Four fonts walk into a bar…

Illustrator Andy Smith has created a range of joke-themed prints, books and coasters for a new solo show at Bristol’s Soma Gallery.

Smith has worked on campaigns for Cadbury, Sony, Orange, Penguin and the Guardian and specialises in cheerful typographic illustrations with a hand drawn feel. He came up with the idea for his latest exhibition while designing the cover of a children’s joke book for MacMillan.

“Flicking through all these cheesy puns and one liners, it occurred to me that they’d make great prints – I really like the way they are very sharp and succinct in their delivery and how they play with words,” he says.

“I’ve tried to use old ones that we’ve all heard before and that are familiar to us. Even though they are obvious, it’s difficult not to smile a little,” he adds.

Most of the works on display are available to buy at Soma Gallery’s online shop – including a set of coasters featuring a range of ‘walked in to a bar’ jokes.

The show is open until April 19 at 4 Boyces Avenue, Clifton, Bristol, BS8 4AA and you can see more of Smith’s work on his website – or read our post on his previous Soma exhibition, Sunny Side Up, here.

A poster a day for Earth Hour

Pentagram, WWF and environmental charity Do the Green Thing have launched a poster campaign to promote Earth Hour on March 29.

Pentagram partners and creatives including Paula Scher, David Shrigley, Quentin Blake, Marion Deuchars and Neville Brody were asked to produce a poster promoting sustainable living. The first designs were unveiled on March 1 and a new one will be released each day until March 29, when people around the world will take part in a ‘lights-out’ event at 8.30pm local time.

The posters encourage taking up simple activities such as walking to work, sharing bathwater and eating seasonal food or less meat (see Rankin’s design, top).

Marion Deuchars

 

Hudson Powell

Pentagram launched a similar campaign last year, with contributions from Olympic logo designer Patrick Cox, illustrator Andrew Rae and photographer Dean Chalkley.

Paula Scher

Harry Pearce

This year, creatives aged between 16 and 25 were also invited to take part (we published a call for entries back in December). Six finalists were offered a session at Pentagram to refine their designs and the overall winner – 22-year-old Rebecca Charlton – was decided by a public vote.

Charlton’s design (above) will be released on the final day of the campaign and will appear at advertising sites around the country. Runners up Matthew Elliot and Jamie Eke’s work will also be featured online.

David Shrigley

Matthew Elliot

Neville Brody

Quentin Blake

Posters are available to buy as an A3 print for £12 and all proceeds will go to Do the Green Thing. You can also see last year’s designs – and follow this month’s new releases – at dothegreenthing.tumblr.com

Phillip Treacy

Vaughan Oliver

Heal’s re-launches fabric business with new and old designs

Heal’s has launched its first own-brand fabric collection since the 1970s, featuring patterns from Malika Favre, Petra Börner and Hvass and Hannibal as well as archived designs by Zandra Rhodes and the late Diana Bloomfield.

The re-launched business will combine work from young designers with updated versions of patterns sold in the 1950s and 60s. Hvass and Hannibal, Favre and Börner were commissioned by illustration agency Outline Artists and have created some colourful floral-themed designs.

Hvass and Hannibal’s Herbarium (top) is inspired by forests and pressed flower samples, while Börner’s Lady Jane references horticultural images found in vintage books. Börner created the design using layers of coloured paper which was then photographed and interpreted digitally.

Favre’s geometric print, Peacock Flower, was inspired by peacocks she saw wandering the grounds of a hotel in the French Riveria. “I wanted to do something fun, playful and summery,” she says.

The first archive patterns to be re-worked for the collection, which launched in stores on Saturday, are Zandra Rhodes Top Brass 2 and Diana Bloomfield’s Tea Time (both below).

Rhodes designed the pattern while studying the Royal College of Art in 1963. Bloomfield’s work was designed in the 1950s and updated for the collection with help from her grand-daughter Julia.

Pia Benham, Heal’s head of fabric and design said the collection aimed to “inject fun and excitement into Heal’s fabric design once again” by combining contemporary patterns with those inspired by the brand’s heritage.

Fabrics were priced at £45 per metre and Heal’s has also launched a co-ordinating accessory line, 1810, which features textiles, cushions and stationery.

It’s nice to see a brand reclaiming a business that used to champion the work of emerging designers, and even better to see collaborations with illustrators as well as textile designers.

Illustration agents round table

Dare to Dream by Chrissy Lau (Illustration Ltd)

If you’re a freelance illustrator, you might have thought about getting yourself an agent. But what exactly can they do for you and your work, and how do you go about approaching one? We talked to four agents to find out…

For our recent illustration special issue, we organised a round table discussion with four agents – Helen Rush, director of Rush Agency; Victoria Pearce, senior agent at Illustration Ltd; Caroline Thomson of Arena Illustration; and Claire Meiklejohn of Meiklejohn and New Division agencies. They talked through everything from how they get their illustrators work to negotiating contracts, fees and rights.

In addition to the topics discussed below, the four of them also shed light on new trends within the industry; how agents can help illustrators to manage their own style and exposure and develop a long-term career, whether as a recent graduate or an established freelancer. An edited version of the discussion is presented below.

 

CR: How do you go about getting work for your illustrators? Do you still place value in showing a physical portfolio, for example?

Victoria Pearce: There’s a whole armoury. When I started out as a junior booker for a photographic agent 20 years ago, it was just based on the reputation that you built with your client. Sending portfolios over by courier, hoping one would get selected. Now you have to be as competitive as you can digitally. You need a well-designed, optimised website backed up with the traditional forms of promotion. We first reacted to the digital age by doing e-marketing and newsletters, but now we’re all aware that people’s inboxes are terrifying things to open every morning – so there are opportunities for print promotions to stand out.

Helen Rush: It’s so nice to see something in a decent format that you can hold and see in print. And the majority of the time it is going to end up in print. But when we show work, it is always backed up with an iPad so people can zoom in and see all the details. And the volume of work on an iPad means we can carry around much more.

Claire Meiklejohn: When you have meetings, it’s also an opportunity for the person you’re visiting to get away from the screen. Your mind becomes clearer as you look at something physical.

VP: I saw a fantastic presentation by a young graduate illustrator, Chris Gilleard, who we’ve recently taken on. He had a small traditional portfolio but then each project was extended by a digital presentation on the iPad – all these long continuous scrolls. But from a purely selfish point of view, with a physical portfolio it was always very difficult to get the edit correct if I was seeing different people. It wasn’t flexible – so the iPad was the answer.

HR: We have loose-leaf portfolios that we change depending on who we go to see, as well as individual portfolios for the artists, then iPads for animations. You can’t do all that on your own though, it’s hard work!

The Diary of Dennis the Menace cover illustration by Steve May (Arena Illustration). Puffin Books TM © DC Thomson & Co. Ltd

CR: How do you actively look for new talent?

Caroline Thomson: In the main, it’s really recommendations from a client – they recommend us to the illustrator. Obviously, we have to love the work, and we might then have a six month trial period and go from there. We also go to student shows; we’ve picked up a lot of people from D&AD’s New Blood, and we have affiliations with certain universities, so we see the illustrators coming out of them before the shows.

CM: The amount of submissions is always tricky to manage, as it’s huge. But you get quick at going through them. You know what you’re looking for, you can tell.

CR: And what is it that? Can you quantify it?

HR: No! It’s a bit like falling in love, isn’t it?

VP: Yes, it’s seeing the work and getting a shiver down your spine. It is like sieving for gold though, because of the sheer numbers we get as a large agency. We have on average over 200 submissions a month through the website.

CT: You have to be really honest as well. We’re a small agency, so we don’t really take on that many people a year, two or three. And we find we have to be really honest, as much as we might love what they do, will we get them the work?

CM: You also might already represent someone similar. And even when you’ve got to the point where you like their work, what’s their personality like, what’s their background? We talk to our illustrators a lot, the relationship is absolutely crucial.

CT: And you have to learn about how they work. Even how long it takes them to do a piece of work. It sounds obvious, but it really is true – it’s important that you know that, so you can tell the client.

CM: We’ve been representing some of our illustrators for over 15 years. But every new person we take on, in my mind, we’re still going to be repping them in 15 years. It’s long-term.

Vogue Portugal cover by Nuno DaCosta (Illustration Ltd)

CR: Can we talk about fees and rights? What factors determine how you work out these aspects of a project?

HR: Yes; exposure, territory. And the client budget.

CT: It’s all based on the exposure of that image. Is it worldwide, or just regional?

CM: So it’s actually a lot of factors, and while it’s probably very simple for us because we do it all the time, unfortunately a lot of independents fall into not necessarily knowing how to price things.

HR: I think they just lack the experience. When I was training someone in pricing things up, we both wrote our figures down and I’d say, ‘Well I don’t know how I got to that’. But it’s experience, it really is. Having a feel for what you’re doing.

VP: A younger freelance illustrator might just be flattered to be asked to work. But they aren’t thinking of the bigger picture: that the client wants to work with you specifically because they like your style in order to sell their product. The illustrator is part of that selling, that promotion and so there’s a value to that. And you need to be very careful about that value. A really useful point of call can be a membership with the Association of Illustrators (AOI) who have a telephone hotline. They are there to help you specifically with costing as part of the membership.

CT: I was part of the pricing survey that they did recently. In the members’ section online it gives you examples of certain parts of the industry; like ‘a book cover on somebody else’s book with a UK publisher’ and there’s a fee bracket for that. But rights are changing so much, with ebooks and audio downloads – an image might now be on the audio account, too. And most publishers are now also thinking about worldwide usage, as many of the big publishers are global.

CT: So many clients say to me, ‘We will retain the copyright’. But it’s not theirs to retain, it’s the illustrator’s, it’s their intellectual property. And in the majority of cases, when an illustrator comes up with their own characters, backgrounds and scenes, it’s their IP, their copyright. So it’s only for the client to buy, or make use of – they can’t retain it.

Watership Down by Al Murphy (Agency Rush)

CR: For those thinking about working with an agent, could you sum up what it is you look after for an illustrator? And is there an ideal time to work with one?

HR: It’s about supporting somebody and developing a career. When we take new grads on, that’s what we do – show them what to do and build a portfolio.

CM: Generally speaking the portfolio they come in with is not the one they’re going to work with, it needs to be produced into a commercial portfolio. The right samples and subject matters are crucial. But most important are the fees and the contracts.

CT: Yes, knowing always to ask for money for something – not to do free work, on the whole.

CM: Some people seem to think that if they do work for free this time, they’ll be paid next time. And we’ve all been in the industry long enough to know that at the moment you do it for free, that means you work for free! That will carry on.

VP: We probably take on fewer graduates as we like people to be a couple of years out of university – to have come out with these high expectations, spent a year getting them dashed. So they’re starting to market and promote their own work with clients, and managing the process. But one important piece of advice would be to separate yourself from your work – see it as a business and create a business plan for your work over a year or two years. By separating your creative from yourself you can see it objectively and strategically.

CT: After two years they’ll probably have a better idea of whether their work is selling, for a start, but also they might be getting to a point when they’re really quite busy. And that’s the problem with illustrators – the busier they are the fewer clients they are able to see. And that’s when an agent is really handy, because we do the business side of things and they can get on with being creative.

CM: Yes, if you’re at the point in your career when you’re very busy, that’s the other area when we come into our own as well. Lots of people presume that if you’re really busy you don’t need an agent because you’re getting the work in. But actually that’s exactly when you do need an agent.

HR: I remember one of our artists getting a great job but they weren’t used to pricing. He said, ‘Oh I’ll do it for a couple of thousand’. We got him £68,000. That’s a life-changing amount of money.

VP: There can be a perception with agents that we can be unfriendly, that we’re the bad guys, but we’re not, we’re here to facilitate and help everybody in the process. And, hopefully, make everybody happy by negotiating the best deals all round. Us then invoicing clients frees illustrators up. And it can be hard to chase up that client who might well be the same person who commissioned you.

HR: It’s quite easy for us to ask for more money; it’s sometimes very different to ask for more money
for yourself.

CR: What else can new graduate illustrators do to get their portfolio into shape?

CM: You need to know where illustration is being used. Go into WHSmiths, look at the editorial – that’s how to develop your portfolio. All the work you’ve done in university should be about honing your skills. So the briefs you’ve responded to aren’t necessarily enough like ‘real life’ – you need to know your market. The easiest way is to be commissioned, but you can set your own briefs. Look through a magazine and find an illustrated article, that’s your real life brief. Set yourself ten from ten different magazines, then you’ve produced ten pieces of work for your portfolio which are as ‘real’ as you’re going to get them.

CT: Many new illustrators don’t think about the end-user and I think that’s because of what’s happening with illustration courses at the moment: because of the situation with the fees you’re getting a lot of students who perhaps would have done fine art being pushed into illustration, because it’s deemed commercial. But it’s not commercial unless you want it to be commercial; it’s as ‘fine art’ as you can get it if you want. College is a great place to experiment, but if you want to go out and get work then you do have to think, ‘Who’s going to buy my work?’

HR: And push yourself – don’t just pick the safe and easy magazine articles to work from – be tough with yourself so your work is always moving. Remember it is a rollercoaster. Even the busiest illustrators have quiet patches.

Claude the Lion by Sean Sims, designed for the Queens Jubilee celebrations through the Greeting Cards Industry Show, PG Live (New Division)

CR: Finally, have your own opinions on what illustration is – and can do – changed over the years you’ve been in the industry?

VP: I think there’ll always be a place for illustration because what it offers is a unique identity to clients and brands. They want something very distinctive.

HR: And you can work with anybody from anywhere in the world.

CT: I still think of it as being the most basic, most fundamental communication tool out there. It is specifically designed to communicate an idea, sometimes with text, sometimes without. But in the most simple and graphic terms it’s an amazing tool.

VP: With the rise of digital media, I felt some of the magic and the art was being lost in photography. With illustrators, still working by hand, I could see the art was there. I’d love to see more use of fashion illustration within an editorial context, though – to one day see a return to an illustrated Vogue cover, if there’s an art director out there who’s got the balls to do that. In fashion photography there are a lot of fantasy images but some of it is too objectifying, there’s too much retouching. Looking at illustration, I know it’s pure fantasy. It has a sophistication.

CM: When someone uses illustration it just stands out from the crowd, from editorial through to advertising. It’s the medium that is going to grab your audience’s attention.

 

The full round table discussion was featured in our February 2014 issue – an illustration special, available to purchase here. For more details on each of the agencies featured and the illustrators on their books, see Agency Rush at agencyrush.com; Arena at arenaillustration.com; Illustration Ltd at illustrationweb.com; and Meiklejohn and New Division at meiklejohn.co.uk and newdivision.com

Oliviero Toscani’s ADC speech turned into newsprint

Last year, photographer and Colors co-founder Oliviero Toscani gave a speech at the 92nd Art Director’s Club festival. The text has now been turned into a newspaper and a series of four typographic posters by illustrator Ben Weeks and Underline Studio

The paper now forms part of the Art Director’s Club‘s communications for its 93rd awards, which will take place in Miami Beach this April.

To make it, Canadian illustrator Weeks took Toscani’s ‘Creativity = Courage’ speech from 2013 and invited Underline Studio to work on a publication which would be sent out to 2,000 ADC members, and made available online to download.

The four posters are shown here, along with an image of the inside text (above) and also of a single page from the PDF version (bottom of post). Spot illustrations of elements from images Toscani has created in his career feature throughout the newspaper.

The ADC was keen to bring the speech’s theme of to life, says Weeks, and initially the illustrator thought it might be easiest to do so within a gallery space. But print won out and Weeks and Underline also created a series of four type-based posters to go with the newspaper, which were also printed by Newspaper Club.

The team also had a link with Toscani himself which no doubt helped the process along. “One of Underline’s principals, Fidel Pena, used to work at Pentagram with Fernando Gutiérrez on Colors,” Weeks explains. “Toscani had to personally approve our work, so Fidel’s deep intuition about the right tone was a huge help.”

The full text of the speech is here; while the 12 page PDF of the newspaper (one page shown below) is also linked on this page, here.

Design and art direction: Underline Studio; Fidel Pena, Claire Dawson, Emily Tu and Jack Choi. Illustration: Ben Weeks. The editions were printed by Newspaper Club. More on the ADC’s 93rd awards festival at adcawards.org/creativity.

OFFSET 2014: Early bird tickets still available

The 2014 edition of Dublin’s OFFSET festival still has early bird tickets available – until March 1. With an impressive line-up of speakers this year, the long weekend of March 21-23 promises to be a memorable one…

OFFSET has become one of the most well-regarded creative events around – not bad for an organisation which launched only four years ago. That it now pulls in a wide range of big names from the creative industries (see below), as well as looking after some 2,000 delegates, says something of how its reputation has grown.

Jessica Walsh, Partner @ Sagmeister & Walsh Designer, Art Director / USA

Put simply, say OFFSET,the three days are a chance to construct “a weekend of presentations, interviews, panel discussions and debates with the very best of Irish and international designers, animators, illustrators, advertisers, artists, photographers and more live on stage.”

Highlights this year include illustrators Sarah Mazzetti, Jon Burgerman and Mike Perry; artists Marian Bantjes and Geneviève Gauckler; designers Jessica Walsh, Marina Willer, Tom Hingston and Neville Brody; agencies Mother London and W+K Amsterdam; animation studios Brownbag and Golden Wolf; and Bloomberg Businesweek’s creative direcror, Richard Turley. Legendary graphic design Milton Glaser will also be appearing in a special filmed interview.

Marina Willer, Partner @ Pentagram London, Graphic Designer / UK

There will also be a week-long series of screenings and exhibitions held across the city – more details of those here.

The full list of speakers for this year’s event is below, with links to their OFFSET biographies. Early bird tickets are €165 (with a reduction for group bookings of six or more), and will be available until March 1 from iloveoffset.com. Thereafter, tickets are €180 each.

CR will also be reporting from the event over the three days.

Richard Mosse, Photographer / Ireland

Happy birthday Lilla

As we discussed in our Feb issue, being an illustrators’ agent can be a tough business – all that negotiating, chasing payment and deadlines and worrying about your artists. But it has its benefits at least once a year

We all look forward to getting cards on our birthday but when your colleagues are also talented imagemakers the quality of card goes up quite considerably. Each January, agent Lilla Rogers of Lilla Rogers Studio receives a rather lovely crop of cards from the illustrators she represents. Shown here are a few of this year’s bunch (above card by Trina Dalziel).

Zoe Ingram

 

 

Sarah Walsh

 

Silvia Dekker

 

 

Lisa Congdon

 

 

Jon Cannell

 

 

Jillian Phillips

 

 

Jennifer Judd-McGee

 

Hsinping Pan

 

Helen Dardik

 

Daniel Roode

 

Carolyn Gavin

 

Amy Blay

 

Allison Cole

 

Being the cynics we are we asked Lilla whether this was a brief that she set her artists but, no “they actually just send them to me every year,” she says. Which presumably goes some way to make up for all the hassle agents deal with throughout the rest of the year.

See more work from all the artists here at Lilla Rogers Studio

GraphicDesign&: Golden Meaning

For GraphicDesign&’s latest book, Golden Meaning, 55 creatives were asked to interpret mathematical concept the golden ratio. Responses include some witty and inventive work exploring how graphics can be used to convey complex or abstract theories…

Golden Meaning is the second release from GraphicDesign&, a publishing venture set up by Lucienne Roberts and Rebecca Wright. The first, Page 1, featured 70 designers’ interpretations of the first page from Charles Dickens’ Great Expectations and offered a look at the effects of typography on reader experience (you can read our blog post on it here).

 

The golden ratio – also known as the golden mean or divine proportion – was first studied in Ancient Greece and has been used for centuries by artists, architects and even composers to create work with harmonious proportions. Contributors to the Golden Meaning were asked to create work based on this theory and have produced illustrations, mnemonics, typefaces and interactive software.

Malika Favre created a silhouette of a woman using a golden ratio grid (above), while Bibliotheque devised a mnemonic to help people remember the golden ratio as an angle:

 

Oli Kellett doctored a portrait of himself in accordance with a template devised by a retired US surgeon that uses the golden ratio to determine how a beautiful face should look:

 

Other designs consider how the golden ratio relates to our everyday surroundings – such as Mark Hudson’s, which compares the proportions of everyday objects, from a Mars Bar to a pack of playing cards.

 

And some involved a creative approach to coding: Face37’s Rick Banks and Tom Duncalf used Processing and the Fibonacci code to generate a typeface, and Sennep used coding to create a visualisation examining the relationship between the Fibonacci code, the golden ratio and the patterns on the head of a sunflower:

 

Not all of the works are entirely mathematically accurate but each presents a thoughtful, creative way of visualising a complicated theory. By choosing contributors from a range of countries, disciplines and age groups, Roberts and Wright have compiled a diverse collection that challenges traditional notions of how we can visually convey abstract ideas.

Illustration by Rose Blake highlighting the short period of time when the height of a parent and their child equals the golden ratio.



Julia’s submission, which matches numbers in the Fibonacci sequence to words in the Oxford English Dictionary.

 

“We invited contributions in batches,” says Roberts. “This allowed us to see how the book was progressing and ensure we had a real mix of work.

“We were keen to include illustrators, who are lateral thinkers by trade, but we also wanted plenty of contributions from typographers and some from creatives with a more mathematical or scientific background, such as The Luxury of Protest [which specialises in data visualisation],” she adds.

George Hardie chose to represent the golden ratio using wine.


The book was compiled with help from Guardian blogger and mathmetician Alex Bellos, who suggested using the golden ratio as the key concept.

“We  discussed a few options with Alex and thought this was a fitting choice, as it’s often associated with aesthetics and creating things of beauty,” explains Roberts. As Roberts points out, the standard dimensions of a paperback also use the golden ratio – something Erik Spiekermann addressed in GraphicDesign&’s first title.

Homework drew a ‘golden ass’…


As well as providing an interesting read for designers and mathmeticians, Roberts hopes the book will help make maths more accessible.

“As with all GraphicDesign& projects, our ambition was to show how the knowledge and practice of graphic designers, typographers and image-makers is uniquely capable of shedding light on ideas,” explain Roberts and Wright in their introduction to the book.

The pair are already working on a third title about religion, and hope to release a range of books marrying design with a range of subjects.

And Jessica Nesbeth used hair to illustrate the golden mean.


Golden Meaning is available to buy now at graphicdesignand.com at an introductory price of £15.

Roberts, Wright, Bello and selected contributors will also be discussing the project at London’s Design Museum on Wednesday, February 26 – see designmuseum.org for details or to book tickets.

Typeface by Adrian Talbot, made using golden ratio proportions..

CR March: the ‘how it was done’ issue

Our March issue is a craft special and examines how a range of creative work was made, including Maya Almeida’s underwater photographs and a 3D-printed slipcase by Helen Yentus. We also explore the science behind Jessica Eaton’s extraordinary images, and go behind-the-scenes of new ads for Schwartz and Honda…

On top of all that we look at the BBC’s new iWonder platform, review the Design of Understanding conference and books by Wally Olins and on the Ulm School of Design, and Paul Belford explains the power behind one of the most famous posters from Paris 1968.

The March issue of Creative Review will be available to buy direct from us here. Better yet, subscribe to make sure that you never miss out on a copy – you’ll save money, too. Details here.

Opening the issue, our Month in Review section looks back at the The Lego Movies’ ‘ad break takeover’; Black + Decker’s new identity; the return of the Old Spice guy; and the debate around the new Squarespace Logo service.

Daniel Benneworth-Gray raises a sleep-deprived toast to working through the night; while Michael Evamy’s Logo Log salutes the Mobil identity on its 50th anniversary.

Our craft features begin with a look at the work of underwater photographer, Maya Almeida. Antonia Wilson talks to her about what it takes to create her beautiful images…

And Helen Yentus, art director at Riverhead Books in New York, talks us through her radical 3D-printed slipcase she recently designed for a special edition of Chang-Rae Lee’s novel, On Such a Full Sea. (Yentus also created this month’s cover.)

Rachael Steven looks at the thinking behind iWonder, the new online storytelling platform from the BBC…

…While six of the objects that appear in BarberOsgerby’s In the Making show at the Design Museum are featured – each one ‘paused’ midway through its manufacture and beautifully shot by György Körössy (two pound coin shown, above right).

Antonia Wilson also talks to photographer Jessica Eaton about the process behind making her stunning images of cubic forms.

And Eliza Williams discovers how over a hundred sacks of spices were blown up in a new ad for Schwartz…

… while a more sedate approach is explored in a behind-the-scenes look at Honda’s Inner Beauty spot from Wieden + Kennedy.

We also look at why VFX is becoming more invisible, and (above) look at the latest trends in packaging.

In Crit, Nick Asbury reviews Wally Olins’ new book, Brand New…

…Mark Sinclair reports back from the recent Design of Understanding conference…

… and Professor Ian McLaren looks at a new book on the influential Ulm School of Design, which he attended in the early 1960s.

Finally, this month’s edition of Monograph, free with subscriber copies of CR, features photographs of Norfolk by designer Pearce Marchbank.

The March issue of Creative Review will be available to buy direct from us here. Better yet, subscribe to make sure that you never miss out on a copy – you’ll save money, too. Details here.

A history of Japanese poster art

A new exhibition at Zürich’s Museum for Design showcases more than six decades of Japanese poster art, exploring changing aesthetics and attitudes towards the medium…

Japanese Poster Artists – Cherry Blossom and Asceticism includes more than 130 posters dating from the 1950s to the present day. These works are also featured in accompanying book Japan – Nippon; the latest addition to Lars Müller Publishers’ poster collections.

As the book and show explain, the poster’s role in Japan’s visual culture has changed significantly since the Second World War. In the 1950s and 60s, the Japan Advertising Annual Club – the country’s first association of graphic designers – held annual exhibitions of hand drawn and painted designs inspired by modernist ideals, which won international awards and recognition.

Rapid economic development in the 1960s led to the introduction of new printing techniques, and an increase in the quality and quantity of posters being produced. In an essay for the book, Kiyonori Muroga cites Yusaku Kamekura’s work (above) for the 1964 Olympic Games in Tokyo as a milestone in Japanese graphic design, “as it represented the intense visual impact achieved by art direction and well-executed typography, rather than pictorial graphic design.

“The poster was the most authentic and successful “advertising” for the national event, though the total design for the Olympic Games — including the pictograms — were recognised as a monumental achievement of, and an effort realised through, modern graphic design,” notes Muroga.

In the decade that followed, designers also embraced silk screen printing, creating limited editions works for artists, musicians and cultural venues and re-defining the poster as an autonomous artwork instead of a vehicle for advertising. “The development of posters sold upon their own inherent merit “generated a wave of public astonishment and fascination…helped along by the advent and quick ascension of the psychedelic poster spawned by the American Hippie counter/subculture,” explains Muroga.

A consumerist boom in the 1980s saw another new wave of designs, where fashion brands, photographers and artists collaborated on experimental artwork and many designers employed “allusive image-based pseudo-narratives” in their posters.

Posters from these decades have since become sought after collectors’ items in Europe and the west, and now feature in many foreign museum archives. In her introduction to Japan – Nippon, Bettina Richter says this probably due to their conceptual, experimental style and exoticism.

“These artworks possess an unusual visual aesthetic that is utterly captivating, and yet seems to refute all the conventional rules of visual communication…What is actually being advertised is often unclear, and the Japanese poster tends to be viewed instead as a visual embodiment of philosophical ideas of the Far East,” she says.

 

Today, however, Richter and Muroga say the poster no longer holds the same prestige or prominence in Japanese visual culture.

“The Japanese poster scene seems to be at a standstill. The same designers who invigorated the format generations ago now make “artistic” posters detached from any criticality in terms of content or subject….the “old masters” of the Japanese poster tradition, individuals with established reputations, dominate both poster competitions and commissions, while younger unproven designers have little opportunity and much less interest in the making of posters,” she says.

The allure of the poster may be fading in Japan but as the book and exhibition demonstrate, it’s a format that should be cherished. The range of artistic styles on show is astonishing, and the collection includes some beautiful, intriguing and innovative designs.

Japanese Poster Artists – Cherry Blossom and Asceticism is open at Museum für Gestaltung, Zürich until 25 May. For details, see museum-gestaltung.ch. Poster Collection 26: Japan – Nippon is published by Lars Müller Publishers and priced at £24.00. For details or to buy a copy, click here.

Photo (top) by Regula Bearth, ©ZHdK