Name that logo: the answers

Last week we set you a task relating to our forthcoming Top 20 logos issue: name the logo from its nickname. Here are the answers.

In the course of our research into our Top 20 logos we uncovered a lot of nicknames bestowed on logos by their designers and users, not all of them complimentary. So, can you guess the logo from the nickname?

1. The meatball
A. The original (and current) NASA logo

 

2. The ferret and dartboard
A. The old (pre-DRU) British Railways logo

 

3. The crows’ feet
A. British Rail

 

4. The worm (two possible answers)
NASA (1974-92), CN (Canadian National railways)

 

 

 

5. The arrows of indecision
A. British Rail again

 

6. The bird splat
A. Mont Blanc

 

CR in print

Thanks for reading the CR Blog, but if you’re not reading us in print too, you’re missing out on a richer, deeper view of your world. Our April issue features our Top 20 logos of all time. You can buy it today by calling +44(0)207 292 3703. Better yet, subscribe to CR, save yourself almost a third and get Monograph for free plus a host of special deals from the CR Shop. Go on, treat yourself.

Japan: how to respond?

The creative community, appalled by events in Japan, has rushed to help. But is the resultant plethora of fundraising prints and posters an adequate or appropriate response? And does visual communications have a longer-term role to play in disaster relief?

Just as happened with Haiti, almost as soon as news of the awful earthquake in Japan spread across the world, they started to appear: fund-raising posters produced by designers, ad agencies and illustrators anxious to do their bit. The logic is straightforward – buy the poster and the proceeds go to aid those in need.

But this approach has not gone unquestioned. There’s a good debate about the issues over at Eye plus Johnson Banks has also summarised the arguments on its Thought for the Week page. In a piece for the Fast Company website, writer John Pavlus called a poster (above) created by Signalnoise that has raised over $7000 for the Canadian Red Cross “fundamentally grotesque”. “Shouldn’t our desire to donate come from actual compassion, not as a side effect of our fascination with pretty artifacts?” Pavlus asked.

The QBN forum has also been debating the topic, asking whether the desire to create such posters is driven as much by self-promotion as it is by a genuine desire to help. And just what are the buyers of such posters supposed to do with them once they get them home? Does anyone really want an image of a crying Japanese flag hanging on their wall? Is such a poster’s presence serving merely, as Pavlus writes, “as some sick, bragging monument to my own willingness to ‘help’?”

These are important questions to ask, but I really don’t believe such posters’ makers are primarily or even substantially motivated by self-promotion. It seems to me entirely legitimate that imagemakers should respond to an urge to help by making an image – it’s what they do. It’s why musicians, respond to the same urge with benefit gigs or charity records.

Wieden + Kennedy’s poster to raise funds for Japan, available here

Why do we have to buy things at all in order to donate? Shouldn’t we just donate directly to charity without acquiring a poster or a CD along the way?

Many do just that, but the history of charity fundraising suggests that, as humans, we often need a little prompting in order to contribute. Everything from Live Aid, through charity auctions down to a raffle for the local hospice or a sponsored walk for a day centre exists because of this. In an ideal world, we would all make charitable donations entirely unbidden, but experience shows that sometimes we need helping along, whether by a concert from a favourite band or just by an old lady shaking a collecting tin and giving us a sticker.

One of the organisations that is involved on the ground in Japan is ShelterBox which delivers emergency aid via distinctive green boxes packed with vital equipment and supplies.

Go to the Get Involved section on its website and its position seems quite clear “By organising, or taking part in an event that raises funds for ShelterBox,” it says “you will be directly providing aid for people affected by disasters all over the world.” For an imagemaker, a simple and cost-effective way to do that is to make a print and sell it. In doing so, chances are they will end up channeling more much-needed cash ShelterBox’s way than if they had just stuck their hand in their pocket and donated directly.

Perhaps some of our community’s unease over the charity poster stems from feelings of inadequacy in comparison to other areas of design. Architects, for example, with a desire to assist disaster relief have the skills to design emergency shelters. Product designers can create simple, cheap forms of heating food. Is a poster really the best we can do? What can visual communicators do to directly influence operations on the ground?

Photo: Rob Kollaard

One possible answer was proposed by Gert Dumbar and his son Derk in 2007. A Safe Place is a system of pictograms designed as a tool for communication between aid workers and victims of disasters. Giving people in disaster areas good and accurate information, the theory goes, can save many lives.

Are there other, similarly practical ways in which visual communicators can get involved? It’s something we are going to look at in the May issue of CR but if readers know of more examples, please let us know in the comments below.

Such projects would give our community the chance to get involved at a deeper, more long-term level. Reactive fundraising is valuable and welcome, but it also would be good to see visual communicators affecting disaster relief on the ground in a similarly positive way. Hopefully, our forthcoming piece will point up some opportunities.

All this has been on my mind of late not just because of the online debates but also because I have been involved in attempting to organise a response to the Japan disaster from the creative community.

Just over a week ago, a prominent designer called. He wanted to do something to help Japan, could CR help? The designer contacted friends and colleagues, many of whom had friends in Japan and who felt a great affinity for the country. All were keen to help in addition to donating money themselves, but how?

For a group of people with limited resources, selling Giclée prints is do-able and it’s effective. A very high proportion of the money raised in this way goes to the charity concerned as there are few up-front costs. Organisations like ShelterBox and the Red Cross who are engaged on the ground in Japan need cash and they need it quickly. Selling prints will provide it, so that route seemed sensible as a first response.

But it also seemed necessary to divorce the works from the disaster itself. There’s no need to illustrate what just happened, and no need to raise awareness. Contributors have been asked to concentrate not on the disaster but on why they love Japan, what makes it beautiful, unique and important to them. In this way we hope that the prints will have a longer life and will act not as a reminder of something awful but as a reminder of a moment when the creative community came together to support their friends and colleagues at a time of great need.

But what else can we do? A lot of people have offered items for auction, so that will happen soon. But besides fundraising, can this community help on the ground in any meaningful way? Do you know of any ways in which it is already doing so? Can we help to make sure that agencies are better equipped to respond to any future disaster?

Can we create a model for future disaster responses by the creative community? We will be setting up a website to act as a forum for suggestions and debate. We will be contacting Japanese designers and NGOs for their views but we would like to invite all CR readers to advise us also. Please let us know your suggestions in the comments below. If you know of anyone else who is already tackling these issues, please give us details.

UPDATE: really interesting Washington Post story here (linked by magCuture) on a local Japanese newspaper producing a handwritten edition. “People need food, water and, also, information.”

CR for CR: DeLillo and Easton Ellis books

Earlier in the week Mark highlighted Picador’s new set of Don DeLillo books with covers by Noma Bar. The nice people at Picador have kindly agreed to donate a complete set of these books – 10 in total – along with a set of 6 Brett Easton Ellis paperbacks to aid Comic Relief.

The Easton Ellis paperbacks are a repackaged backlist released to mark the 25th anniversary of the publication of Less Than Zero. The covers were designed by none other than the marvellous Chip Kidd.

If you’d like to bid to get your hands on these, you can bid for them here.

Galy Tots print by Ken Garland

The cover of Ken Garland’s catalogue for Galt Toys’ 1969/70 season has been made into a beautiful art print. You’ll have to be quick to get one mind, as only 25 have been produced by Jonny Trunk of Trunk Records…

In what is, surprisingly, the first fine art print to be made of Garland’s work, the charming ‘Galy Tots’ is for sale from the Trunk Records site and will also be available from Haji&White’s stand at the Mid Century Modern show at Dulwich College, London this Sunday March 20.

Produced by Jonny Trunk, each of the 60 x 42cm giclée art prints is annotated and signed by Garland and priced at £200. They are available from the Trunk site, here. Garland’s website is at kengarland.co.uk and an image of the original catalogue, produced by Ken Garland Associates in 1969, is here.

CR for CR: 5 more subs

UPDATE: THEY”VE GONE! IN THREE MINUTES FLAT. THANKS EVERYONE

All this week we are raising money for Comic Relief via the CR Blog. Today, we have five more UK one-year subscriptions on offer for a donation of £35 each. Usual price: £64

The subscriptions are listed on ebay. You pay £35, 90% goes to Comic Relief and the other 10% covers selling costs (no, we are not making any money on this).

This only applies to the UK and will give you 12 issues of CR plus Monograph and access to our online archive. We will start the sub from the first available month after your payment clears.

Hurry, hurry. The subs are listed:

Here

Here

Here

Here

And here

Name that logo

Our April Top 20 logos issue is at the printers. Copies will be available next week so, in advance of that we thought we’d set you a challenge: can you name the logo from the nickname?

In the course of our research into our Top 20 logos we uncovered a lot of nicknames bestowed on logos by their designers and users, not all of them complimentary. So, can you guess the logo from the nickname?

1. The meatball

2. The ferret and dartboard

3. The crows’ feet

4. The worm (two possible answers)

5. The arrows of indecision

6. The bird splat

All of them are included in our Top 20, though some refer to earlier versions of the chosen logos.

No Googling allowed…

CR for CR: Adrian Shaughnessy consultancy

Author, designer and publisher, Adrian Shaughnessy also works as a studio consultant and mentor. As part of CR for CR, you can bid to have a mentoring session with him…

As the man behind How To Be a Graphic Designer Without Losing Your Soul and editor of Studio Culture, not to mention being ex-creative director of Intro, Shaughnessy knows a thing or two about running a design studio. Over the past few years he has helped many design studios (including some famous names) to develop their businesses with advice on how to grow, getting new business etc.

In aid of Comic Relief, Adrian has kindly offered to donate half a day’s consultancy time with a CR reader (he may tell some jokes, no promises mind).

In addition to this he has also offered up a full set of Unit Editions books, papers and posters (you can see their printed output to date, here) as part of his auction. So as well as receiving plenty of advice on making the best of your design business, you’ll also get a stack of goodies including books Supergraphics, Studio Culture and the forthcoming Total Design book TD: 63-73, plus Unit newspapers and posters.

The consultancy meeting will take place in central London and CR will not be able to pay for any travel expenses. The auction winner will be responsible for setting up the meeting with Shaughnessy.

Bid for your session with him, here.

CR for CR: Laurence King book bundle

Publishers Laurence King have just given us a big box of books to auction off as part of this week’s CR for CR campaign…

The box contains the following bibliographic gems:

Whose Hair?
The 3D Type Book
Protest Stencil Toolkit
Pentagram Marks
Bibliographic: 100 Classic Graphic Design Books
The Picture Book

Two specially commissioned tote bags from their Tote Bag book
PLUS they’ll also add in a copy of ANY other Laurence King book that’s still in print (under £50)

Not bad eh?

Get bidding for this fantastic box of goodies, here.

CR for CR: More goodies

The latest items to join our list of eBay auctions being sold to raise money for Comic Relief include a Depeche Mode box set, prints from Monocle, James Jarvis and Rob Flowers and a special edition Nintendo DSi

 

All this week we are raising funds for Comic Relief by auctioning design-related items. New today are the following:

A deluxe box set of Depeche Mode’s 2009 album, Sounds Of The Universe

The box contains:

2 piece custom made box with foil blocking.

2 x 84 page hardback books:
The first featuring the lyrics to all the songs from the Sounds Of The Universe sessions accompanied by exclusive photography by Anton Corbijn.
The second featuring exclusive and candid studio photography by Daniel Miller, Ben Hillier, Luke Smith and Ferg Peterkin.

2 exclusive enamel badges

1 poster

5 artcards, sealed in a collectors envelope
(seal broken, as per image below)
1 certificate of authenticity

Label: Mute

Bid for it here:

 

Courtesy of Nintendo, a DSi Pokemon Black and White limited edition bundle with game. Bid for it here

A beautiful print by Japanese illustrator Satoshi Hashimoto courtesy of the good people at Monocle.

Description: Improve your immediate environment with Monocle‘s complete community as seen on page 145 of Monocle’s issue 15. The illustration shows how to create a borough that’s green, clean, and well-connected – as envisioned by the urbanist Alejandro Gutierrez.

Printed A2 size on Monocle magazine’s matt paper, it is in four colours with gold-foil detailing. This is the first in a collection of Monocle prints and is now sold out. Unframed – print only. Bid on it here.

 

Illustrator Spencer Wilson has kindly donated one of his 190mm x 280mm Space Cowboy prints. Space Cowboy is a letterpress planographic print on 300gsm somerset hot press printing paper – printed in three colours: dark blue, red and silver. Limited to an edition of 40. Bid on it here

 

 

They look like sticker packs, but actually we have three A3 size digital prints by artist Rob Flowers, packaged in one-off packaging, the likes of which Mr Flowers won’t be making again…

The one on the left is titled Ice Cream, the middle one is the Money Parade and the one on the right is titled Krampus and is Flowers’ interpretation of the anti-Saint Nicholas from Germanic folklore. We’re auctioning them as one lot on eBay here.

And finally (but there will be more to come soon)

From James Jarvis for (and dontaed by) Art & Sole (thanks Nathan), a stamped and signed artist proof of Sole Inspector, screenprinted on 175gsm Colourplan stock, 700mm x 500mm. Bid on it here

Pick Me Up at Somerset House

London’s graphic art fair is back at Somerset House – Pick Me Up opened today and runs until March 27. This year it will feature exhibited work by 24 artists plus a range of collectives, live printing workshops and lots more cool stuff…

You couldn’t move at Somerset House for boat shoes and beards last night on the Pick Me Up opening night.

Highlights this year include Anthony Burrill who has transported his studio to the exhibition’s largest single space and will be conducting collaborations with a host of imagemakers whilst a roster of guest DJs provide a soundtrack.

Print Club have again set up a live printing room

Various collectives are showing their wares including Nous Vous, Puck, Evening Tweed, Ditto Press, Jaguar Shoes and ThemLot, many of whom are new for this year.

And, of course, there is loads of stuff to buy including this McBess plate

As last year, 24 illustrators (a mix of the new and the familiar) have each been given a space for solo shows.

Exhibitors include Gwénola Carrère who designed our January cover

MVM (aka Magnus Voll Mathiassen)

And Polish illustrator Otecki (aka Wolciech Kolacz)

There are various “after-work” opening sessions of the exhibition at which various events, from live drawing to screenprinting are taking place. For example, tonight, Andrew Rae, James Jarvis and Will Sweeney, amongst others, will be drawing live to a soundtrack provided by musicians and DJs (including CR’s Gav).

For full details and opening hours, visit somersethouse.org.uk.

More images by some of this year’s exhibitors:

From illustrator Andy Rementer‘s long running Techno Tuesday comic

Fatigue, 2010 by McBess

Grouper by recent CR One To Watch, Gwénola Carrère

Untitled, 2010 by Tom Gauld

Of the Blue Colour of the Sky (5 Syllables), 2010 by Stefanie Posavec