i-Design tomorrow

If anyone is in London tomorrow (24 September) and has some time, Malcolm Garrett’s i-Design conference has a great line up of speakers

i-Design, which is is on at The University of Westminster on Regent Street, London W1, describes itself as “an essential one day conference and showcase for anyone with an interest or passion for interactive design and the digital arts”. Garrett is the event’s creative director.

Speakers include Nic Roope of Poke, Adrian Shaughnessy, Desiree Collier, Andrew Chitty, Bill Thompson, David Taylor, Tali Krakowsky, sound designer Martyn Ware and Andrew Shoben of Greyworld.

There are also free portfolio clinics where you can show your work to the UK’s most accomplished digital media agencies for best practice tips and to find out what agencies look for plus an exhibition of interactive work curated by Cybersonica.

Full ticket info here

Digital Wallpaper

Un travail du studio Strukt et plus précisément du chef de projet Gregor Hofbauer dans les bureaux administratifs de Büro Hirsberger à Vienne. Un mur et une visualisation mêlant lumière et projecteurs, le tout généré en processing. Vidéo de démonstration dans la suite.



Previously on Fubiz

Selling digital

As promised, we have started to put together films of the sessions at our Click Singapore conference. The first two are from a panel discussion on the difficulties of selling digital work

To see both films, go to the CRTV section of the website, here

Click is our international conference on digital advertising and creativity. This year, we will be running Click in Singapore, New York and London.

Click New York is on October 1 where speakers include Rob Reilly of Crispin Porter, Khoi Vinh, design director of the New York Times online, Vincent Morisset of AATOAA and Jason Zada of Tool. The day will be chaired by Michael Lebowitz of Big Spaceship. For full programme and ticket details, please go here

Click London will be on November 12 and will be chaired by Johan and Måns Tesch with speakers including 42 Entertainment, Teenage Engineering and Sony Music. More details here

That Kanye, he gets everywhere

 

CR blog fan Kanye West (hi Kanye!) has been in a bit of trouble of late. In case you have been living in a hole, he got a bit over-excited at the recent MTV VMAs when he felt that Beyonce was the rightful winner of the best female video of the year, and interrupted the actual winner Taylor Swift to tell her so. And now he’s popping up on desktops all over town…

 

 

Shown top is Kanye dissing Glossy‘s website, and above is when he popped up on CR. To see Kanye on your own site, follow the instructions here

The London Design Festival – some highlights…

Above: Jaime Hayón’s huge chess set will be set up in Trafalgar square throughout The London Design Festival

Starting tomorrow, The London Design Festival encompasses an impressive array of creative events, talks, installations and exhibitions taking place across the capital. We thought we’d put together a list of highlights of the forthcoming week’s activities – focusing on the more graphic (rather than product) design-led events…

September 19 – September 27
London Posters
curated by Pentagram

Pentagram partner Domenic Lippa and Sir John Sorrell, chairman of the London Design Festival, have commissioned 20 UK-based graphic designers to create posters with a London theme for this year’s event. The posters will be on display in the V&A’s Sackler Centre during the festival. The 20 designers who have produced a poster for the project are: Alan Aboud, Alan Kitching, Angus Hyland, Bibliothèque, Jonathan Ellery, Damon Murray and Stephen Sorrell of fuel, Derek and Fred Birdsall, Fernando Gutiérrez, Henrik Kubel, Jeremy Leslie, Matt Willey, Michael Wolff, Mike Dempsey, Nick Bell, Morag Myerscough (her poster shown above),  Quentin Newark, Studio Frith (shown below), Tom Hingston Studio, Tony Brook and Andy Altmann.

 

10am-5.45pm daily; 10am-10pm, Friday

at
Victoria and Albert Museum
Sackler Centre
Cromwell Road
London
SW7 2RL

For a chance to win two of the posters, check out the gallery page in our October issue (out next week).

Full details of the show: londondesignfestival.com/events/london-posters

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September 20 – 25
UP ALL NIGHT
Central Saint Martins

The Up All Night exhibition showcases student work from various courses including MA Communication Design, MA Design; Ceramics, Furniture or Jewellery.

10am-6pm Mon-Friday

at:

Innovation Centre
Proctor Street
Red Lion Square
London WC1B 4AP

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September 21 – 27
It’s Nice That / The Dock

It’s Nice That preview their second publication at Portobello’s White House as part of The Dock. 

10am-6pm, Mon – Sat; 10am – 4pm, Sunday

at
The Dock
Portobello Dock
334 Ladbroke Grove
London
W10 5BU

More details at porobellodock.com 

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September 22
Panel discussion on copyright issues in art and advertising
Own-It 

6.30pm – 8.30pm

Own-it has invited a panel of experts from advertising and film-making to discuss inspiration & copyright issues. Chaired by CR’s own Eliza Williams. 

On the panel:

Charles Swan, head of Swan Turton’s Advertising & Marketing and Photography & Visual Arts Groups; Johnny Hardstaff and Matt Smith, director of strategy at The Viral Factory 

Admission is free, however places are limited. To reserve your place you must register and book via the Own-it website: own-it.org/

Full details here: londondesignfestival.com/events/art-ad-about-moral-legal-and-aesthetic-consequences-current-trend

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September 22-27
MAKER DIFFERENCE – Pop-up Letterpress studio
Cockpit Arts And SORT (The Society of Revisionist Typographers)

Watch SORT design and print bespoke books, cards and curios using antique letterpresses and try your hand at printing…

11am-6pm, Tues & Wed, Fri& Sat
12pm-8pm, Thurs; 12pm-2pm, Sun

at:
3 Lowndes Court
Newburgh Quarter
London W1F 7HD

Full details at: londondesignfestival.com/events/maker-difference-pop-letterpress-studio

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September 10 – October 2
BRAZIL ILLUSTRATED
Embassy of Brazil

An exhibition by three up-and-coming Brazillian illustrators: Bruno Kurru, Wagner Pinto and Eduardo Recife

Gallery 32
32 Green Street
London
W1K 7AT

Full details here: londondesignfestival.com/events/brazil-illustrated-bruno-kurru-wagner-pinto-eduardo-recife

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September 22-24
Grafik presents Olympik

Olympik celebrates the rich relationship between graphic design and the Olympic Games. To celebrate London hosting the 2012 games, Grafik magazine has commissioned thirty-nine of the UK’s most talented designers to create a poster interpreting an Olympic sport or discipline. 39 Sports, 39 Designers, 39 Posters. The project is a collaboration between Grafik, SEA Design, GF Smith and Team Impression.

10am-6.30pm daily

at:
The German Gymnasium
26 St Pancras Road
London
NW1 2TB

Find out more at londondesignfestival.com/events/grafik-presents-olympik

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September 21-25
Greengaged at the Design Council

Each day for five days a different expert curates a day looking at green issues in design. The five curators are Ed Gillespie, Founder of Futerra and slow travel expert; John Grant, author of The Green Marketing Manifesto and former co-founder of St Luke’s agency; Michael Pawlyn, founder of Exploration Architechture; Dan Epstein, head of sustainability and regeneratio, Olympic Deliver Authority; and Three Trees Don’t Make a Forest with Anna Gerber, design critic.

9am-10pm Mon-Friday

at
Design Council
3rd Floor
34 Bow Street
Lonodn
WC2E 7DL

Free but registration is needed. Visit greengaged.com to book

More details at londondesignfestival.com/events/greengaged-design-council

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September 19-23 
The Tournament: An installation by Jaime Hayón

For this year’s London Design Festival, designer Jaime Hayón creates a giant interactive chess board in Trafalgar Square. The chess pieces have been inspired by iconic London buildings – their domes and spires. Each of the 32 chess pieces has been handcrafted by Hayón, working wiht Bosa, the Italian ceramics experts in Veneto, Italy. The Tournament Team move the two metre-high creramic chess pieces across a specially built glass mosaic chess board. Seated upon elevated platforms, contestants from the English Chess Federation and members of the public will battle it out over the five days to become The Tournament champion. 

10am-6pm daily

at
Trafalgar Square
London SW1 Y 5BJ

Full details at londondesignfestival.com/events/tournament

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September 17 – December 22 
Somerset House presents
SHOWstudio: Fashion Revolution

Major new exhibition by SHOWstudio, the award-winning fashion website founded by Nick Knight.

10am-6pm, Sun-Wed; 10am-9pm, Thurs & Fri

at
Embankment Galleries
Somerset House
Strand
London WC2R 1LA

Book online at somersethouse.org.uk/showstudio

More info at londondesignfestival.com/events/showstudio-fashion-revolution

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September 19- October  3
The Outer Limit – Beyond Zone One
Transport For London

Winning poster designs that celebrate life outside London’s city centre go on temporary display… Featured work is a selection of the best poster entries from TFL’s summer poster design competition. All exhibited designs will be available as print to order posters at the London Transport Museum’s online shop at ltmuseum.co.uk

10am-6pm, Sat-Thurs; 11am-6pm, Fri

at
London Transport Museum
Covent Garden Piazza
London WC2E 7BB

tickets: Adults £10.00*; Senior citizens £8.00*; Students £6.00*; Under 16s free. (* includes voluntary Gift Aid donation)

Full deets at londondesignfestival.com/events/exhibition-outer-limits-–-beyond-zone-one

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September 21-27
A6/Future
Creative [SIN]ergy

Creative [SIN]ergy presents A6 /future/, a collaboration between 22 illustrators from both Singapore and the UK.

10am-6pm, Mon-Fri; 12pm-5pm, Sat &Sun

at
Idea Generation Gallery
11 Chance Street
London E2 7JB

More deets at http://www.londondesignfestival.com/events/a6-future

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September 19 – October 3
There’s No Place Like Home
Ella Doran

Showcase of ‘one off’ placemats designed by artists, designers and illustrators including Rob Ryan, Michael Marriott, Sharon Elphick and Martin Parr. The show will open on Saturday September 19 with a tea party from 2pm-5pm and the sets of placemats will be sold through a silent auction that will close on October 3. All profits go to Shelter. 

10am-6pm, Wed-Fri; 12pm-5pm, Sat; 11am-5pm, Sun

at
Ella Doran Shop
46 Cheshire Street
London
E2 6EH

Full details here: londondesignfestival.com/news/theres-no-place-home-1

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September 11 – October 31
Typographica
Kemistry Gallery


Curated by regular CR contributor Rick Poynor, Typographica is an exhibition dedicated to the eponymous groundbreaking and now legendary graphic design journal which ran from 1949 to 1967.

10am-5pm, Mon-Fri; 11am-4pm, Sun

at
Kemistry Gallery
43 Charlotte Road
London
EC2A 3PD

Full details: londondesignfestival.com/events/typographica

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September 24
i-Design one day conference

i-Design is a one day conference and showcase for anyone with an interest or passion for interactive design and the digital arts. The programme aims to inspire, entertain and explore how our digital future looks set to unfold and the central role interactive design will take in our cultural, work and social life. Events include:

5D: The Future of Immersive Design Panel – an exclusive session on immersive experience design will be convened by the 5D Conference team, flying in from Los Angeles.

Speakers include Nic Roope, Adrian Shaughnessy, Desiree Collier, Andrew Chitty, Bill Thompson, David Taylor, Tali Krakowsky, Martyn Ware, Andrew Shoben and more

Alongside the conference there will be screenings of new work from Onedotzero, an exhibition of interactive work curated by Cybersonica and a Future of Sound panel

9am-6pm

at
The Old Cinema
University of Westminster
309 Regent Street
London
W1B 2UW

The event requires pre-registration at idesign-london.com/

Full details here: londondigitalweek.com/eventdetail.php?id=40&cat=1

 

Question of the Week 08.09.09

It’s a new QOTW and we want to know whether our readers are bloggers too. Is everyone at it, or is there always a time and a place? If you blog, why do you do it? What do you blog about?

Here at CR, we’ve been blogging since August 2006 and have clocked in well over 1,200 posts. 

We love it. It offers us an immediate platform for news stories but, at the same time, provides us with near infinite space to show images (or run long interviews) that we simply don’t have room for in the printed magazine.

Our blog also acts as a place where we can interact directly with readers and instigate – and, on occasion, moderate – debate.

I think the CR editors would agree that we write slightly differently on the CR blog, to when writing for the magazine, and that we all enjoy that very aspect of it.

For e.g, this post took about ten minutes to put together; it has an immediacy to it that, hopefully, will be reflected in the comments it receives throughout the day (as with other Questions of the Week).

So, if you blog too, why do you do it? Does it have a purpose in your working life, or is it purely a recreational thing?

If you just enjoy reading blogs, which ones do you like and why? What makes a good blog?

Are there even too many blogs out there? How do you cut through the mass of voices and focus in on the good stuff?

What about Twitter, or the future of blogging. Where are things going? 

Let us know what you think. And, of course, include any links to great blogs, your own or otherwise, that we should check out.

Question of the Week is produced in partnership with MajorPlayers

Onedotzero arrives at BFI Southbank

 

 

Onedotzero arrives at the BFI Southbank for its annual stint of screenings and talks on Wednesday. Now in its 13th year, the festival is renowned for its champi­oning of new talent in short films and promos, and this year’s highlights also include a retrospective of French directors/designers H5, alongside exclusive previews of the new Disney/Pixar feature film Up, and the break-dancing documentary Turn It Loose, directed by Partizan’s Alastair Siddon.

Onedotzero is free to enter, which creative director Shane Walter believes has helped it remain somewhat reces­sion-proof. “We had a shorter submis­sions window this year but still got a healthy number of admissions, there was no downturn in that respect,” he says. “It helps that it’s completely open and free to submit work – that’s still important to us.” In terms of trends that can be spotted within this year’s entries, he comments: “Last year we saw a hand-drawn aesthetic in moving image, which has continued to progress this year. We’ve seen a lot of people using digital tools to create things that look handmade. Digital has become more everyday and people are looking for other ways to express themselves. Plus it might be cheaper to make in the recession – or it seems that way….”

 

Trailer for Turn It Loose by Alistair Siddons, showing as part of the festival

 

Among the numerous programmes taking place over the four-day festival (for full details see onedotzero.com), will be the culmination of the Cascade education project. One of three strands in the festival sponsored by glue London (as part of the agency’s 10th birthday celebrations), Cascade sees a number of graduates from all over the UK, from various creative disciplines, collaborate on briefs set by glue during a series of workshops. The concepts created by the teams will be presented as part of onedotzero on September 10.

Onedotzero has commissioned Wieden + Kennedy London to design its identity this year (trailer shown top), and the agency has worked with Karsten Schmidt to create a logo that draws on the festival’s theme of ‘convergence and collaboration’. “This year we wanted to have a pure digital look to our identity but harness our community and also the idea that the festival is very open to ideas,” says Walter. “The identity will draw all the chatter around the social networks when people mention onedotzero, and that gets fed into the visual identity.” A live interactive version of the logo, which visitors can engage with via SMS and email, will be projected at the BFI during the festival. A making-of film of the identity can be viewed online here.

 

Video for The Child by Alex Gopher, directed by H5, who will be showing a retrospective of their work at onedotzero

 

Onedotzero is on from September 9-13. For full listings of what’s on during the festival, visit onedotzero.com.

Click New York

Fresh from a successful event in Singapore, CR’s Click conference goes to New York for a day of digital creativity on 1 October. With one month to go, there’s still time to book your place…

Click New York will provide a platform for US creatives to reveal the secrets behind some of the year’s most influential digital campaigns. Held at the Art Directors Club, this year’s event in the Big Apple has a great lineup of speakers:

 

Chloe Gottlieb, Executive Creative Director, Interaction Design, R/GA

Rob Reilly, Partner/Co-Executive Creative Director, Crispin Porter + Bogusky

Michael Lebowitz, Founder/CEO, Big Spaceship

Patrick Burgoyne, Editor, Creative Review

Lars Bastholm, Chief Digital Creative Officer, Ogilvy

Benjamin Palmer, CEO/Co-Founder, The Barbarian Group

Tom Ajello, Founder/Creative Director, Poke New York

Vivian Rosenthal, Co-Founder, Tronic Studio

Vincent Morisset, Web-Friendly Director, AATOAA

Jason Zada, Director, Tool of North America

Gareth Kay, Director of Digital Strategy, Goodby Silverstein & Partners

Ty Montague, Co-President, Chief Creative Officer, JWT North America

Khoi Vinh, Design Director, NYtimes.com

 

And we still have some tickets left, so to register your place, email Anna Knight or get in touch via this link.

Patrick’s highlights from our day in Singapore are here while the full details of Click New York 2009 can be found at click2009.net.

Welcome to 2007

We’ve steadily been adding content from back issues of CR to the website: all of the content from 2007 is now up and available to view…

A few highlights include, from the February issue, Peter Saville on the notion of selling out as a designer

And, from the same issue, philosopher AC Grayling discussing the morals of working in advertising and design

Then we have a great piece on Otl Aicher and the Munich Olympics from the March issue

Our special April issue (the one without a cover) on sustainability

The story of how São Paulo banned advertising from its streets from the June issue, as well as features on Lawrence Weiner, Tony Chambers and Goodby Silverstein

A first look at that 2012 logo

In August we looked at a month in the life of a graphic designer

In September, we looked at The New Ugly in editorial design as well as profiling Janet Froelich of the NY Times magazine (whose work is certainly not ugly) and looked at the new face of advertising

October featured the amazing Keld Helmer-Petersen

Also, check out our Work In Progress issue from November

While in December we looked at a month in the life of a client

Issues from 2006 will be available shortly

Click Singapore

Last week saw CR stage our first event in Asia – Click Singapore, which brought together speakers from China, Japan, the UK and the host country to discuss the future of digital creativity

Staged at Dempsey House – part of what was once a British Army barracks but that is now a complex of restaurants, bars and shops – Click was a one-day conference covering all aspects of online advertising.

Probably the most hotly debated issue of the day was how to sell digital work to clients, with our audience anxious to hear the advice from our international speakers. Their answer? That for a client to buy digital work requires a great deal of faith and trust. They may be used to a world where they can buy a guaranteed audience of x million for a TV spot at an alloted time – digital work often requires the audience to come to it. If it’s good enough, people will want to view it, but, although agencies can help via PR, seeding and so on, an audience cannot be guaranteed in the same way that it can on TV or in the press. Secondly, you are dealing with technology that often has to be built first before a client can get a true idea of what it looks and feels like. Tom Sacchi of Unit 9 explained how they draw up schematics and simple animations to show clients each step in the process, but even this requires a leap of faith to truly ‘get’ what the final work will be like.

From left to right: CR editor Patrick Burgoyne, Daryl Arnold of Profero, Benjy Choo of Kilo Studio, Mateo Eaton of Mindshare SIngapore, Nicolas Roope of Poke and Tom Sacchi of Unit9 discuss the problems of selling digital work

Sacchi also stressed that “people think digital is quick and cheap – it’s neither”. He stressed that it takes “small steps” to sell innovative digital work to clients, so that trust builds cumulatively. Nic Roope of Poke reinforced this, stressing that Poke’s work for Orange was only possible because it had been working with the client for some time, pushing things a little further with each project.

With the day interspersing individual presentations with panel discussions there were plenty of other discussion points – on education, on ex-pat versus local talent and also on the future for digital agencies. Here, the prevailing view seemed to be that so-called ‘traditional’ agencies will continue to develop digital capabilities while specialist digital shops will continue to benefit from their ability to innovate and lead technological development. Those looking vulnerable, our panel thought, may be the digital arms of traditional agency networks who are finding themselves squeezed between the main agency on one side and the small digital specialist on the other. All were also agreed that ‘digital’ agencies will no longer need to describe themselves as such – they will just be agencies. Daryl Arnold of Profero’s take was that his agency is positioning itself as an organisation that uses technology to help businesses solve their problems – so this may or not involve any visual communications.

In Nic Roope’s presentation, he showed a piece developed by Poke for the Design Museum’s Super Contemporary show charting just how much change there has been on the digital scene in London

Design Museum – Super Contemporary from Poke on Vimeo.

 

Roope (above) also showed BakerTweet, a very nifty device installed by Poke at the Albion bakery across the road from its offices. As the below film explains, BakerTweet is a wall-mounted box that sends a message to Albion’s Twitter followers, alerting them each time a fresh batch of croissants, rolls or whatever emerges from the oven

BakerTweet from POKE on Vimeo.

 

One of the other more intriguing presentations came from Daryl Arnold, Profero’s global CEO. He talked about Factory, the centre for young creatives that the agency has recently opened in Shanghai (and which we alluded to here). Factory has a restaurant, event space, recording studio, digital studio and pop-up retail space, housed on the ground floor of Profero’s Shanghai building.

They offer young creatives in Shanghai the chance to come in and collaborate with one another using Factory’s equipment. They also bring in visitng VIPs such as Jimmy Choo and Quincy Jones to speak to and work with the young talent.

However, Arnold revealed that it has not been as easy as you may think to attract people to the space. Thanks to the one child per family rule, he claimed, young people in Shanghai have grown up with a huge sense of entitlement and, in some cases, expect opportuitites to be handed to them rather than having to strive for success. As an example, he revealed that Factory had set up one young musician with the chance to work with Quincy Jones in their recording studio one evening. She didn’t show up, explaining that she had deciced to have dinner with friends instead.

For more on Factory’s activities, check out the website here

We had some great feedback from the day and hope to return to SIngapore next year for a bigger and even better event. Next stop, Click New York on October 1 (info here).

Also, at Click SIngapore, Mattias Hansson of HyperIsland talked about how the school’s unique approach delivers such great results

Droga5 Sydney’s Sudeep Gohil explained how the agency comes up with its ideas

Morihiro Harano, Creative Director of Drill Inc in Tokyo

With CR’s Patrick Burgoyne, Johan Vakidis, Executive Creative Director, AKQA (China), Dirk Eschenbacher, Executive Creative Director/Managing Partner Asia Pacific, Tribal DDB and Richard Bleasdale, Regional CEO Asia Pacific, Iris Nation

Thanks to all our speakers (complete list here) and to everyone who came along. Thanks also to Yong Ping Loo for the photos. See you next year