Designs of the Year show opens

The Design Museum’s Designs of the Year show opened last night. As usual, there’s an eclectic array of projects, from the worthy to the quirky, but it’s difficult to spot a frontrunner for the big prize

 

 

If anyone’s ever challenged you with the old “what is design?” question, sending them along to the Design Museum show would be a good place to start. Its breadth, from fashion to vehicle design (Sadie Williams dress and VW XL1 car shown above), type to architecture really brings home the multifacted potential of design today.

 

Model of Makoko Floating School

 

But this diversity also poses a problem for the judges who convene on Monday March 31 with the unenviable task of choosing a Design of the Year. Comparing projects so different in intent, scale and budget is enormously difficult.

 

 

That difficulty has been offset in previous years by the presence of an obvious frontrunner at an early stage – One Laptop Per Child, for example, or last year’s winner, Gov.UK. Looking round the show last night, it was hard to think of an equivalently obvious candidate (see our post on the nominees here) but I’d suggest the ABC syringe which changes colour when exposed to air thus alerting users to its pre-use or potential exposure to infection, might fit the bill.

 

e-Go single-seater aircraft byGiotto Castelli, Tony Bishop, Rob Martin and Malcolm Bird

One thing that does stand out for me this year is the exhibition design. This is a really difficult show to pull together coherently. This year’s designers, Hunting & Narud with visual identity and graphic design by OK-RM, have headlined each project with a one-line explanation of its purpose: ‘A tactile watch for blind people’, for example, or ‘An identity built around the letter W’.

This proves to be a simple and highly effective way of drawing in the visitor to the more detailed information on each project which is presented on cards atop long thin stems next to each piece. It also provides a kind of snapshot sense of what the show is all about as you look aroudn the room – great ideas to improve our lives. But which deserves to be Design of the Year?

 

MEWE car, Musem Jumex model

 

Hybrid 24 electric bicycle by A2B

 

Iro Collection by Jo Nagasaka.


Prada SS14 Collection by Miuccia Prada. All above images by Luke Hayes

 

Grand-Central by Thibault Brevet

 

Vitamins’ Lego Calendar and Anthony Sheret, Edd Harrington and Rupert Dunk’s Castledown Primary School Type Family


For more on the nominated projects, see the Design Museum site here or our previous post here

Designs of the Year, supported by Bird & Bird, runs until August 25 at the Design Museum, Shad Thames, London SE1

KesselsKramer re-imagines the printing press for Moo

KesselKramer has re-imagined the printing press in a colourful new spot for UK printing company Moo. The ad features a custom made machine with confetti bellows and a paper feed operated by treadmill…

The spot was directed by Karim Zarrifa and Bob Partington at 1st Ave Machine and will air in the US. Partington also designed and built the press and Dave Bell, creative partner at Kessels Kramer, says it is fully functional.

“Audiences today recognise when something is done for real: it was crucial that we told this story without being dependent on CGI,” he adds.

“We were looking to achieve…an advert that pokes fun at both itself, and the over the top, epic, no-expense-spared nature of many adverts seen today. You don’t have to throw money at something to be creative,” he says.

It’s a simple idea but an effective one: KesselsKramer’s irreverent take on the often dry business of card printing immediately sets Moo apart from companies adopting a more earnest approach, and the low cost set features some lovely attention to detail and use of colour.

Creatives: Dave Bell & Freddy Taylor
Directors: Karim Zarrifa & Bob Partington
Production: Field Trip

The video of This is a Generic Brand Video

Published on McSweeney’s Internet Tendency last month, Kendra Eash‘s satirical poem This is a Generic Brand Video has now been made into an actual video by a stock footage company…

In an interesting take on Eash’s subject matter, stock footage providers Dissolve looked to their own database for every single cliché she describes in her poetic tribute to the ‘brand video’.

Aping the kinds of signifiers which fill brand videos for all manner of companies, her poem opens: “We think first / Of vague words that are synonyms for progress / And pair them with footage of a high-speed train.”

On their website Dissolve explain that “the minute we saw Kendra Eash’s brilliant ‘This Is a Generic Brand Video’ on McSweeney’s, we knew it was our moral imperative to make that generic brand video so. No surprise, we had all the footage.”

They then found the right music – emotive piano – and, in Dallas McClain, a familiar sounding narrator for the video.

On Twitter, Eash has said she’s delighted with the results, though one can’t help feeling this is a bit of a bizarre self-promotional move from a company whose product is essentially the fuel for the satire – though the brands themselves are of course the acual target.

We’ve seen stock imagery providers as the target of jokes before – Women Laughing Alone With Salad being a highpoint – but never the providers themselves sending up how their visuals are routinely used and abused.

All the clips featured in the film are from dissolve.com.

Kendra Eash’s original piece is published on McSweeney’s (see more of her writing here), while Dissolve’s film is on Vimeo here.

New BBH ad for KFC marks change in direction

KFC opts for out-and-out American nostalgia in its new ad by BBH London, which promotes its new range of slow cooked chicken products…

The spot is based on the idea that the slower you take things, the better they are, and tells the story of a young man who spends months wooing a beautiful young woman he sees on a bus. Set in the southern states of America, the commercial features beautifully shot scenes of vast empty landscapes and a classic American diner. It’s all quite a long way from the brand’s recent cheeky all-singing-all-dancing Christmas ad, but perhaps more in keeping with the food chain’s Kentucky roots. Watch the ad below: <!– Start of Brightcove Player –>
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Credits:
Creatives: Matt Moreland, Chris Clarke, Mads Mardahl, Anders Wendel
Creative director: Hamish Pinnell
Deputy ECD: David Kolbusz
Agency producer: Natalie Parish
Agency assistant producer: Adam Reid
Production company: Blink
Director: Benito Montorio
Executive producer: James Bland
Producer: Josh Barwick
DOP: Alwin Kutchler
Post: MPC/The Mill
Editor: Paul Watts, The Quarry

Mikros Image Showreel 2014

Spécialisées dans la création d’effets visuels et dans la post-production, les équipes de Mikros Image présentent la bande démo 2014, réunissant les plus belles images des différentes réalisations. Des projets très réussis, notamment vus au cinéma ou en publicité tout au long de l’année, réunis et condensés en quelques minutes dans une vidéo.

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Seat Cupra – Extreme Simulator

La société de production Rogue Films nous propose de découvrir ce spot pour la marque de voitures Seat. Réalisée par Mark Jenkinson, il invite des personnes à essayer un simulateur démontrant la vitesse de la nouvelle voiture Cupra de la marque. Une expérience à découvrir en images dans la suite de l’article.

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0800 Fun: animated silliness from The Layzell Bros and W+K

The Layzell Bros have created a weird and wonderful series of animations for a new campaign promoting mobile network Three’s decision to give customers free access to 0800 numbers.

0800 fun was launched by Wieden + Kennedy last week. The agency set up a series of automated 0800 numbers including a compliments line, a singing dictionary, a time wasting service and a sympathy line, and asked Matt and Paul Layzell to illustrate recordings of calls made to each.

The amusing online videos feature a colourful range of creatures, including a ‘cool cucumber’, a glamorous pineapple, a cheerleading robot and a sand castle in need of cheering up:

Chris Palmer has also directed three TV spots for the campaign, the first of which aired on March 18:

CR readers might remember The Layzell Bros from our ‘animators to watch’ issue last April. Since graduating from Brighton and Kingston, they have produced surreal and silly animations for Fox, Adam Buxton, E4 and US band Crystal Antlers – you can see more of their work on the pair’s website, or view their moving image showreel at Blinkink.

 

Channel 4 serves up dynamic Grand National trail

This striking new film from Channel 4 to promote the Crabbie’s Grand National Festival is part-Barry Lyndon, part-Sex Pistols, and aims to position steeplechasing as the original extreme sport…

The 90-second promo is based on the story of the first ever recorded steeplechase, reported to have taken place in 1752 in Ireland as a result of a wager between Cornelius O’Callaghan and Edmund Blake. Set to a soundtrack of On The Run by New York-based punk band Cerebral Ballzy, it is a stylish retelling of the duo’s tale and ends by suggesting that little has really changed in terms of the sport’s intense rivalry.

Credits:
Agency/Production company: 4 Creative
Creative directors: Chris Bovill & John Allison
Director: Keith McCarthy

L’Institut du Monde Arabe Animation

Le studio de motion design Bot42, déjà à l’origine d’une vidéo à l’occasion du lancement de Canal+ Series, a réalisé un film pour L’Institut du Monde Arabe, à l’occasion du lancement du nouveau site du musée. Un rendu animé très réussi, vantant avec de jolies couleurs et de l’imagination tout ce que propose ce lieu dédié à la culture du Monde Arabe.

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Offset 2014: Day three

The final day of Offset 2014 featured talks from Marian Bantjes, Richard Turley, Jeff Greenspan and I Love Dust (to name just a few), who provided some amusing, thought provoking and inspiring reflections on their craft.

After talks from Genevieve Gauckler and fashion stylist Aisling Farinella, Johnny Winslade and Ollie Munden from I Love Dust discussed the studio’s culture and its work for Nike, Karl Lagerfeld and London burger restaurant Meat Liquor.

I Love Dust designed illustrated interiors for the venue and its sister restaurants Meat Mission, Meat Market and Meat Liquor Brighton. Meat Liquor London is designed to “look like the building has been tattooed”, while Meat Mission’s murals reference religious iconography (a nod to the building’s former use as a Christian Mission site). Meat Liquor Brighton is inspired by Miami – “another seaside location full of colourful characters” said Winslade.

The pair also discussed a series of self-initiated projects, from a custom motorbike it designed with Boneshaker Choppers to celebrate the studio’s 10th birthday, to ‘Black Valentine’s’ voodoo donuts, coffee cups and coasters.

As well as surprising clients (and making their way on to art directors’ desks), the pair said these kind of projects allowed the team, and its new members in particular, to try out new styles and techniques.

What is good design?

Next up (and sadly clashing with what I hear was a very entertaining talk from John Burgerman) was a debate on the notion of ‘good design’ – what exactly is it and how can it be measured.

Hosted by Studio AAD creative director Scott Burnett, the panel included Johnny Kelly, Richard Turley, Oran Day from Dublin studio Atelier David Smith and Brenda Dermody, who teaches graphic design at Dublin Institute of Technology.

Dermody said good design could only be measured based on its context: it might be a project where someone has worked outside of their comfort zone, or something that is simply beautiful. “But if the designer hasn’t learned much from it, is it still good?” she asked. Day, who also lectures at DIT, said that when teaching students, it could be just as valuable to critique examples of bad design, and Turley said for a design to be ‘good’, it must provoke a visceral reaction.

Johnny Kelly’s The Seed

The panel also touched on whether the public is becoming more aware and critical of design, but Turley said it’s not the only discipline to suffer exaggerated critiques on personal blogs and social media these days, while Dermody said that public outcries over logos, marques or branding were often just masking discontent over the brand itself or a wider issue. “The design is just a soft target,” she said.

The group also discussed the importance of awards: Turley said he felt there was little value in them, other than impressing his bosses in America. Kelly said he had felt it made people take notice of his work, but claimed he had also noticed a culture of ‘this is definitely going to win awards’ among agencies. “It’s a bad place to start any project,” he said.

Day said that they’re still of value, even if there are many other ways to gain recognition online now, because of the positive psychological effect of receiving praise from your peers, while Kelly pointed out that they can also stimulate important debates within the industry.

Richard Turley

Richard Turley took to the stage again after lunch, discussing his work for Bloomberg Businessweek, his thoughts on editorial design and his work for The Guardian.

While other talks this weekend have spoken about the importance of originality, or praised craft intensive projects, Turley spoke about creating powerful covers on a weekly basis, sometimes in just a few hours. Most of the ideas for his covers come from Google image searches, he said, adding: “a lot of what I do is copying. People are a bit angsty about the fact that you must have your own ideas, but I think it’s good to admit where we’ve taken things from.”

Of course, Turley didn’t mean he actually copies anyone’s work, but was referring to the fact that he is constantly seeking and adapting ideas that confront or inspire him – the cover of the election issue was inspired by the Halifax X, and the cover image for an issue on Bitcoin currency by an image of a unicorn he found online.

Talking through Bloomberg’s visual structure, Turley discussed his use of Helvetica and a grid structure based on multiples of 1.3 Despite these restrictions, however, he likes cover spreads to be as inentive and “expressive” as possible. “I dislike polite modernism…the Apple-ification of design,” he said. “Magazine design is really just about attracting attention: [cover spreads] are like little adverts, and you are selling the writer’s articles.”

Turley said working on the Guardian and its G2 supplement provided invaluable experience for his time at Bloomberg, and said the pressure of working for daily and weekly titles means “you have to become instinctive. It’s very immediate ad you can’t over think it,” he said.

Marian Bantjes

Marian Bantjes followed Turley and spoke about her need to “say something” with her work, showing examples of designs with embedded codes, concealed type and an installation for the Chicago Design Museum which spelled out the word sorrow in flowers, and died towards the end of the show.

“You have to make sure a project is worth the time and effort you will bestow on it,” she said, adding that she had a pet peeve for things like alphabet posters which are pretty but have little purpose. “If you’re going to the trouble of creating a beautiful alphabet, use it to say something,” she added.

Bantjes also discussed her monograph, Pretty Pictures (read our blog post on it here); personal projects including her yearly Valentine’s gifts and a recent project with Adobe, where she customised an Eames chair with wood veneer:

She also spoke about collecting and said that she often photographs sidewalks and hotel rooms: a poster she recently designed for the National was inspired by the structure of the skyline from her room in Hong Kong. “Grids and structure are a key part of my work,” she added.

Jeff Greenspan

Up next was freelance creative Jeff Greenspan, formerly a communication designer at Facebook, chief creative officer at Buzzfeed and creative director at BBDO.

Greenspan discussed how his self-initiated and side projects gave him the confidence to build a successful freelance career, and spoke of the importance of “finding your own individual voice and speaking it very loudly.” He is the creator of the ‘hipster trap’ (below), New York’s Tourist Lanes (which started out as a simple prank and attracted global media attention), and the Bush Booth (booths where people sick of seeing George W Bush campaign for a second term as President could voice their discontent at a video loop of him just listening).

Greenspan also created Selfless Portraits, a site where internet users are given a profile picture of another user somewhere in the world and asked to draw it, and “The World’s Most Exclusive Website“, a site where users must have a certain number of Twitter followers to access rooms, only to be met with another locked door. A satirical swipe at fame culture, those who did manage to access the site were offered nothing but confirmation of their followers, but the promise of exclusivity attracted Kim Kardashian, Justin Bieber and Jerry Bruckheimer, among others.

Each of these projects were self-initiated yet became viral successes: Greenspan had the idea for Selfless Portraits when working at Facebook, but couldn’t persuade the company to fund it, and said if he’d approached brands with many of these ideas, he would have been turned down, yet they have attracted millions of hits and huge levels of user engagement.

“If people don’t trust me, I keep trying,” he said. “I refuse to listen to people who try to diminish that voice in my head. I know we’re not changing the world – I’m usually advertising pizza and coffee – but it’s important to be true to yourself,” he said. “If you start something, put energy into it and be bold with your ideas…then other people will join you.”

Chris Judge

The last talk of the day was delivered by Chris Judge, an Irish illustrator, former member of The Chalets and author of award-winning children’s book The Lonely Beast.

Judge presented some charming, funny and bizarre illustration projects and discussed his forthcoming work for a teen novel by Kirsty McKay and an illustrated ‘danger manual’, Danger is Everywhere, written by comedian David O Doherty. He also talked about his spin-off Lonely Beast counting and alphabet apps, which were recently featured in an Apple ad campaign.

This was just a few of the events happening each day: the schedule also included a talk from Nobrow artists on getting published, a panel debate among Irish architects and one from a selection of Irish illustrators.
Le Cool Dublin has also been running a series of stylus wars – interactive pictionary duels – as well as portfolio reviews, and their have been regular talks on building brands in various industries. With a line-up so diverse, it’s little wonder Offset has become a sell-out events with over 2,500 attending.