to mention our blog as well!).

 
by Emmet Byrne at 11:56 am 2007-10-29
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left: European distribution; right: U.S. distribution

The recent opening of the Walker-curated exhibition Kara Walker: My Complement, My Enemy, My Oppressor, My Love at the Whitney has seen a flurry of press in publications such as the New York Times, the New Yorker, and the cover of Art in America, and all I really care about, really, is how this affects our amazon.com sales for the catalogue. In that spirit, here is a reflection I wrote for the May/June issue of WALKER magazine—more than you ever wanted to know about the cover of this book. See here for images of the interior.



Designing an exhibition catalogue offers you a chance to become immersed in someone else’s world for awhile. Kara Walker’s is a mythologized fiction of the antebellum South, a brutal place inhabited by slaves and masters, struggle and submission. It is also a graphic world, in both senses of the term. Her work is about as designer-friendly as it gets, particularly her cut-paper silhouettes. But her form wasn’t the only impetus behind the design of the book. What really kept me up at night was the opportunity to highlight her writing. Characterized by mock politesse and merciless honesty, it shows up in excessively long titles, hand-typed index cards, wall texts, and fragments of diaristic essays. In an interview with the artist, Thelma Golden suggests that if Walker’s various writings were collected together, the combination would approach something of an imaginary slave narrative. This notion became a loose framework for the book.

Practically, the project began like any other—with questions. How do you present works that are 30 feet long next to those that are 6 inches tall? How do you reference the past, in this case the pre-Civil War South, without perpetuating redundancies or invoking typographic cliches? How can it function as both catalogue and textbook? How do you make a book that is as aggressive and unrelenting as Walker’s work?

How indeed. A good place to start was with the subtitle of the show, taken from the artist’s Letter from a Black Girl. A bitter text written from a freed slave to her former master, Letter also serves as Walker’s critique of the art world. By starting with the half-title page and working backwards to the cover, we were able to present the entire text. The artist loved it: “I laughed a hearty throaty laugh when I saw the cover. yes. yes yes. And yes.” Besides being racially charged, the text includes several expletives, which concerned our American distributor, who consequently asked us for a new cover design. This, of course, did not go over well at the Walker, but our design director embraced the problem as a challenge (I needed a little coaxing), and we eventually created a vertical band that wraps the cover and hides the naughty parts while (not accidentally) suggesting censorship, something the artist has faced before. After a project is sent to the printer, the designer is sent to a press check. This one landed me in Belgium, where I watched over the color balance, binding, foil-stamping, and fine-tuning of the book’s 10 (count ‘em!) different shades of brown. Press-checking can be a nerve-wracking experience—most of your time is spent in a waiting room obsessing over slight variations in ink colors and second-guessing the design. This purgatory is punctuated every three hours by a trip to the presses to check the next sheet, and then—back to The Room, which, in my case, meant writing long and demented e-mails to whoever might be awake in whichever time zone.

During one of my checks I explained the cover situation to my Belgian pressmen; they laughed somewhat incredulously—did art still have the power to offend people? After all, our European distributors had no problem selling the book with its original cover. Of course, the context of a book cover is different than that of a gallery. And a bookstore in America is not a bookshop in Belgium. But their nonchalance made me question whether they had any understanding of the complexities of U.S. race relations.

Admittedly, I could offer them little clarification in this area, though I could have shown them my favorite part of the book, the artist’s original 34-page visual essay entitled “Chronology of Black Suffering, Images and Notes, 1992–2007.” We had intended this to be a 16-page insert, but what she sent us was a huge notebook overflowing with examples of the media’s portrayals of the black image over the past 15 years. Flipping through it (with white gloves, of course) brought revelation after revelation. I was particularly startled by a telecommunications ad showing Martin Luther King, Jr., delivering his famous “I Have a Dream” speech at the Lincoln Memorial. Some Photoshop whiz had digitally removed the crowd to make it look as if King was speaking to an empty lawn. Did that company intend to create such a bleak image, one that could imply the (apparent) futility of the Civil Rights movement? Maybe in this I did have an answer to the pressman’s question: maybe art had relinquished the power to offend, only to have it assumed by someone else.

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spread from “Chronology of Black Suffering, Images and Notes, 1992–2007″

 
by Emmet Byrne at 10:34 pm 2007-10-21
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So, we finally got our act together and decided that it was time for the Walker Design Department to blog, though we’re not really sure what that means yet. But don’t worry, we have a plan:

Bulletin Board: These posts will alert you to upcoming design programming at the Walker such as the Drawn Here architecture lecture series, the Insights design lecture series, and design exhibitions like Worlds Away: New Suburban Landscapes. And you will respond en masse resulting in many ticket sales.

Flat Files: There are boxes and boxes full of postcards, flyers, brochures, posters, gallery guides, and other Walker ephemera that we would love to properly document and archive. Since we don’t have the time to do that, we’ll just pull out a few pieces each month and tell you who designed them, what the project brief was, and why we love them even after all this time.

Memos: Here we will call your attention to the history of our department, how our studio operates today, and design issues that we address on a daily basis. Like fonts and stuff.

Interviews: . . . with designers. Sample question: “If you were stranded on a desert island, which 10 typefaces would you take with you?”

Junk Drawer: A catchall category for link dumps.

Now what we’re especially excited about is our Guest Bloggers! We’ve invited a whole slew of former Walker designers to contribute whenever and whatever they feel like—reporting from places as far as England, Holland, and Korea, as well as places more close to home like MCAD. We want to hear what they’re working on now, what is interesting to them, who they think is stroking it, seriously downloading the uploader. Who knows what they’ll write about. Not we.

If nothing else, we hope to give you a better idea of what we do, and why we can do it at the Walker.

 
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