New Designers 2012: illustration

The visual communications part of New Designers 2012 presents a vast haul of graduate illustration, graphics and multimedia work. For this post on some of CR’s illustration favourites, I’ve included images of work exhibited by 11 students, plus some further highlights from each of their online portfolios…

From the University of Hertfordshire, Sigrid Rødli’s Encyclopedia of Legendary Monsters is a lovely ABC book of mythical beasts from different cultures, including the yeti (show above), the ‘finman’ and ‘leviathan’, below.

Rødli’s fascination with myths and legends also extends making illustrations for the Grimm fairytales. Here are two images from his web portfolio: Cat-skin and Briar Rose. Rødli’s work can be seen at cargocollective.com/sigridrodli and sigridrodli.tumblr.com.

Already clearly a talented comic book artist, Issac Lenkiewicz’s work takes a refreshing trip into the strange and wonderful. A graduate of Plymouth College of Art’s illustration course, his Night of the Giants strip about fighting behemoths (below, in black and white) shows some great penmanship and humour; while another printed comic on display depicts the adventures of a series of root vegetables (below in blue).

Lenkiewicz has some earlier images from his fighting giants comic up on isaaclenkiewicz.blogspot.co.uk. Here are two colour pages:

He also worked with Nobrow and Luke Pearson on this great poster for last year’s Comica Festival (detail below the poster). More giants, gremlins, fighting and madness etc at isaaclenkiewicz.blogspot.co.uk.

A slight change of tack with the work of fellow Plymouth College of Art graduate, Kelly Walton. I really liked her watercolour illustrations which feature three mischievous girls on the hunt for strawberries (they use bows and arrows to get the fruit).

If there is one thing that New Designers does suffer from this year, it’s a glut of rather similar folksy illustration, but what I liked about Walton’s style was the discernible glint in the eyes of the characters. Cute they may be, but there’s something a little disconcerting about them, too, which made me want to look through the great wordless comic, The Straubs, that Walton has on display (spread below, followed by the single giclée print, Victory).

Here’s another page from the comic, from her portfolio up at cargocollective.com/kellywalton, and a picture from her Wicked Annabella series. Walton also shows work at kellywalton.tumblr.com.

To Cambridge School of Art now (which overall has an excellent stand this year) and here’s one of Tim Parker’s prints from his Wolf God series up on display, followed by a detail.

Parker seems to like referencing four legged friends in his work (lupine or canine). Here’s a nice series from his site, timparkerillustration.com, which brilliantly puts dogs in various office party situations. Down boy! (See also timmydraws.tumblr.com.)

Also graduating Cambridge School of Art is Ines Vilares who displayed a series of atmospheric prints based on German author Judith Hermann’s 2011 novel, Alice.

Vilares’ website is at inesvilares.com and she also blogs at ivilaresillustration.blogspot.co.uk. From there, here’s an intriguing single print entitled Carrying the Body, one of a series of 12 linocuts inspired by the Gabriel Garcia Marquez story, The Handsomest Drowned Man In The World, which is told from the viewpoint of the drowned man.

Illustrator and printmaker Andrew Berwick of Glyndwr University showed how important it is to realise and produce a project well. His illustrated story, The Bear and The Salmon, is beautifully printed in this unusually wide format, which gives the work inside (four pages shown in the frame) a real sense of dynamism and movement.

 

And from his site at andrewberwick.co.uk here’s Berwick’s poster for Noah & The Whale’s album, Last Night on Earth, which makes use of an interesting crop of said marine mammal. The image is completed when the vinyl record is pulled half-way out of the sleeve of the album itself, see below. Nice).

From University College Falmouth, Josh Hurley’s spiralling screenprints which he solds at gigs by Touché Amoré (below left) and MewithoutYou (right) certainly caught the eye. Details taken from joshhurley.co.uk.

And like an analogue Olafur Eliasson, Hurley’s print for a screening of Danny Boyle’s film, Sunshine, worked a treat, with the mess and blotches of the print production really adding something to the finished work. Shown below that pieces are some self-promotional prints. Hurley also blogs at joshhurleyillustration.blogspot.co.uk.

The range of styles coming out of University College Falmouth is really impressive – and the work of two other students stood out for me: the bizarre, highly detailed drawings of Sam Brookes, and the more expressive, visceral imagery that Sam Kerwin has on show. Brookes’ drawings really are something to behold – a kind of Pieter Brueghel the Elder meets psychedelia, with extra nightmares. Here are two:

On Brookes’ site, sfbrookesillustration.com, some sketchbook work offers clues to the gestation of some of these images, and there are also some examples of perhaps a more straight forward approach to portraiture (though these are strange enough).

As a contrast, Sam Kerwin’s work is bold, aggressive and painterly – but nonetheless has a real sense of mystery, too. These schoolboys, if that’s what they are, look like exam season may have just got the better of them.

The above image, taken from Brookes’ portfolio on samkerwin.co.uk features in a large collection of work by the illustrator as part of the Falmouth stand (see below).

Here’s another shot of Brookes’ wall.

And here’s an illustration inspired by Sedna, the Inuit creation myth, and (below that) a lovely image from Kerwin’s sketchbook.

From Teeside University, a series of illustrations by Selma Roberts for Angela Carter’s short story collection, The Bloody Chamber, made good use or tracing paper to convey the notion of a ‘secret’ contained within each story, and each image. Here are two from the collection.

And the other…

Roberts also details her cover design for One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest on her website, which was created for the Penguin Design Award (lots of students have work from this brief on show at New Designers). Her idea depicts main character McMurphy’s eye after his lobotomy at the end of the novel, while other illustrations represent found objects, each relevant to the story and character.

Finally, I was really impressed by Matt Clixby’s work, which ably covers a real range of disciplines, styles, and techniques. He has this portrait hanging as part of the Nottingham Trent University stand, and some other examples from the series in his portfolio (show below, grabbed from his website).

Clixby’s poster work is also very strong. As well as concert posters (one for a Music Exchange Live event with a “Northern Soul coat of arms”, and one for a White Hills gig, shown below); he is also showing a series of self-promotional pieces that apply the tone of mid-century government public information posters to modern day internet security issues.

His poster documenting all the chemicals put into and onto his body over a given morning was also really interesting, and well conceived.

Clixby also has a video on display, a piece made for XL Records using the track, Home, by Gil Scott Heron and Jamie XX. On his site at studiodeathray.com, Clixby explains that the brief was to create a visual holding page for XL Records’ YouTube channel, which would allow high quality music videos to be uploaded by the record company. The video, made with Dan Burns, was created using a high powered microscope and traditional stop motion techniques. Apparently they completed it in two days.

New Designers is a huge show, so the above – while it represents my own favourite pieces of work from this year’s exhibitors – is only a fraction of the amount of work on display. New Designers is open to the public until Saturday July 7 at the Business Design Centre in Islington in London. More details at newdesigners.com.

Saying more with less

How can you say the most with the least? It’s a perpetual challenge for everyone in visual communications and one explored in a new show based on a workshop by Mesa & Cadeira and Anthony Burrill

 

Kemistry Gallery installation. Photography: Robert Charbonnet

 

Set up by Francesca Wade and Barbara Soalheiro, São Paulo-based Mesa & Cadeira (Table & Chair in Portuguese)  describes itself as “a company that believes in learning through doing. We organise workshops in which participants sit together at a table and work on a real project. At the head of the table is someone who’s brilliant at his/her field.” The idea is that attendees learn by doing, by seeing how a prominent person in a particular field solves problems, why they choose certain paths and how they come up with ideas.

Previously, they have organised such workshops with the late Andy Cameron and Its Nice That. Workshops typically last 20 hours and cost 1,950 Brazilian Reais (about £600).

In March, Anthony Burrill was invited to lead a six-day Mesa & Cadeira workshop in São Paulo and attended by 12 local designers. Together, the group worked on a simple brief: to produce a collection of phrases that best expressed their individual life philosophy.

 

Barbara Soalheiro (l) and Francesca Wade installing the Kemistry Gallery show

 

Those phrases were then transformed by the group into a series of posters using typography inspired by the vernacular design of the city (see below). The posters have now been used to create an installation at London’s Kemistry Gallery. An edition of the posters will also be available to buy from the gallery.

 

 

From the São Paulo workshop


Close-up of the Kemistry Gallery show

 

L to R: Francesca Wade, Anthony Burrill, Barbara Soalheiro and Iki

 

Anthony Burrill – Mesa & Cadeira: How to say the most with the least is at the Kemistry Gallery, 43 Charlotte Road, London EC2 from July 5 until July 28. Francesca Wade and Barbara Soalheiro from Mesa & Cadeira will be doing a talk on the project with Burrill on July 12 (details here).

 

 

 

 

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CR in Print
The July issue of Creative Review features a piece exploring the past and future of the dingbat. Plus a look at the potential of paper electronics and printed apps, how a new generation of documentary filmmakers is making use of the web, current logo trends, a review of MoMA New York’s group show on art and type, thoughts on how design may help save Greece and much more. Also, in Monograph this month we showcase a host of rejected design work put together by two Kingston students.

Please note, CR is no longer stocked in WH Smith high street stores (although it can still be found in WH Smith travel branches at stations and airports). If you cannot find a copy of CR in your town, your independent newsagent can order it for you or you can search for your nearest stockist here. Alternatively, email Laura McQueen (laura.mcqueen@centaur.co.uk) or call her on 020 7970 4878 to buy a copy direct from us. Based outside the UK? Simply call +44(0)207 292 3703 to find your nearest stockist. Better yet, subscribe to CR for a year here and

Talent-spotters: De Montfort

Our guest talent-spotter, Paul Ross, visited Leicester’s De Montfort degree show, which included some great pieces of illustration work, as well as an interesting use of sculpture.

Beginning my tour in Graphic Design & Illustration, I was immediately taken by Chris Goodson’s work. The bold linocuts and muted colours really stood out, particularly in his visualization of a child’s pondering on old wives tales. Ingeniously compelling!
goodsonillustration.blogspot.co.uk

Alisia Bufano’s designs for some of Edgar Allan Poe’s works were also a pleasure to see in this part of the show. There’s a beautiful depth and simplicity in the ‘cut out’ approach to these pieces, and the shadows they cast set the tone just right for gothic fiction.
alisiagazelle.tumblr.com

Finally in this area, it was Sarah Nash’s work that caught my eye. The Evolution of Kodak (a campaign to celebrate the history of the brand and help sell 35mm film) shows her versatility, and great attention to detail in the research and execution.
sarahnash.webs.com

You might find it interesting that nothing particularly digital made its way into my choice of designers/ illustrators. I can only say that from working in a Digital Design Agency it was refreshing to see work that embraced the more traditional, mechanical approach to producing the work.

Moving through the Photography show, it was Archit Patel’s work that stood out for me. The staged cinematic stills, based on true crimes, are very evocative and atmospheric. But I would have really liked to have seen them presented on a larger scale.
flickr.com/photos/sacredsoul

In the Fine Art Show, Lindsey Archer’s work exploring 3 dimensional space and architecture was very refreshing. Using card and paper these were displayed as wall and floor pieces.

Samantha Stubbs’ large scale collage portraits of celebrities dominated the room with their visceral nature.

Megan McMullen’s versatile paintings emphasised colour and perspective, and created a subtle tension and narrative.

Sculpture was also represented by Jessica Castle’s wall pieces made of discarded cardboard packaging. These organic forms seemed to grow out of the wall like writhing giant paper mache.

Last but not least Nigel Oldman’s work in the Design Crafts Show had me mesmerized. Sadly the photo doesn’t do his kinetic sculpture justice. The metal blades scissor, causing the wooden spheres to gracefully rise and fall creating a hypnotic feeling of weightlessness; fantastic!
nigeloldman.co.uk

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Read in-depth features and analysis plus exclusive iPad-only content in the Creative Review iPad App. Longer, more in-depth features than we run on the blog, portfolios of great, full-screen images and hi-res video. If the blog is about news, comment and debate, the iPad is about inspiration, viewing and reading. As well as providing exclusive, iPad-only content, the app will also update with new content throughout each month. Try a free sample issue here

 

 

CR in Print
The July issue of Creative Review features a piece exploring the past and future of the dingbat. Plus a look at the potential of paper electronics and printed apps, how a new generation of documentary filmmakers is making use of the web, current logo trends, a review of MoMA New York’s group show on art and type, thoughts on how design may help save Greece and much more. Also, in Monograph this month we showcase a host of rejected design work put together by two Kingston students.

Please note, CR is no longer stocked in WH Smith high street stores (although it can still be found in WH Smith travel branches at stations and airports). If you cannot find a copy of CR in your town, your independent newsagent can order it for you or you can search for your nearest stockist here. Alternatively, email Laura McQueen (laura.mcqueen@centaur.co.uk) or call her on 020 7970 4878 to buy a copy direct from us. Based outside the UK? Simply call +44(0)207 292 3703 to find your nearest stockist. Better yet, subscribe to CR for a year here and

Fit: Olympics-inspired posters by designers

When the 2012 Olympics artists posters were released last year, a collective howl of protest arose from the graphic design community: why weren’t we given the chance to do these? Well now they have been

Fit is an exhibition of London 2012-inspired posters by contemporary British-based graphic designers at Central St Martins. It was put together by Jonathan Barnbrook and Vaughan Oliver. Frustrated by what they saw as the exclusion of graphic design from the Olympics, and inspired by the challenge laid down by the artists series, Barnbrook and Oliver decided to stop moaning and do something about it. And so, they invited leading UK-based designers (those who, conceivably, may have been officially invited to tackle such a brief) to create a poster inspired by 2012 and sport in general.

So, will the resultant images teach LOCOG the error of its ways? Will Seb Coe be rueing the day he ignored the serried ranks of design’s great and good? Has, in effect, design made its point?

Yes and no. The results are just as uneven as the artists series – as uneven as the work any project of this nature would engender. This is a ‘phoney’, theoretical exercise, with no commissioner to guide it, no degree of control over the submissions (save for those rejected on copyright grounds). Just as, I suspect, happened with the artists series, some have taken it very seriousy, others not so much. Some have really put themselves in the shoes of a designer officially commissioned to do a real Olympic poster, some have just made highly personal responses.

It is the former, where designers are utilising their communication skills more than their artistic ones, that I feel work better. So, for example, Bibliotheque drew on what has perhpas been the most succesful piece commissioned for the games so far, Barber Osgerby’s torch, in their poster:

 

Build paid tribute to Harry Beck in creating a poster with a direct reference to a London icon – the kind of ‘storied’ approach with great appeal to foreign visitors that London 2012 has shied away from.

 

Matt Willey’s submission was very much in the spirit of official Olympics posters of times past

 

While David Pearson’s has a touch of E McKnight Kauffer about it

 

Others dealt more directly with sport, including two beautiful posters from Jonathan Barnbrook, one on cycling, the other archery.

 

And Domenic Lippa took the current world 100m record times for men and women as his inspiration

 

Horse 23 by Vaughan Oliver and Si Scott

 

Others were inspired more by the stories and spirit behind sporting endeavour. Tomato, for example, created a series of three posters called Olympic Origins based on the early experiences of three British athletes.

 

Phil Baines listed out past British medallists

 

Fuel issued an impassioned plea to try harder

 

Others were more esoteric or playful. Jeremy Leslie’s Hoopless removed the five Os (Olympic Rings) in his message

 

Marina Willer and Ian Osborne riffed on the show’s title, Fit

 

Ian Anderson had words of encouragement, of a sort

 

As did Morag Myerscough

 

While Catherine Dixon was more consoling

 

And Graham Wood was, well, Graham Wood. Which is fine by me.

 

While Angus Hyland passed comment on the way that the IOC jealously guards its copyright (the small print at the foot of his poster is the IOC copyright notice on the rings)

 

While Alan Kitching found a way around such issues

 

One thing that certainly didn’t work in the favour of the work on show at CSM was that all were displayed as digital prints, pinned roughtly to the wall. Inkjet or screenprinting would have really lifted many of the designs, underlining the importance of production to graphic work.

If I was to apply the strictly subjectve criterion of which of these I would have on my wall compared to how many from the artists series, I’d put the Fit posters marginally ahead. On balance, I find the designers’ efforts more immediately engaging and relevant than the artsists’ but, given their respective training and skills, that is to be expected.

There’s good and bad in the show – as you must expect from this kind of exercise. At the very least, Barnbrook and Oliver have given graphic design a platform which it has so-far been largely denied in 2012 and they should be applauded for that. The posters don’t prove irrefutably that designers are ‘better’ at this exercise than artists, nor that they should have been given the task instead of the artists commissioned by LOCOG. But designers could have been given a different task – that of producing series of posters with a specific communications objective for the Games which would have really allowed them to make the most of their talents.

 

Fit is at the Lethaby Gallery, CSM, 1 Granary Square London N1C 4AA until July 9 and the Widow Gallery at the same location until August 30. Money raised from sales of prints of the posters will go toward student bursaries at CSM.

The full list of contributors is: Ian Anderson, Phil Baines, Jonathan Barnbrook, Neville Brody, Catherine Dixon, Fuel, GTF, Angus Hyland, Alan Kitching, Jeremy Leslie, Domenic Lippa, Morag Myerscough, Vaughan Oliver, David Pearson, Michael Place, Tomato, Why Not Associates, Matt Willey, Marina Willer, Graham Wood and Michael Worthington.

 

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Read in-depth features and analysis plus exclusive iPad-only content in the Creative Review iPad App. Longer, more in-depth features than we run on the blog, portfolios of great, full-screen images and hi-res video. If the blog is about news, comment and debate, the iPad is about inspiration, viewing and reading. As well as providing exclusive, iPad-only content, the app will also update with new content throughout each month. Try a free sample issue here

 

 

CR in Print
The July issue of Creative Review features a piece exploring the past and future of the dingbat. Plus a look at the potential of paper electronics and printed apps, how a new generation of documentary filmmakers is making use of the web, current logo trends, a review of MoMA New York’s group show on art and type, thoughts on how design may help save Greece and much more. Also, in Monograph this month we showcase a host of rejected design work put together by two Kingston students.

Please note, CR is no longer stocked in WH Smith high street stores (although it can still be found in WH Smith travel branches at stations and airports). If you cannot find a copy of CR in your town, your independent newsagent can order it for you or you can search for your nearest stockist here. Alternatively, email Laura McQueen (laura.mcqueen@centaur.co.uk) or call her on 020 7970 4878 to buy a copy direct from us. Based outside the UK? Simply call +44(0)207 292 3703 to find your nearest stockist. Better yet, subscribe to CR for a year here and save yourself almost 30% on the printed magazine.

Degree Shows 2012: LCC Graphics

LCC‘s Graphics show is quite the marathon. It’s split into various sections which include Illustration, Graphic Design, Design for Advertising, Information Design, Typo/Graphics, Design for Print, plus Interaction and Moving Image. Here’s our pick of the exhibited work, starting with the Graphic Design work…

These illustrations by Sam Hamer have a touch of the Andy Rementer about them. Hamer’s book of Urban Plant Life also caught my eye:

See more of Hamer’s work at sam-land.co.uk

Sacha Childs-Clarke’s trio of illustrations announce the methodology behind each one.

More at sachacc.com.

Next to Sacha’s work was an illustration of Hannibal Lecter by Kyle Gall in the most unusual of illustration mediums:

Yes, that’s right folks, this image has been rendered in breakfast cereal. blographicdesign.blogspot.com.

Lora Bojinova‘s set of posters created for a fictional exhibition on Geometry in Nature at the Tate feature patterns formed the Fibonacci series.

Alexandra Whitfield also designed a set of three posters, but to advertise the science and music “lates” evenings held at the Science Museum on May 30. See more of Whitfield’s work here.

Moving up to the first floor, the Illustration work was the next thing to check out, with Louise Handyside’s Batter Land installation greeting me at the top of the stairs:

See more of Handyside’s illustration work at louisehandyside.com.

Above, some of Ben Brockbank‘s Janitor Man, Traveller Man illustrations.

Sholto Douglas displayed dozens of his Nightmare World postcards. See more of his work at sholtodouglas.co.uk.

Right next to Douglas’ postcards was this image by Ludovica Comucci which seemed to carry through the nightmare theme. More at cargocollective.com/ludovicacomucci. And carrying on the theme again was Jack Edwards hairy hand image from his series, Doodles of a Deluded Man:

See more at jack-ed.co.uk.

I next found myself in the Design for Typo/Graphics section where Alex May Hughes’ multi-mirror installation inspired by H.G. Wells’ The Island of Dr Moreau caught my eye:

“The story itself mirrors changing Victorian society; ‘The Law’ which must be obeyed by the Best-men to give them structure and purpose,” explains Hughes. “Emulating the typographic style of Victorian glass and gold paintwork, the final works were based around key quotes from the book, creating an overwhelming wall of mirrors reflecting back on the viewer.” More at alexmayhughes.co.uk

Viet-Anh Cao’s 10 Bullets exhibit involved a computer (above) that was linked to this device:

“I wanted to reinterpret the video by Tom Saches ’10 Bullets, working to code’, following a systematic approach with the result in the form of a drawing machine.” I’m not sure how it worked, but the computer fed the machine instructions and it proceeded to “draw” the work. vietanhcao.co.uk

Caroline Claisse created this Wheelbarrow Chair which, she explains, “tells the story of Ferdinand Cheval who committed his life to build the Palais Idéal.”

In Graphic Media Design, Laura Shehata advertised her documentary Living In Disney’s World (which looks at a town called Celebration in Florida designed by Disney) by printing off large format stills (one shown above) from the film:

See more of her work at laurashehata.com.

Alastair Oloo’s work was also great. Here’s a look at his Gentrification film:

Gentrification from WHEELS on Vimeo.

See more of his work at wearewheels.com.

Elise Anglert’s Celluloid Quilt project saw her stitch 100 rolls of 35mm film, cut into small pieces, stitched back together. Here’s the project film:

See more of Anglert’s work at eliseanglert.com.

And finally, in Information Design, Yaser Hassan’s Modular 3 project looked great. For it he produced a series of typefaces created using only three shapes on different grids.

Jay Jung Hyun Yeo’s collaboration with Hwasoo Shim in response to a D&AD brief to rebrand the City of London won them a student pencil last week:

See more at jayyeo.co.kr

Also impressive in the Information Design section was Joshua Lee’s app entitled Europa, Jupiter’s Secret Ocean Moon. Play the above film to see it in action. Impressive. See more of Lee’s work at joshualee.sg.

As with all of our degree show posts, the work shown is just the tip of the iceberg. Do try and get along to the LCC show if you can to explore for yourself. The show runs until the end of this week (Friday July 6). Full details at lccgraphics2012.com


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Read in-depth features and analysis plus exclusive iPad-only content in the Creative Review iPad App. Longer, more in-depth features than we run on the blog, portfolios of great, full-screen images and hi-res video. If the blog is about news, comment and debate, the iPad is about inspiration, viewing and reading. As well as providing exclusive, iPad-only content, the app will also update with new content throughout each month. Try a free sample issue here

 

 

CR in Print
The July issue of Creative Review features a piece exploring the past and future of the dingbat. Plus a look at the potential of paper electronics and printed apps, how a new generation of documentary filmmakers is making use of the web, current logo trends, a review of MoMA New York’s group show on art and type, thoughts on how design may help save Greece and much more. Also, in Monograph this month we showcase a host of rejected design work put together by two Kingston students.

Please note, CR is no longer stocked in WH Smith high street stores (although it can still be found in WH Smith travel branches at stations and airports). If you cannot find a copy of CR in your town, your independent newsagent can order it for you or you can search for your nearest stockist here. Alternatively, email Laura McQueen (laura.mcqueen@centaur.co.uk) or call her on 020 7970 4878 to buy a copy direct from us. Based outside the UK? Simply call +44(0)207 292 3703 to find your nearest stockist. Better yet, subscribe to CR for a year here and save yourself almost 30% on the printed magazine.

Bath School of Art & Design Graphic Communication

Bath School of Art & Design’s final year graphic communication students created various fund-raising events to enable them to hire a decent venue for their degree show. Their efforts have paid off because their show, entitled Assembly and currently showing at the Rochelle School in Shoreditch, is well worth a visit…

There’s a huge amount of great work on show at Assembly but here are some highlights:

Tess Redburn illustration work included this laser cut cross section of a tree. Redburn then photographed the illustration to form the artwork for a submission to a Puffin design competition:

Redburn also exhibited a number of brightly coloured illustrations:

See more of Redburn’s work at tessredburn.co.uk

Lydia Burgess‘s illustrations of matchboxes.

Rupert Dunk created this typeface, The Mule, and also this rather nice engraving style face, carved into a slab of chipboard:

See more at rupertdunk.com

More type, this time by Will Harvey and created out of layers of cut wood.

And John Chapman‘s Pinko typeface was inspired by Art Deco London.

The above llustration is by Eliot Wyatt – who also exhibited a totem pole with a British theme (note the bulldog):

Wyatt also created a nice screenprinted concertina book featuring a host of illustrated characters:

See more at cargocollective.com/eliotwyatt

Cecilia Redondon-Zaratiegui created a plastic stencil tool to showcase her stencil typeface…

I also liked her design for an M&S biscuit tin that features a hand drawn image based on a cross-section of a thistle:

See more at  ceciliarz.co.uk

Ed Seymour showcased his work on a series of wall mounted clipboards. I particularly liked his rendering of this Marina Willer quote:

Tom Sydenham‘s Shit My Friends Post (SMFP) book is a collection of Facebook status posts by friends posted in January 2012, each rendered in a different style.

See more of Sydenham’s work at cargocollective.com/antlaclad

Above is Callum Robey‘s sampler for his brush and ink rendered typeface, Les Crobag (named after “a wonderful place, which is like a foreign Greggs”. Love the dingbats:

See more of Robey’s work at callumrobey.blogspot.co.uk

Upstairs, a number of group projects were showcased. Punk & Posters was a fundraising event which featured a host of live bands . A group of 20 students created posters to promote the event which were exhibited on the evening. They were all published as a newsprint publication sold to raise funds for the degree show:


By Steph Winton

And Sports Day too was another group show arranged by the year group on the course. Below are four of 16 posters created for the project. Each artist was allocated an Olympic event and a colour with which to produce their print design. Shown here are posters by (clockwise from top left) Caitlin Ashton, Will Harvey, Thomas Wells and Seb Ingham.

Another group project saw different students create posters for their lectures:

This post really only scratches the surface of a great degree show. Assembly runs until July 1 at Rochelle School, Arnold Circus, London E2 7ES.

assembly2012.co.uk

 

CR for the iPad
Read in-depth features and analysis plus exclusive iPad-only content in the Creative Review iPad App. Longer, more in-depth features than we run on the blog, portfolios of great, full-screen images and hi-res video. If the blog is about news, comment and debate, the iPad is about inspiration, viewing and reading. As well as providing exclusive, iPad-only content, the app will also update with new content throughout each month. Try a free sample issue here

CR in Print
The July issue of Creative Review features a piece exploring the past and future of the dingbat. Plus a look at the potential of paper electronics and printed apps, how a new generation of documentary filmmakers is making use of the web, current logo trends, a review of MoMA New York’s group show on art and type, thoughts on how design may help save Greece and much more. Also, in Monograph this month we showcase a host of rejected design work put together by two Kingston students.

Please note, CR is no longer stocked in WH Smith high street stores (although it can still be found in WH Smith travel branches at stations and airports). If you cannot find a copy of CR in your town, your independent newsagent can order it for you or you can search for your nearest stockist here. Alternatively, email Laura McQueen (laura.mcqueen@centaur.co.uk) or call her on 020 7970 4878 to buy a copy direct from us. Based outside the UK? Simply call +44(0)207 292 3703 to find your nearest stockist. Better yet, subscribe to CR for a year here and save yourself almost 30% on the printed magazine.

Talent-spotters: Sunderland

Sunderland’s Degree Show this year proved an eclectic mix, with silversmithing, fashion, interior design and animation, to name but a few, all packed into one space. Livija Dale attended the opening night to snap us some pics of the best work.

Gordon Cable really stole the show on the Jewellery and Silversmithing front. Amazing use of creating typography with metal, then exploring a physical manifestation of the rabbit hole in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.

Charlotte Hirst’s pieces caught my eye with their vibrant colours and bold shapes, and become even more interesting once you realise they’re based on Pythagoras’ theorem and the Fibonacci sequence.

Petra Bartosova’s work is very conceptual; Mindspace is an experimental piece focusing on how thoughts can be perceived and created in a virtual space. She utilises dynamic typography and motion graphics to explore textural thoughts to great effect.

Jamie Sparkes’ Origami Tweet project creates a physical version of Twitter, where people write their tweets to friends and family, which are then folded into the shape of the signature Twitter bird. An interesting alternate look at social networking.

Teodora Nedyalkova’s work has a dream-like feel to it. In Sacred Geometry she explores geometric forms found throughout nature and in religion.

Neil McKenzie’s project Characterising Creativity saw him explore the meaning of creativity. His work also displays some nice branding projects for Crystal Glass catering.

Faye Robertson has a unique and intricate style, mixing bold and dull colours together to create a very old-world feel. It’s interesting to see her application of illustration to textiles, showing the different ways her style can be utilised.

You can see more of the students’ work here.

CR for the iPad
Read in-depth features and analysis plus exclusive iPad-only content in the Creative Review iPad App. Longer, more in-depth features than we run on the blog, portfolios of great, full-screen images and hi-res video. If the blog is about news, comment and debate, the iPad is about inspiration, viewing and reading. As well as providing exclusive, iPad-only content, the app will also update with new content throughout each month. Try a free sample issue here

CR in Print
The July issue of Creative Review features a piece exploring the past and future of the dingbat. Plus a look at the potential of paper electronics and printed apps, how a new generation of documentary filmmakers is making use of the web, current logo trends, a review of MoMA New York’s group show on art and type, thoughts on how design may help save Greece and much more. Also, in Monograph this month we showcase a host of rejected design work put together by two Kingston students.

Please note, CR is no longer stocked in WH Smith high street stores (although it can still be found in WH Smith travel branches at stations and airports). If you cannot find a copy of CR in your town, your independent newsagent can order it for you or you can search for your nearest stockist here. Alternatively, email Laura McQueen (laura.mcqueen@centaur.co.uk) or call her on 020 7970 4878 to buy a copy direct from us. Based outside the UK? Simply call +44(0)207 292 3703 to find your nearest stockist. Better yet, subscribe to CR for a year here and save yourself almost 30% on the printed magazine.

Illustrations to aid bookshop navigation

Stockholm-based designer Patrik Svensson has created a set of 20 illustrated signs for a branch of Jashanmal, a chain of bookshops in the United Arab Emirates…

“Each sign is 2 x 1 metres and is used to simply communicate to customers which genre of book or product type is situated in a particular area of the store,” explains Svensson who designs under the moniker Prince Hat.

The signs have just been installed in Jashanmal’s Mall of the Emirates branch in Dubai, which re-opened this week after a shop refit. The plan is to roll them out to the chain’s other shops across the United Arab Emirates. Here’s a selection – note the playful elements such as the rocket taking off in the Technology sign, below – or the zip made of aeroplanes on the Travel bag…

See more of Svensson’s work at princehat.se.

 

CR for the iPad
Read in-depth features and analysis plus exclusive iPad-only content in the Creative Review iPad App. Longer, more in-depth features than we run on the blog, portfolios of great, full-screen images and hi-res video. If the blog is about news, comment and debate, the iPad is about inspiration, viewing and reading. As well as providing exclusive, iPad-only content, the app will also update with new content throughout each month. Try a free sample issue here

CR in Print
The July issue of Creative Review features a piece exploring the past and future of the dingbat. Plus a look at the potential of paper electronics and printed apps, how a new generation of documentary filmmakers is making use of the web, current logo trends, a review of MoMA New York’s group show on art and type, thoughts on how design may help save Greece and much more. Also, in Monograph this month we showcase a host of rejected design work put together by two Kingston students.

Please note, CR is no longer stocked in WH Smith high street stores (although it can still be found in WH Smith travel branches at stations and airports). If you cannot find a copy of CR in your town, your independent newsagent can order it for you or you can search for your nearest stockist here. Alternatively, email Laura McQueen (laura.mcqueen@centaur.co.uk) or call her on 020 7970 4878 to buy a copy direct from us. Based outside the UK? Simply call +44(0)207 292 3703 to find your nearest stockist. Better yet, subscribe to CR for a year here and save yourself almost 30% on the printed magazine.

D&AD student award winners 2012

D&AD announced the winners of its annual Student Awards this week. Here’s our roundup of Yellow Pencil winners…

In the Advertising category, Fernando Barcelona and Juan David Manotas of Miami Ad School won a yellow pencil for their response to a brief for Internet Explorer 9. The duo came up with the notion of “sorbing” – where users phones note locations visited or passed during a daily routine, then offered users a host of exploration options next time they used Internet Explorer. See more at dandad.org/awards/student/2012/

Emma Leamore and Michael Pollard of University of Salford also won a pencil for their work for Internet Explorer 9 that involved an adventurous Hamster who explored “off the wheel”. More info here.

Adam Gäfvert, Fredrik Broander and Jesper Stein of Beckmans College of Design also won a pencil for their Internet Explorer 9 work. Their concept was to reward users who tagged visited sites or pages as having the potential to be popular. The more popular one of your tagged sites becomes, the higher you soar up the ratings, possibly to become a Top Explorer, thus encouraging people to explore more online. More info here.

Chris Nuelle of The Arts University College at Bournemouth answered a Channel 4 brief with this entry (above) to win a pencil.

…and Stephen Pierce from University of Ulster also won a pencil for his “The best is yet to come” campaign for Channel 4. More info at dandad.org/awards/student/2012

Louise Flanagan and Naomi Hodgson from University of Central Lancashire answered a brief by Pitch & Sync to win a pencil. Their idea was to create visual metaphors for music using objects associated with various different brands – to highlight that P&S can make music for any brand.

See more executions from the campaign here.

Norhumbria University student Steven Kelly also answered the Pitch & Sync brief but took a very different approach – creating a series of video mash ups, overlaying crazy, inappropriate and unexpected music over kids TV clips. There’s a particularly good one of Sooty and Sweep having a rave. See all three films at dandad.org/awards/student/2012

In the Open Advertising category, Matthew Kern and Westley Taylor of Miami Ad School won a pencil for their Aviva entry that encouraged people to save (above).

From Singapore’s Chatsworth Media Arts Academy, Amelie Kam Pei Wen, Andy Dexiang Xu, Fleur Vella, Goh Ting Yu and Violaine Hernery picked up one of two pencils awarded in the advertising Open Brief category for their Peace One Day campaign. Watch their entry film here.

Martin Headon and Olly Wood from the UK picked up the other for their Peace Day campaign. Watch their film here.

A Digital Advertising pencil was awarded to Claire Stokes and Christina Smith of the University of Lincoln for their Top Fans campaign (screen grab above) encouraging users of Spotify and Facebook to play their favourite song more than anyone else to earn Top Fan status. More here.

Haley Cole, Laura Cabello Molina, Marina Ricciardi, Olimpia Muñoz and Clare Eiluned Prowse of Miami Ad School also picked up a Digital Advertising pencil for their Guilty Pleasure Facebook app which you can check out here.

A third Digital Advertising pencil was awarded to Caroline Ekrem and Sara Marie Hodnebo of Norway’s Westerdals School of Communication for their Friends FM idea. View their entry film here.

A yellow pencil for Digital Design was won by five students of Simon Fraser University for their campaign for Windows Phone. Justin Lim, Kenneth Au-Yeung, Stanley Lai, Yu-Chuan (Felix) Lai, and Sarah Fung combined forces to answer the brief to “create a forward thinking multi-screen experience that can make a significant impact to the user’s personal or professional life.”
See more here.

For graphic design, three students from Beckmans College of Design in Sweden won a pencil. Elin Mejergren, Josefin Janson and Nicole Kärnell responded to a brief set by Pentagram. More info and images here.

Two illustrators won a pencil each for illustrations created in response to a brief set by Little White Lies magazine to create a striking cover image:

Above is Norwich University undergraduate Rupert Smissen’s cover illustration, and below is the cover created by Francesca Hotchin of the University of Leeds:

In Moving Image, Yana Mironova, Lidia Velles and Zhanna Nosova of the Higher School of Art and Design in Russia won a pencil for their film (still shown above) made in response to a brief by HP in which a girl talks to camera about her relationship with her laptop. Watch the film here.

Martin Craster of the University of Salford also picked up a pencil in the Moving Image category for his very different take on the HP brief (still shown above). Watch the film here.

Hwasoo Shim and Jay Jung Hyun Yeo of LCC picked up a pencil in the Branding category for their identity system created for London entitled The City. See more here.

One Packaging Design pencil was won by Melissa Preston of Edinburgh Napier University for her WLTM whisky packaging (above). More images and info here.

Michael Skachkov from Russia picked up a pencil for Photography for his project featuring models wearing fabricated “skin suits”. See more here.

Also picking up a Photography pencil, Eason Page (City University Hong Kong) took a series of images of vertical structures such as the two shown above. See more here.

A pencil for Intergrated Communications was awarded to Arina Kisleva and Kseniya Apresyan from Russia for their Maket School campaign which can be viewed here.

And finally, new in this year’s student awards is the Make Your Mark category for which D&AD asked students: “how are you going to stand out from the crowd?”. Three pencils were awarded, one went to Joy Ayles from the University of Salford (see her entry film here) and the other went to Kyle Jacobson and Chad Goddard from Vega, The Brand Communications School in South Africa for their box of 50 engraved anti-procrastination pencils (below). See more here.

To see all of the Student Awards winners, visit dandad.org

 

CR for the iPad
Read in-depth features and analysis plus exclusive iPad-only content in the Creative Review iPad App. Longer, more in-depth features than we run on the blog, portfolios of great, full-screen images and hi-res video. If the blog is about news, comment and debate, the iPad is about inspiration, viewing and reading. As well as providing exclusive, iPad-only content, the app will also update with new content throughout each month. Try a free sample issue here

CR in Print
The July issue of Creative Review features a piece exploring the past and future of the dingbat. Plus a look at the potential of paper electronics and printed apps, how a new generation of documentary filmmakers is making use of the web, current logo trends, a review of MoMA New York’s group show on art and type, thoughts on how design may help save Greece and much more. Also, in Monograph this month we showcase a host of rejected design work put together by two Kingston students.

Please note, CR is no longer stocked in WH Smith high street stores (although it can still be found in WH Smith travel branches at stations and airports). If you cannot find a copy of CR in your town, your independent newsagent can order it for you or you can search for your nearest stockist here. Alternatively, email Laura McQueen (laura.mcqueen@centaur.co.uk) or call her on 020 7970 4878 to buy a copy direct from us. Based outside the UK? Simply call +44(0)207 292 3703 to find your nearest stockist. Better yet, subscribe to CR for a year here and save yourself almost 30% on the printed magazine.

D&AD New Blood 2012: our picks

Though installed in a new venue, D&AD’s graduate talent hypermarket, otherwise known as New Blood, is as overwhelming as ever. Patrick Burgoyne battled through the private view crowds to find some favourites

Both the D&AD Student Awards and its New Blood show, in which visual arts courses each take a stand to display the pick of their graduates’ work, are in London’s Spitalfields market this year. It’s a great space, which no doubt will attract some valuable passing traffic, but the New Blood show itself is very cramped. Colleges sit cheek by jowl, the fruit and veg stalls of the old market replaced by tutors and grads hawking their creative talents.

Here are a few who stood out for me, but, with the show open until the evevening of June 28, I’d recommend a trip down there to se for yourself if you are in the vicinity. I’ve deliberately avoided colleges whose shows we have either already covered on the blog or who we know we will cover separately in the coming weeks and concentrated on institutions whose shows we may otherwise not have been able to see.

So let’s start with the Illustration course at UCA Maidstone where the vivd, quite aggressive work was a counterpoint to medium’s tendency toward the twee. I particularly liked Ian O’Shea‘s project on Tom Crean, a survivor from the 1912 Scott expedition to the Antarctic

And Aleksandra Jablokova‘s bizarre interpretation of Beauty and the Beast was memorable, if disturbing!

This is from her version of Little Red Riding Hood

 

At the Dundee illustration stand, Sally Hackett‘s ceramic tribute to notorious streakers, including Erica Roe, was hard to miss

 

Staying with illustration, Southampton Solent impressed, notably Christopher Todd‘s series of circular works on notable people, places and events related to the city.

 

And Nate Kitch‘s project on the patient studies of psychiatrist Oliver Sacks as related in the book The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat, including this piece on an elderly ex-submariner who could not remember anything between the second world war and the early 70s.

 

I also liked the vivid work of Jack ‘Ren” Reynolds of University College Bournemouth

 

Simon Cheadle‘s project on mistakes at the Kingston illustration stand was beautifully presented: “Drawing tools that generate mistakes were designed and used to reinterpret objects and ideas that are considered perfect. By then printing and manufacturing the results, these notions of perfection are pushed back into the realm of creativity and the imperfections of the object are celebrated.”

You can download and print out paper versions of the tools here

 

At the Arts University College at Bournemouth graphics show, Kudzai Dyirakumunda attempted to tackle the topic of the London riots using messages about the events that had been posted on Twitter. Some were etched into News Blocks presented in a wooden tray, giving permanence to these digital communications.

Others were immortalised in poster form

 

Also at Bournemouth is Peter Smart who is behind the hugely impressive 50 Problems in 50 Days, which he describes thus: “I’m on an adventure – to explore the limits of design’s ability to solve social problems, big and small. To do this I attempted to solve 50 problems in 50 days using design. I also spent time with 12 of Europe’s top design firms.”

Each day, Smart attempted to use design to tackle a different social problem, from easing tube congestion to improving translation tools, while also interviewing and visiting top design firms around Europe. A really strong piece of work.

On to the UWE graphics stand and CJ Brown who applied to Facebook to see all the data it had on him. The massive file he received in return was made into a hardback book.

 

Brown also created One Country Two Systems in response to an ISTD brief. The book is split into two sections “with each focusing on the attitude and objectives of the two major countries involved in the transfer of sovereignty over Hong Kong. This concept of having two books originated from the term given to China after the handover, ‘One Country Two Systems’. Although each book is intended to be read individually there are certain occasions when the chapters and content relate.”

 

In a strong UWE stand, I also enjoyed Magnus Hearn‘s book OMG in the OED about new words admitted to the dictionary

 

Liam Roberts‘ film on football celebrations

 

Andrew Duncan‘s film on the formula for the perfect romatic comedy

 

And Sam Stefan‘s The Waitress, created in response to an ISTD brief on “tales to change the world”. Presented as an iPad app, the book responds to its location.

 

At the Stockport design and visual arts stand, Helen Porter wrapped various iplements in coloured twine, making a striking display

The project was in response to a GF Smith brief which asked ‘ If colour was something physical, how might it interact with objects?’. Porter created a hand-boound book showcasing her work.

Last but by no means least, what would a degree show be without some Risograph action, this time prodiced by Gabriella Marcella Ditano aka Risotto of Glasgow School of Art

 

 

This is just a small selection of the work on show. Get down to New Blood if you can – details here

 

 

CR for the iPad
Read in-depth features and analysis plus exclusive iPad-only content in the Creative Review iPad App. Longer, more in-depth features than we run on the blog, portfolios of great, full-screen images and hi-res video. If the blog is about news, comment and debate, the iPad is about inspiration, viewing and reading. As well as providing exclusive, iPad-only content, the app will also update with new content throughout each month. Try a free sample issue here

 

 

CR in Print
The July issue of Creative Review features a piece exploring the past and future of the dingbat. Plus a look at the potential of paper electronics and printed apps, how a new generation of documentary filmmakers is making use of the web, current logo trends, a review of MoMA New York’s group show on art and type, thoughts on how design may help save Greece and much more. Also, in Monograph this month we showcase a host of rejected design work put together by two Kingston students.

Please note, CR is no longer stocked in WH Smith high street stores (although it can still be found in WH Smith travel branches at stations and airports). If you cannot find a copy of CR in your town, your independent newsagent can order it for you or you can search for your nearest stockist here. Alternatively, email Laura McQueen (laura.mcqueen@centaur.co.uk) or call her on 020 7970 4878 to buy a copy direct from us. Based outside the UK? Simply call +44(0)207 292 3703 to find your nearest stockist. Better yet, subscribe to CR for a year here and save yourself almost 30% on the printed magazine.