The lost Guinness art: a talk at St Bride

Former Guinness brewer and author David Hughes is giving a talk at St Bride Library in London next month on the recently re-discovered ‘lost’ Guinness artwork painted by John Gilroy.

Between 1930 and 1962, Gilroy worked with ad agency S H Benson, producing hundreds of illustrations for some of Guinness’ most iconic campaigns. Many featured animals – lions, ostrich, octopus and rhinos as well as the famous toucan – while others referenced artistic and cultural figures. In 1936, he produced illustrations featuring Nazi imagery for a German distributor, but the posters were never used:

The oil-on-canvas paintings were stored in the S H Benson archive but when the agency closed in 1971, they were lost. Many were bought by a private collector and others were donated to the British Museum and the V&A.

Around 40 years later, Gilroy’s art resurfaced in the US antiques market and since then, around 320 oil paintings have been found. 250 of them are showcased in Gilroy was Good for Guinness – Hughes’ third book on the stout brand’s history.

Most of the artwork featured in the book had not previously been published and many of the illustrations are from rejected campaigns. Hughes will be discussing Gilroy’s work and methods at his talk on St Bride on Tuesday March 4.

The talk will take place at 7.00pm in the Bridewell Hall, St Bride Foundation, Bride Lane, Fleet Street, London EC4Y 8EE.

Tickets cost £15 or £12.50 for Friends of St Bride and concessions are available for students.

For details and to book a place, see stbride.org

Images above (excluding German print) taken from a set of 22 done in 1952 and never used commercially. Titled The Art of Guinness and Old Masters, they were later re-worked by Gilroy to become adverts for Guinness.

All images © David Hughes

Glasgow brewery teams up with School of Art alumni

A new craft beer company launching in Glasgow later this year has commissioned Glasgow School of Art alumni to create illustrations for use on bottles and packaging.

Drygate is a partnership between C&C Group, which owns lager brand Tennent’s, and Scottish craft brewery Williams Bros. The brewery is due to open in the city’s East End in May.

Local agency D8 is designing the company’s identity, and asked GSA students and graduates to create a series of illustrations that could be used to promote the company’s initial range of beers.

 

Alumni were asked to draw on the beers’ flavours and the company’s heritage when creating their designs. 15 designs were shortlisted from those submitted and displayed at a one-day event at Glasgow Print Studio.

Featured work included illustrations by Jack Bedford and Linda Sweenie (top); Emma Houlston:

 

 

Information designer Andrew Park:

 

Illustrator Paul Ryding:

 

 

And a series by Patch Keyes and Good Press bookshop founders Matthew Walkerdine and Jessica Higgins:

 

Visitors were also invited to sample Drygate’s beer and take a look at plans for the brewery’s new site. The company plans to launch a restaurant and visitor’s centre, where people will be able to try making their own craft beer.

“The brand is all about brewing exceptional beer and breaking down the barriers to craft beer making it more accessible to everyone,” explains D8 creative director Adrian Carroll.

Drygate’s identity is still a work in progress but D8 has already released a distinctive logo for the brand. The marque features a zig zag line, which represents the seven peaks in the building’s roof and the German/Nordic translation of Drygate.

“In essence, it means “priest’s path”. One of the things that Drygate mentioned at the beginning of this project was taking people on a journey from the everyday to the exceptional, so the line also represents this journey, which isn’t a straightforward one,” adds Carroll.

Slight tweaks in the Drygate headline font also provide a nod to its location: the crossbar in the ‘A’ represents a walkway that will lead from a roof garden into the main building, explains Carroll. The building’s signage will feature the same logotype, with each letter standing around a metre high.

We’ve yet to see how the illustrations will work in situ but GSA’s alumni have produced some fun and intriguing designs. Three  will be selected from the shortlist to appear on the initial range of products, but Carroll says all of the artists’ work will be used by the brewery in some way.

Behind the scenes at the BAFTAs

Each year, the BAFTAs recruits a different studio to design invites, passes and programmes for its A-list guests as well as posters promoting coverage of the ceremony. This year’s were created by Human After All and illustrated by La Boca

Human After All was founded last year by Danny Miller, Rob Longworth, Alexander Capes and Paul Willoughby – former directors of The Church of London and the team that launched cult magazines Huck and Little White Lies (we wrote a feature on HAA back in May).

In 12 months, the studio has designed print and digital communications for Facebook, Google, YouTube, Adidas and the World Economic Forum, but the BAFTAs is perhaps their most high profile project to date.

The poster

When pitching for the project, the studio recommended a handful of illustrators to produce programme covers and a lead image for posters. La Boca was chosen based on its previous poster designs for Black Swan and King Kong. “They do such iconic, reduced compositions,” says creative director Paul Willoughby. “I first found out about them when I saw the Black Swan poster in 2010 – it was the kind of design where you look at it and think, ‘I wish I’d done that!”

The poster appeared in Tube stations and on London buses and features a spotlight shining through a BAFTA mask onto a small protagonist standing in front of it. The black and gold design is suitably elegant for one of the UK’s most prestigious awards ceremonies, but offers a playful take on traditional BAFTA imagery.

Early concept images featured rich, deep colours with a vintage, disco feel, in a nod to the golden age of cinema, says Willoughby. This would have required four-colour printing, however, and would not have worked so well on tickets, so Human After All opted for a two-colour design with white text in the BAFTA’s official font, Wilford.

“We were really happy when we saw the font – it’s crisp and stylish, and communicates clearly,” says Willoughby.

The tickets

The black, white and gold scheme used on posters was also applied to tickets, partly to avoid confusion among staff checking them in dim lighting. Regular guests received a white and gold invitation and VIPs a black and gold foil one, and each contained a breakdown of the evening’s events and party passes printed on red, purple and green paper. Both tickets and passes were printed on GF Smith stock.

“In previous years, it would be difficult to tell the tickets apart, so we needed the biggest contrast possible,” says creative Evan Lelliot. “In terms of the design, we wanted to create a really easy journey – there’s quite a lot of information to pack in and we wanted to streamline that and create the best user experience we could,” he adds.While the focus was on simplicity, there are some charming added touches, such as an image of the small protagonist from the poster in ticket folds.

 

 

While BAFTA has its own shade of gold, Human After All opted for a standard shade on tickets and passes to ensure maximum opacity. “The BAFTA gold just didn’t look as we’d intended. It also has the same mid tone as the red party passes, so when we tried printing it out you could barely see it,” says Willoughby. Car passes (above) are equally bright, printed on yellow, teal and purple paper to ensure they are visible from afar.

 

The programme

As well as their ticket to the event, each BAFTA guest receives a printed programme featuring editorial on nominated films and actors, an ‘in memoriam’ section acknowledging those who have passed away since last year’s ceremony and a photo essay, shot this year by Dr Andy Gotts.

Programmes are the same inside but as with previous years, they feature one of five covers, each depitcing a nominated film (see previous year’s cover designs here and here). Films selected for this year’s covers were 12 Years a Slave, American Hustle, Philomena, Captain Philips and Gravity.

“Each cover had to speak to the film but in a metaphorical way,” says Willoughby. “Evan and I watched trailers for each, made a list of the iconography in them and sent La Boca a list of words. I didn’t want to steer them in any graphic direction, just set them on the right path with ideas,” he adds.

Covers contain several references to key themes in each film and each uses a different key colour. Together, the whole set makes up a full spectrum, says Willoughby.

The cover designs are also used inside programmes to introduce features on each film, where they are accompanied by headlines arranged in playful compositions that reference the imagery. In the headline for a piece on 12 Years a Slave, for example, the 1 and 2 make up a violin. In another feature on Philomena, words are arranged like a cross in a reference to the film’s religious themes.

“When designing [Huck and Little White Lies], we would spend a lot of time getting images and type to talk to each other,” says Willoughby. “We returned to a lot of techniques we’d refined designing magazines over the years for this project,” he says.

“We wanted everything to communicate the ‘cinimersive theme’ we’d been keen to convey from the start – the headlines, imagery and page furniture all had to offer something extra, a little more involving,” adds Lelliot.

When designing the photo essay, Human After All applied the same playful approach, cropping Gott’s head and shoulders portraits of actors to create extreme close-ups, toying with the idea of how much we really need to see of celebrities to know who they are.

Gotts’ portraits are powerful and present an intimate look at some impressive names. “You can tell he has a big rapport with the people he shoots. His images are very evocative and often, he takes shots you that wouldn’t expect from celebrities of such status,” adds Lelliot.

Human After All’s attention to detail throughout is impressive: all images were treated with the same colour code to ensure they appear vibrant on uncoated paper, pages of the photo essay feature a gold trim for an added sense of luxury, and the in memoriam and listings sections feature varied layouts to ensure readers remain engaged throughout.

Human After All and La Boca’s styles work well together, and the studios have produced a scheme that is fun, creative and carefully executed.

ICA invades Dover Street Market

The ICA has invaded London shopping venue Dover Street Market for the latest instalment in its ‘Off-Site’ series of events. Designed by Julia, the show offers a fascinating look at some rarely seen material from the Institute’s archives.

Dover Street Market now houses luxury clothing and accessories but between 1950 and 1968, it was home to the ICA and is allegedly the birthplace of op art, pop art and brutalist architecture.

The venue hosted some of ICA’s best known shows, including exhibitions by Lucian Freud, Pablo Picasso and Jackson Pollock, and was a regular meeting place of the Independent Group, whose members included Richard Hamilton, Eduardo Paolozzi and the architect Peter Smithson.

The exhibition was launched this week to coincide with a Hamilton retrospective at the ICA and Tate Modern and the release of a new book, Institute of Contemporary Arts: 1946-1968. Until April, each of Dover Street Market’s six floors will feature large scale photographs, posters and imagery produced during the ICA’s 18-year tenure there, including ICA Bulletin covers, Francis Bacon’s first ever show covers and posters for various exhibitions held at the site.

ICA executive director Gregor Muir came up with the idea for the exhibition after discovering an old poster bearing the address 17-18 Dover Street. After exploring the ICA archives, he discovered more ephemera dating back to the institute’s stay there and asked London agency Julia to design an exhibition using the rarely seen material.

As the site is now home to a busy shop, Julia had to work within the existing furniture and layout, but the agency has done a fantastic job of ‘invading’ the space while remaining sensitive to its interior.

“It wasn’t easy at first – the site is already very busy and full of work by a lot of designers, and we were adding another layer of business on top of that,” says Julia co-founder Erwan Lhuissier. “In the end, we think the work we’ve made integrates with the store pretty well, but there were a lot of situations where we had to adapt to suit the existing layout,” he explains.

Key to this was visiting the site with the company responsible for printing the large scale artworks to determine exactly what could be put where, says Lhuissier. “We had to strike that balance between placing the images where they would have maximum impact and hiding some behind furniture to create a kind of narrative through the building,” he says.

Dover Street Market regularly hosts art and design installations, but the ICA’s is the first to take over every floor of the building. “[Dover Street Market and the ICA] pretty much gave us carte blanche, which was nice, and we had a lot of freedom to add extra elements such as an ICA timeline on the staircase, which provides some context for the show,” says Lhuissier. “What’s great is that it appeals to two audiences – the people who have visited Dover Street Market to shop and those who are interested in the ICA,” he adds.

As the show has been launched to tie in with Hamilton’s retrospective, Julia has made references to the artist throughout, such as in the use of black and red graphics, colours which Hamilton often used. ICA shows from the fifties and sixties also provided inspiration for the positioning of images.

“We looked at a lot of shows that were hosted in the space and the artists often used to hang things horizontally, vertically, or from the ceiling. We wanted to reference this and also reflect the idea of an invasion – having things on the ceilings and floors instead of hanging in frames,” adds Lhuissier.

The show is one of several Off-Site events staged by the ICA since last summer. In September, it launched a journey through London’s sub culture in the basement of the Old Selfridges Hotel, which featured 56 vitrines of art, fashion, design and memorabilia produced by London creatives over four decades – you can read our blog post on it here.

The latest show provides a glimpse into a seminal period in the ICA’s history and Julia has done an excellent job of designing the space.

ICA Off-Site is open at Dover Street Market, 17-18 Dover Street, London, W1S 4LT until April 6 – see ica.org.uk for details.

Carphone Warehouse targets Valentine’s Day scrimpers

Carphone Warehouse is targeting frugal lovers this Valentine’s Day with a print ad that doubles as a paper bouquet.

Designed by CHI & Partners, the double page spread can be transformed into a makeshift bunch of flowers in three easy steps and features the strapline ‘Why spend more this Valentine’s Day?’:

It’s the latest instalment in CHI & Partner’s ‘Scrimpers’ campaign for the brand, which aims to cement its position as a value retailer by celebrating ‘the filthy, the frugal and the downright tight’.

The campaign launched last September with a humorous 40-second spot depicting characters engaged in various money-saving antics, from cutting their own hair (with disastrous consequences), to stuffing their handbag full of pastries from a free buffet.

Today’s ad is another great follow-up, and if you’ve yet to buy a gift – or are just too tight to pay for one – you can find it in various national newspapers.

Credits

ECD: Jonathan Burley

Creative direction: Rob Webster & Alexei Berwitz

Copywriting and art direction: James Crosby & Will Cottam

Design: Max Henderson

Design that works: the DBA Effectiveness Awards 2014

Each year the Design Business Association recognises design projects that have a tangible effect on a client’s business through its Design Effectiveness Awards. The latest winners were announced last night with the Grand Prix going to B&B Studio for the healthy snack brand Bear.

According to the DBA, B&B Studio‘s work for client Urban Fresh Foods has helped the brand see sales rise from £0 to £6.4 million in three years. In 2012, Bear sold 30 million portions of its fruity snacks. B&B were involved at every stage, from initial naming and brand creaton to packaging the brand’s latest products.

 

Other major award winners include WPA Pinfold and its client Croots which won a Gold. Croots is an upmarket country sports brand making gun cases, bags and accessories.

 

The company was originally known as AC Supplies. WPA Pinfold renamed it and rebranded it, splitting the product range into City and Country and playing up its English-made heritage and quality (case study here).

The effect was, apparently a massive 17,963% increase in retail sales (which makes us wonder what level sales must have been at before) and export growth of 250%.

 

 

 

In the Design For Society category (recognising design that has impacted people’s lives for the better) The Team and the Gas Safe Register won Gold for the Silent Killer campaign. The Team created a brand from scratch when in 2008 the Health and Safety Executive gave Capita the contract to run the UK’s new gas registration scheme to replace CORGI. According to the DBA, the new Register has “increased the number of higher risk households having annual gas safety checks by a staggering 300%, helping to avoid the devastating and potentially life-threatening effects of unsafe gas work.”

 

Another interesting award winner was the Science Museum. Universal Design Studio and Barbery Osgerby’s Map were given a Gold for their Fundraiser Desk. This spectacular shiny installation helped the Museum increase donations by 80%.

According to the case study “While studying visitors’ movements, Universal Design Studio and MAP identified an excess of pathways that often caused customers to bypass both the museum’s fundraisers and its information desk. Universal Design Studio and MAP streamlined the reception hall and incorporated a two-stage entry system with bespoke desk installations featuring mirror-polished stainless steel in keeping with their contemporary surroundings.
As a result, visitors approached the fundraising desk before passing through to a central information point.” At that point, museum staff ask visitors if they would like to make a donation whereas before, the only mechanism to donate as by putting money into clear plastic receptacles whihc, of course, many people ignored.

 

Elmwood was the most awarded agency for the fifth year, winning six awards on the night, including a Gold for Gressingham Duck.

See a full list of the winners and case studies here

 

J&B releases tattooed whisky bottles

We’ve seen many an unusual piece of packaging at CR towers – but Scotch Whisky brand J&B’s latest range of bottles may be the strangest yet.

The brand recently released 25 bottles of its finest blend wrapped in a fleshy latex skin. Each ‘skin’ was delicately tattooed by SM Bousille, owner of Paris tattoo parlour Le Sphinx.

The concept was devised by French design studio Button Button as an unusual way to commemorate J&B’s heritage. The product was launched in the mid eighteenth century by London wine merchant Justerini & Brooks, at a time when tattoos were becoming popular with UK sailors, says the agency. In 1862, the Prince of Wales became the first monarch to receive one and the trend for tattoos spread throughout Europe.

It took Bousille around 20 hours to tattoo each bottle, and each one features the same design. The latex skins used had to be slim enough to respect the bottle’s shape yet strong enough to withstand being hit with Bousille’s needle. A flesh colour was chosen for added authenticity and intrigue, says Button Button.

Bottles were packaged in a black silk screened box and sold at Paris’ Publicis Drugstore and L’eclaireur rue Herold. Priced at 150 Euros each, they sold out within a week.

There’s something a little unsettling about these eerily realistic skins, but it’s certainly a novel approach to packaging. Button Button says there are no immediate plans to release any more, but the company is interested in collaborating with a different tattoo artist in another country. And in case you’re still intrigued, here’s a video on how it was done:

MuirMcNeil release four new typeface systems

Four new geometric typefaces from Paul McNeil and Hamish Muir’s studio are supported by a series of bold, large-format posters and new-look website…

The two designers founded MuirMcNeil in 2010 – McNeil, a type designer and course leader of the MA in Contemporary Typographic Media at the London College of Communication; Muir, well known for his work as co-founder of 8vo (and co-editor of its type journal, Octavo), and now art director of digital publisher, Outcast Editions.

The four new typefaces – Panopticon, Intersect, Nine and Interact – continue the design approach that the studio explored in its ThreeSix optical/geometric type system, which in 2011 won a Premier Award from The International Society of Typographic Designers.

As geometric designs the typefaces can, say MuirMcNeil, function as the building blocks of both page and screen architectures. “The attributes of each type system, such as contours, set width, spacing and weight, are modulated consistently in calibrated steps,” they say, “allowing the user precise control of typographic arrangements, spaces or sequences.

“In addition, working with any MuirMcNeil type system in bitmap, vector or moving image software, the user is able to overlay selected component forms either in precise registration or in easily calculated positional offsets. Outlines, tints, colours, textures, patterns, transparencies or transitions can subsequently be applied as appropriate.”

Below, MuirMcNeil explain the thinking behind each of the four new faces, which have already spawned some rather fine day-glo posters.

The site muirmcneil.com has also been relaunched in time for the new projects, with both typeface licenses and posters (each measuring 100 x 70 cm) available to purchase.

Interact (poster shown, top of post)

Interact 06 / 18 shown in sample

“Interact was originally designed by 8vo in 1994 as a system of grid-based bitmap typefaces for screen use in four fixed sizes,” say the studio. “Taking as a starting point the optical characteristics of the stroke junctions in Wim Crouwel’s ‘vormgevers’ lettering of 1968, Interact employs horizontal and vertical lines as well as forty-five degree pixel steps to modulate a set of stroke junctions which have the effect of optically rounding the letterforms. Interact has been extensively expanded and revised as a system of 23 typefaces in four scaleable groups with a comprehensive range of 12 calibrated weights. Interact typefaces follow a mathematical progression in which type sizes are scaled in exact proportion to a constant pixel resolution.”

 

Intersect

Intersect A / 4-4 shown in sample

“Intersect is a geometric bitmap type system which aims to subvert the idea of typographic weight,” say MuirMcNeil. “Where traditional type designs can only provide a binary contrast of positive and negative, or form and counterform, Intersect exceeds this limitation by emulating a successive range of linear screens to give the illusion of tonal densities within the body of the letterform. The Intersect system is available in two alternative variants, analogous to light and bold, with each featuring16  screen patterns and tones mapped onto the same grid. Intersect typefaces can be assembled in multiple layers, providing thousands of possible visual permutations.”

 

Panopticon

Panopticon A / 10 shown in sample

“Named after a form of polygonal building devised in the 18th-century by Jeremy Bentham to facilitate controlled and concealed viewpoints, Panopticon is a system of three-dimensional display typefaces in four orthographic projections,” the studio explains. “Each typeface projection is subdivided into four separate sub-component layers which are designed to interlock with one another precisely, offering a wide range of possible visual interactions.”

 

Nine

Nine Metric / 162 shown in sample

“Nine is a geometric type system available in both varispaced and monospaced versions – Nine Metric and Nine Mono,” say MuirMcNeil. “Although both Nine versions have been generated within strict geometric constraints they are sufficiently robust for use in either extended text settings or display. Both typefaces have nine weights whose strokes align on a central horizontal and vertical axis onto which weight is added incrementally. In this way, width, stroke, cap-height, x-height, ascent and descent are modulated vertically and horizontally on a fixed grid. The grid also determines consistent character and word spacing throughout.”

More details at muirmcneil.com.

Arjowiggins’ creative papers promo

Paris-based designer Julian Douek and marketing agency Bloomeo have collaborated on a beautifully produced box set promoting Arjowiggins’ new range of creative papers.

The limited edition package contains two hardback books with debossed covers: one provides a look at the company and its origins – it was founded in the 18th century and has mills in the UK, Spain, France and Brazil – and the other contains samples of 61 papers from the new range.

The brand book also contains several shots of creative projects made using Arjowiggins paper. It features work by Norwegian agency Grandpeople, Swedish agency BVD, set designer Gary Card and French studio Creative Sweatshop.

 

In addition to the box set, Parisian agency Some/Things recently produced a short brand film documenting the production process at an Arjowiggins mill. Directed by Monika Bielskyte, it’s a fascinating insight into the craft, skill and machinery involved in making creative papers.

 

 

Design Indaba 2014

Global creative conference Design Indaba returns to Cape Town on February 26. The line-up so far is impressive, with talks from Thomas Heatherwick, Stefan Sagmeister, Experimental Jetset and photographer David Goldblatt…

The three-day conference turns 20 this year and has earned a reputation as one of the world’s biggest creative events, covering graphics, digital media and architecture as well as fashion, product and interior design.The full programme is yet to be released but 40 speakers have been announced so far.

 

Caitlin and I by Zanele Muholi. Image courtesy of Muholi and Stevenson Johannesburg/Cape Town


Man building his house, Marselle Township, Kenton-on-sea, shot by David Goldblatt.

 

They include South African photographers David Goldblatt, Nandipha Mntambo and Zanele Muholi. Muholi’s latest photography series, Of Love and Loss, is a collection of portraits capturing weddings among South Africa’s black LGBT community, on display in Johannesburg from February 14 until April 4.

There is a strong presence from graphics, branding and media firms, too, with speakers from Europe, Australasia and the Americas.

 

Experimental Jetset’s identity for the Whitney Museum and exhibition design for The Printed Book: A Visual History


Amsterdam Studio Experimental Jetset will be discussing their work alongside Sagmeister, who is based in New York; Dean Poole, co-founder and creative director of Auckland studio Alt Group; Tom Hulme, design director at London firm IDEO, Sao Paulo-based AlmapBBDO creative director Marcello Serpa and Wolf Ollins London’s managing director, Ije Nwokorie.

 

New Zealand Opera branding & New Zealand New Music packaging by Alt Group


The Happy Show and Standard Charter commercial by Stefan Sagmeister


Creatives attending from other sectors include fashion designer Henrik Vibskov, currently the subject of an exhibition at Helsinki’s Design Museum, Heatherwick and Dutch interior design duo Scholten & Baijings. A selection of graduates from leading design schools will also be presenting their work Pecha Kucha style.

 

Story Corps, a local storytelling project devised by New York media design firm Local Projects. Founder Jake Barton will be speaking at this year’s Design Indaba

UK Pavilion at the Shanghai Expo and new look London buses designed by Thomas Heatherwick. Image: Iwan Baan


The conference ends on February 28 and is immediately followed by a South African design Expo running until March 2, showcasing work from emerging creatives and local artists and makers. Music and film programmes run alongside both events with 38 gigs over two nights, and 10 film premieres between February 21 and March 2.

Fore more information or to book tickets, see designindaba.com