Your 2014 AIGA Medalists: Chip Kidd, Louise Fili, Bill Moggridge, and 21 More Design Stars

centennial medalists

Frederic Goudy had one, so did Philip Johnson and Robert Rauschenberg. The Eameses had two. Pentagram is awash in them. George Lois wears his to bed. We’re talking about AIGA Medals, the graphic design world’s highest honor. This year, the AIGA is celebrating its centennial by bestowing medals on 24 design visionaries that “together exemplify the legacy of visual communications and the impact of design”: Sean Adams and Noreen Morioka, Richard Danne, Alexander Isley, Charles S. Anderson, Michael Donovan and Nancye Green, Chip Kidd, Dana Arnett, Stephen Doyle, Michael Mabry, Kenneth Carbone and Leslie Smolan, Louise Fili, Abbott Miller, David Carson, Bob Greenberg, Bill Moggridge, Kyle Cooper, Sylvia Harris, Gael Towey, Michael Cronan, Cheryl Heller, and Ann Willoughby. They will be presented with their James Earle Fraser-designed medals on April 25 at the AIGA Centennial Gala in New York City.

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“Estrada: Sailing Through Design”: An influential Spanish designer brings finished projects and the sketches that started them to NYC




The AIGA National Design Center welcomes its newest exhibit Estrada: Sailing Through Design, by celebrated Spanish graphic designer Manuel Estrada, with a gigantic clock-like image on its glass windows….

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Bright Lights Is Tonight: Drenttel & Helfand, Hoefler & Frere-Jones to Receive AIGA Medals


A taste of the digital typefaces designed by Hoefler & Frere-Jones.

Shield your eyes from the glare of design talent this evening in New York, as AIGA hosts “Bright Lights.” The annual awards gala will begin with cocktails and conversation, and proceed to celebration and presentation of the coveted AIGA medal, the graphic design world’s highest honor. This year’s crop of James Earle Fraser-designed medallions goes to John Bielenberg, William Drenttel and Jessica Helfand, Jonathan Hoefler and Tobias Frere-Jones, Stefan Sagmeister, Lucille Tenazas, and Wolfgang Weingart. Not bound for Bright Lights? Play along at home by reading aloud, in your best announcer voice, AIGA’s citations (below) of the design luminaries.
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AIGA/NY Anniversary Posters

Thirty designers pay homage to three decades of inspiration
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2012 marks the 30th anniversary of the New York chapter of the American Institute of Graphic Arts (AIGA), the nation’s premier professional design organization. In honor of the celebration, AIGA/NY reached out to 30 NYC design stars to each create a poster for the festivities based on the following brief: “AIGA, New York City, and/or the number 30: capturing your personal experience with the AIGA’s NY chapter.”

The roster of participating designers reads like a who’s who of New York design with names like Milton Glaser, Seymour Chwast, Paula Scher, Michael Bierut, Mirko Illic, Maira Kalman, and Debbie Millman, among others. Design-wise, the limited-edition posters are as eclectic as the city, genre, and organization they celebrate.

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Michael Bierut saw the assignment as a chance to dig through his basement for the mix tape he made for AIGA/NY’s launch party three decades ago, which he then scanned. Describing his poster, Scott Stowell, proprietor of Open, says, “It’s a receipt for your donation. It’s a message from me to AIGA/NY, from AIGA/NY to you, and from you to your friends (assuming you buy one and hang it up somewhere). The poster both connects us and makes our connections clear.”

“Since it was being printed, we tried to play up the use of color and the celebratory energy that it provides,” says Adam Michaels at Project Projects, who approached the commission as what he calls a kind of “poster as birthday card”. He goes on to explain that “Color gradients both reference the history of poster printing (split fountains and all that) as well as ideas of change and transformation. The poster also represents the studio, so we asked everyone here to give us one or two 30s of their own design to throw in the mix—the result is both multi-vocal and collective.”

Of course, the anniversary—and the poster commissions—provided an opportunity to look back and reminisce on AIGA/NY’s role in the city’s design scene, and the recurring theme that multiple players point to is the sense of community the organization has provided its members. As David Heasty of Triboro points out, “It’s the way you first get to meet your design heroes. The best AIGA events are like Hollywood premiers—a room full of creative legends chatting and drinking wine. What could be cooler?”

Stowell concurs, “AIGA/NY is the gateway drug for design in New York City,” he says. “How else can we connect with so many resources and people and ideas? With more and more events and programs every year, I don’t know what it would be like to be a designer here without it.”

“AIGA/NY was entirely about community for me,” recalls designer Sam Potts, noting the importance of face-to-face opportunities in an increasingly digital era. “Before I joined, I was just a naive kid working in the living room with a 90-pound laser printer and a Metrocard to get in to Manhattan for client meetings. Participating in the NY chapter, seeing amazing people speak live for real and in person while holding a cold beverage in my hand, meeting people whose work I’d long admired, feeling the warmth of sunlight on my face—these are not pleasures and benefits well-afforded by our creeping online social networks—at least not until WordPress comes out with a sunlight plug-in. So yeah, it was a big deal to me and opened a lot of doors to do things like teach, collaborate and pitch for the Red Sox (which has yet to happen, technically).”

The limited-edition series includes just 100 posters of each design, and 10 copies of every design are signed. The commemorative posters are available for purchase through Etsy, and all proceeds will benefit AIGA/NY.

For more information on the anniversary celebrations, including the upcoming June benefit, visit AIGA/NY.


AIGA Baltimore Lecture

Une belle animation informative et didactique autour de la représentation graphique des chiffres clés d’Internet dans le monde (Twitter, Facebook ou Google). Un brillant travail et une excellente mise en images par Jesse Thomas, inspiré des statistiques d’AIGA Baltimore.



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Urban Forest Project

San Francisco has joined the growing list of cities to launch the ‘Urban Forest Project’— an initiative of Worldstudio.

Each local project incorporates an environmental call to action such as tree planting initiatives. The program can easily be adapted to address a number of green and creative initiatives in a variety of ways to shape a project that is unique and expressive of the local community.

The deadline for this initiative is June 12th. To learn more click here.

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Call for Entries: AIGA (Re) Design Awards

The 2009 (Re)design Awards is now accepting submissions of work. The competition is focused on recognizing designers that have produced innovative sustainable solutions. Find out more here.

AIGA announces this years Medal Recipients

AIGA individually names Pablo Ferro, Carin Goldberg and Doyald Young as the 2009 recipients of the AIGA Medal. This prestigious award is given out annually to those who have made exceptional contributions to the field of design and visual communication.

Pablo Ferro:

Carin Goldberg:

Doyald Young:

via AIGA: