Oh, London

Unless you’ve been sleeping under a stone for the last few weeks, you’ll have struggled to ignore the fact that Our Great City of London (or the Greater London Authority and its Mayor, to be precise) have decided the time is ripe for a re-brand. It’s been holding a highly controversial public tender – with the Olympics looming, it seems there’s a desire for a unified visual approach for the city.

The whole ‘brand’ for London issue was probably kicked off by the various ‘ON’ variants introduced by previous Mayor Ken Livingston. Which was then confused further by Visit London’s own variant on the theme (they’re the tourist ‘bit’, in case you’re wondering).

In the early noughties there was meant to be an overarching ‘brand idea’ (courtesy of Interbrand) which became known as ‘London Unlimited’ and involved some fairly standard stock shots and slightly dodgy kaleidoscope graphics that no-one wanted to use. So no-one did.

In the meantime, Film London was done, Visit London was done by Wolff Olins

…and we at johnson banks and Circus did the inward investment arm which was re-named Think London.

Put all the elements together, and yes they were disparate. And a bit confusing. So another attempt was made in 2006/7, this time by Wolff Olins, to bring the ‘essence’ of London together, and a thought based on ‘London: Planet City’ was presented, but never adopted.

In the meantime, Visit London (courtesy of Saffron) adopted some nicely centred Akzidenz (as you do), and apparently tried and failed to persuade the other players to adopt the same livery. Maybe they were asking ‘why Akzidenz?’, who knows.

Step back from London (and typography) for a minute and you can understand why one of the world’s greatest cities would want a coherent, strong, central brand. After all, look what Amsterdam did – they removed 55 separate department logos and replaced it all with the three crosses of the city flag.

Very nicely done. A round of applause for our orange friends, and their designers, Thonik. (Although it was almost immediately confused by this I Amsterdam work, but that’s besides the point).

Just as ‘I love New York’ will continually complicate any attempt by New York to rebrand (ie there’s a famous symbol there that isn’t going away), any attempt by ‘London’ to change its spots faces an immovable, immutable object with a century old back-story – the London Transport Roundel. No-one with any brains is going to change that. It sums up ‘Transport in London’, yes, but it currently sums up ‘London’ as well.

Add to that the furore concerning the London Olympic logo, and any attempt to draw those nice, neat, clean up slides that brand consultants like to do is immediately buggered.

You can propose all manner of smart symbolic devices to draw together parts of the equation, but some significant parts aren’t going to re-brand. Cue messy diagram.

Anyway, back to the pitch. The bit that’s got everyone talking is that the GLA, in their own sweet way wanted people to wade through a massive tender questionnaire, write some pithy words on the issues, and oh, yes, chuck a few scribbles in while you’re at it.

The legal, ISO-thirty-three-thousand-and-thirty-one tender stuff in current UK tenders is tricky enough. Add in the ‘how multi-racial is your workforce’ questions, then the  ‘please tell us the sexual preferences of your designers’ stuff and tempers start to fray and evenings lengthen. But apart from assessing exactly what sexual habits have to do with logo-design, anyone left with an ounce of self-esteem is left with a very ethical conundrum – ‘yes I want to have a shot at London’s logo, but do I really want to be giving ideas away for free?’

At johnson banks, our route through these tricky waters was to write the obligatory pithy document, but rather than show any designs per se, we showed a few brief diagrams then concluded that actually, perhaps they should consider this?


(Yes, of course, we’re being biased, but we’re always being told it would make a great logo for the city so we thought we’d propose it).

Unsurprisingly this, er, single-minded approach has gone down like a proverbial lead balloon, and no we haven’t been asked to go any further. No surprise there then. Several notable figures such as Martin Lambie-Nairn have already denounced the whole thing, and many people have rightly queried whether chucking a few hasty scribbles in a document is really the right way to go about this, or indeed even remotely professional.

One brave/reckless/misguided/inspired (choose your own adjective) approach came from Moving Brands who set up a public website for this public tender. They’ve also been shown the door, which, considering the amount of work they did, was probably quite gutting.

The issue here isn’t so much who will be selected (the pain of the process means only the larger groups have the firepower to get through the tender requirements), the issue is what will be chosen. We know that the London Olympic bid logo free pitch was a fatally flawed process: remember, from 1100 applicants that included this… 

…they could only choose this.


The ‘real’ 2012 involved proper presentations from proper companies, but there seems to be a feeling at the GLA that someone somewhere got bounced into the final Olympics logo, and the hoo-hah that came with its launch was perhaps undesirable.There’s a view that this time around, real Londoners should be involved, or at least have a say.

How the ‘public engagement’ part of this project will manifest itself is yet to be seen. Any attempt at further ‘free’ or ‘public’ designs will only result in more mockery and/or accusations of crowd-sourcing on the grandest of scales. Only the briefest of skims through the entries so far to Moving Brands self-initiated competition reveals just how scary design can get when placed in the hands of the public.

What can we conclude from this? That buying big design projects in this country continues to be completely inept? Maybe. That the chances of London getting a decent logo are pretty slim? Perhaps. That London already has its unofficial logo, and that’s the famous roundel? Probably.

Maybe we’ll get a logo straight out of ‘brushstroke central’, the universally accepted design approach for tourist brands.

But here’s the best bit. When is the logo needed for?

The first of November.

So that’s 7 weeks to consult, engage the public, design and implement a highly controversial brand that will have to co-exist with the TfL roundel and the Olympic mark, whilst gluing together all the other, disparate organisations? Oh, London, what have you done…

 

MIchael Johnson is design director of johnson banks. This article was first published on the johnson banks blog, Thought for the Week. More here

The American school of rock

In her film, American Artifact, New York-based director Merle Becker charts the history of one of the true American artforms: the rock music poster. Inspired by the current resurgence in gig poster printing in the US, Becker sets off to talk to several of the leading practitioners; from the now legendary figures who made their name in the nascent scene of the 1960s, through the Xerox-based DIY generation, to the contemporary artists who are taking traditional craft skills into the digital age.

Read the full article (from August’s CR) here

And here’s the trailer

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CR graduate show at Mother

Our very own graduate show, featuring work from the six creative talents profiled in the current issue, has just opened at the Mother agency in London. Why not take Tom Lovell’s advice (shown) and cheer youself up by popping in…

The show is open to the public from 2pm until 5pm on weekdays until next Thursday, 10 September. The work is displayed in the foyer of Mother – in their appropriately named Downstairs at Mother space.

We’ve just had a quick look round at the newly installed work.

Alongside Lovell’s graphic cri de coeur, Mark Boardman (a graduate of University College Falmouth) is showing several of his book covers and posters, including some of his fantastic original paintings:

James Callahan and Joe Kiers, who met at the University of Leeds, have gone a step further and installed themselves in the exhibition (well, some handsome replicas anyway). Both are being sustained in their quest to stick around in the industry through large quantities of Pepsi (see top)…

Here they are close up. Just noticed the wall-mounted catheter – something for Dragon’s Den?

Tomomi Sayuda (a graduate of London College of Communication) has installed her brilliant iBum in the space, too. It’s a chair that, when sat upon, takes a scan of the sitter’s behind, then provides a colour printout for them to take away. (The sign kindly notifies potential bum-copiers that demonstrations will take place between 3pm and 5pm).

Sayuda has also brought her sound sculpture, Life Tree, to the show as well (you place the eggs on the branches to make the sounds):

Ravensbourne graduate Eilin Bergum is displaying a large selection of her tactile pieces (in which there are quiffs aplenty) in the gallery space:

And, finally, Kingston University’s Matt Robinson and Tom Wrigglesworth are showing their HP Workstation film – which you can view online, here – as a projection onto one of the gallery’s walls.

The projector will be up and running by now; these headphones were, temptingly, hanging by in readiness…

CR subscribers can see more of each of the graduate’s work in their CR profiles, linked below, and of course, on their own websites.

Tom Lovelllovelldesign.co.uk

Mark Boardman – mark-boardman.com

James Callahan and Joe Kiersjamesandjoe.co.uk

Tomomi Sayudatomomisayuda.com

Eilin Bergumeilinbergum.com

Matt Robinson and Tom Wrigglesworthmatthewrobinson.co.uk, tomwrigglesworth.com

Mother London is based at the Biscuit Building, 10 Redchurch Street, London, E2 7DD. The gallery of graduate work is open 2pm to 5pm on weekdays until 10 September

It’s Nice That issue 2

Pre-order the second printed installment of great creative work selected by the It’s Nice That boys and you’ll get a lovely Rob Ryan print thrown in as well (detail shown). Issue two features a huge range of work that INT has featured on its website from UVA, George Hardie, Sam Messenger, and Wilfrid Wood…

A few spreads from the second issue of It’s Nice That:

And the complete Ryan screenprint in all its glory, which will be dispatched with your copy of It’s Nice That 2, if you order before midnight on 30 September (£10). The print measures 260mm x 195mm.

More details on It’s Nice That 2 are here

Pre-orders will be dispatched on the week commencing 28 September
Printed by PUSH 
Paper by Fenner 
Designed by It’s Nice That in collaboration with Joseph Burrin

The best way to show off?

We’re all about the graduates here at CR at the moment: the current issue is devoted to them, their work and their hopes and fears for the future while our current Question of the Week asks what they still need to learn.

But we also wanted to draw your attention to two more grad-related pieces from our August issue, now available online.

In the first, Michael Johnson questions the role of the degree show: “The ‘old way’ has been under pressure from all sides with the advent of multi-college shows like D&AD’s New Blood (in the UK), the rise of the digital degree show, or online portfolios of students’ work. Bit by bit the whole idea of an analogue show at all is being called into question.,” he writes. Read the whole piece here

Meanwhile, our new-ish contributor, James McNulty (who is a senior creative at a top London ad agency writing under a pseudonym) argues that creatives should ditch their black case and laminates in favour of a digital book. “If you haven’t made the leap yet, and are wondering whether you should do so, there’s a very simple answer. Yes. Immediately, if not sooner. Consider this: despite growing up in an age when the most advanced piece of kit in an agency was the door handle, today’s creative directors have gone digital-crazy. They know what the future looks like, and your portfolio needs to brand you as the team who can bring it to them.”

Read the whole piece here

Question of the Week 01.09.09

Tying in with our current graduate issue, our latest QoTW asks what kind of things students need to bring to the workplace that they might not have learned in college…

So you get your degree, you have a successful show and a portfolio of great work. The creative world’s your oyster. But what else will you need to get to the next step?

Graduates sometimes bemoan the lack of ‘real world’ skills that they’re able to pick up in education – while studios are often surprised at how unprepared their student intake is for working life.

What can gradutes do to improve the transition to paid work, be it within a studio environment, in an agency, or setting out on their own?

Is having a website important to get your work out there, or does a well produced CV still impress the most? How should you email people for jobs, or arrange meetings?

Is developing one’s personal skills a priority for the workplace? Does appearance still matter?

There’s a lot to bear in mind before graduates set foot in the creative industry – and we want to know what advice you might have to make that path a little easier and, hopefully, more productive.

Question of the Week is produced in partnership with MajorPlayers

 

 

 

 

Alex Holdens Reimagined Choking Victim Poster Goes Down Easy

choking closeup.jpgSince its last redesign more than a decade ago, the government-issued “Choking Victim” poster has adorned the walls of New York City restaurants with scenes of a faceless duo safely performing the Heimlich maneuver in a Constructivist swirl of step-by-step instructions on “how to dislodge food from a choking person.” Brooklyn artist Alex Holden took it upon himself to freshen up the ubiquitous poster, softening the didactic graphics and primary colors with a comic strip-style take in a soothing blue and white palette. His reimagined “Choking Victim” poster contains all the same life-saving information but sets the choking scene at a beachside resort, where members of the upscale crowd (one collapsed, one standing and wearing a fedora) escape death among the palm trees and festive party lanterns. Holden’s poster has already been adopted by a few more aesthetically astute restaurateurs, who find his version much easier to swallow. Here’s a look at the full poster:

continued…

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

The ever-evolving catalogue

 

An unusual show is currently taking place at the Jerwood Space in London: three artists have taken over the gallery and, starting from nothing, have been building an exhibition over the past month. The catalogue for the show, designed by The Partners, is similarly experimental…

 

 

Filmmaker Steven Eastwood, sculptor Jock Mooney and painter Mia Taylor are all working at Jerwood in Laboratory, exposing their art practice to visitors. In order to reflect the unpredictable nature of the show The Partners have created a catalogue that also evolves daily, and neatly combines print with digital media.

 

 

The catalogue uses content from the Laboratory blog, where the artists, curator, resident writer, photographer and designers all post updates on the exhibition. Each post on the blog is printed out and then added to the catalogue that is on show at the gallery for visitors to read. As each blog post prints out at a different size, no two pages in the catalogue are alike.

 

 

This is the second time that The Partners have worked with the Jerwood:  they created a make-it-yourself catalogue for last year’s Jerwood Show, which featured in the CR Annual. Laboratory is on show at the Jerwood Space until Sunday, but the catalogue will continue to be added to in the days following its closure, documenting the artists’ reflections on the experience. Sixty copies of it will then be packaged as a limited edition run, and people will have the opportunity to sign up for a copy via the blog. A film showing the catalogue so far is shown below.

 

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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

Perpenduum turns two

I know it’s been quiet on the Perpenduum front for a bit but it’s only because we’ve been so busy that we’ve even forgotten our birthday! Perpenduum was registered two years ago on August 21st, 2007.


Birthday Cake

(Birthday Cake from Andreas’ Flickr photostream. Take a look at his fantastic online portfolio. Particularly liking his video showing the most used words in the Billboard Top 5 during the years of each presidential administration from 1950 to 2006. He’s incredibly talented and a real Gentleman.)