100 Ideas That Changed Graphic Design

The most influential concepts in the history of the industry

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In the new chronologically ordered book “100 Ideas That Changed Graphic Design“, Steven Heller and Véronique Vienne explore the most important moments in an industry they themselves helped to define. Part of publisher Laurence King‘s popular “100 Ideas” series, the combination of symbols, techniques, archetypes, tropes and trends represents some of the major creative explosions that continue to inspire an array of visual mediums today. The scope is broad but intelligently refined, connecting all aspects of graphic design, from the age-old technique of text ornamentation to the relatively nascent appearance of pixelated images and digital type.

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Heller, winner of the prestigious AIGA medal and former New York Times art director for 33 years, continues to write the “Visuals” column for the paper’s Book Review, as well as The Daily Heller for Imprint magazine. Vienne also comes from an art direction background and has published a number of books on the subject of graphic design. They draw enlightening and occasionally surprising connections, their observations identifying hidden meanings that inform images, such as the sun ray-inspired Mickey Mouse graphic created for his 80th birthday, which is actually a riff on Maoist propaganda posters.

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Analyzing the use of the human body in design, the book regards the pointed finger, the clenched fist and the provocative pose as the most iconic corporeal representations from the past century. While corporate and political influences remain the most common originators of new ideas in design, there are a fair amount of underground sources that influenced the field, such as the cut-out ransom note, which was first discovered by a careless printing staff in the 19th century.

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Also accounted for are specific design topics like asymmetry, color blocks and the graphic artist’s never-ending battle with forming the perfectly proportioned rectangle. The duo tackle each idea by breaking down not only how it influences visual communication, but also how it came about, whether through advances in technology or new layout restrictions.

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A complete overview of the field, the book’s clean layout—including a cover designed by Pentagram’s Angus Hyland—and wealth of historical context lend insight that is as interesting for designers as it is for any art enthusiast.

Pick up the book from Laurence King or Amazon, and see more images from within its pages in the slideshow below.


Reading Architecture: A Visual Lexicon

The language of structures explained in a visual dictionary

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The comprehensive language of architecture has been mastered by only a select few. While many of us may have a basic grasp from that freshman survey course, most would be hard-pressed to identify the difference between Roman and Greek doric columns, let alone identify the “squinch” on modern high-rise buildings. Reading Architecture, a new book by Owen Hopkins, aims to demystify the lexicon in a wide-ranging breakdown of architecture’s most important terminology.

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Utilizing floor plans, diagrams and photographs of famous constructions, Hopkins takes the reader through building types from the classical to the modern era before delving into structures and architectural elements. The final section comprises a quick-reference glossary of architectural terms. Reminiscent of a child’s visual dictionary, the book may seem light to architectural historians, but it more than informs the curious neophyte.

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Hopkins has a knack for selecting architectural structures with an array of complexity, breaking down the elements in laymen’s terms. “Reading Architecture” marks the first title from the young architectural historian and curator, his straightforward approach the perfect primer for a European tour.