waldemar swierzy
Transcription
waldemar swierzy
JUNIOR REVIEW PROCESS SKETCH BOOK Compiled by Justin Bastock Editor | Designer | Typographic Boffin Justin Bastock | thewanderingangel. com Year of Publication © 2013 | Printed at Folk Hall All rights reserved. This process/sketchbook was made for Junior Review - Fall 2013 taken at the Myers School of Art. The main text of this book was set in Univers. Header text was set in Glypha45-Light Special Thanks To: Chris Wallenhorst, Kayla Hull, Matt Weiss, Andrew Krigline, and Danielle Lowery, Katie Timperio, Brittyn DeWerth, Janice Troutman,Vlada Vukadinovic, and so many more at the Myers School of Art! Contents Typography 2: History of Graphic Design Poster Type Specimen Booklet Production 1: Image Translation Project Typography 3: Design for Good - Community Gardening Illustration: Projects 1 & 2 - Contrasts/Phobias Out of Class Project History of Graphic Design Poster TYPOGRAPHY 2 52 59 51 69 63 68 62 64 61 58 67 53 57 60 50 65 45 66 56 55 41 46 54 42 48 47 49 43 ThE 44 ConCEpTual ImagE 1. Armando Testa, poster for Pirelli, 1954. The strength of a bull elephant is bestowed on the tire by the surrealist technique of image combination. 19. Milton Glaser, Bob Dylan poster, 1967. Transcending subject and function, this image became a symbolic crystallization of its time. 2. Armando Testa, rubber and plastics exhibition poster, 1972. A synthetic hand holds a plastic ball in a distinctive and appropriate image for this trade exhibition. 20. Milton Glaser, Dada and surrealism exhibition poster, 1968. The smaller table isolates the word real within the longer word surrealism. 34. Paul Rand, cover design for Modern Art in Your Life, 1949. With this MoMA publication Rand makes modern art seem as accessible as a daily meal. As Steven Heller aptly stated in his superb biography of Rand, published in 1999, “Rand’s jackets and covers were both mini canvases and mini posters. He composed the limited image area for maximum impact.” 48. David Lance Goines, classical film screening poster, 1973. The directness of image and composition gains graphic distinction from a poetic sense of color and sensitive drawing. 3. Tadeusz Trepkowski, antiwar poster, 1953. 21. Milton Glaser, Poppy Records poster, 35. Lou Danziger, “American Paintings serigraph, 1967. A passionate statement is reduced to just one word: No! 1968. A poppy blooming from a granite cube symbolizes a new, independent company breaking through the monolithic conventions of the recording industry. from the Metropolitan Museum of Art” poster, 1966. 4. Henryk Tomaszewski, football poster for the Olympic Games in London, 1948. 5. Henryk Tomaszewski, poster for the play Marie and Napoleon, 1964. Tomaszewski led Polish graphic design toward colorful and artistic expression. 6. Jerzy Flisak, cinema poster for Rzeczpospolita Babska, undated. Bright colors and informal shapes convey the delightful resonance of the 1950s Polish poster. 7. Roman Cieslewicz, circus poster, 1962. Collage elements superimpose the word cyrk and a clown on a high-contrast photograph of an elephant. 8. Franciszek Starowieyski, Warsaw Drama Theater poster, 1962. The cube drawn in perspective transforms the flat page into deep space, forcing the strange complex above it to float. 9. Jan Lenica, Warsaw Poster Biennale poster, 1976. Meandering arabesques metamorphose into a winged being. 10. Jan Lenica, poster for Alban Berg’s Wozzeck, 1964. As with many of Lenica’s posters, the spirit of art nouveau is evident. 11. Waldemar Swierzy, Ulica Hanby poster, 1959. The painterly lettering becomes an extension of the lipstick. 12. Waldemar Swierzy, Jimi Hendrix poster, 1974. The electric vitality of gestural strokes on the cobalt blue portrait suggests the vigorous energy of hard-rock music. 13. Roman Cieslewicz, poster for Vertigo, 1963. A target on the forehead of a skull, also alluding to the film’s title, is combined with a fingerprint in this enigmatic interpretation of the Polish version of Hitchcock’s film. 14. Roman Cieslewicz, Zezowate Szczescie (Bad Luck) movie poster, 1959. As with many posters by Cieslewicz,the viewer is left with the task of interpreting the image. 15. Jerzy Janiszewski, Solidarity logo, c. 1980. Crude letter forms evoke street graffiti, and the crowded letters are a metaphor for people standing solidly together in the street. 16. Marian Nowinski, political poster, 1979. A book bearing the name of Chilean poet Pablo Neruda, whose works were banned and burned by the Pinochet regime, is closed by large metal spikes. 17. Reynolds Ruffins, illustration for Amtrak Express magazine, 1983. Decorative color and abstracted forms typify Ruffins’s work over half a century. 22. Milton Glaser, “Art Is” poster, 1996. Suggesting a painting by Magritte, visual and verbal meanings are explored by manifesting a hat as a photograph, a shadow, a word, a pictograph, and a written definition. 23. Seymour Chwast, Judy Garland poster, c. 1960. The vibrant flat colors aptly express the resonance of her singing. Chwast uses his own typeface Blimp for the title. 24. Seymour Chwast, album cover for The Threepenny Opera, 1975. Diverse inspirations combine to capture the resonance of the renowned German play. 25. Seymour Chwast, moving announcement for Elektra Productions, c. 1965. Walking, riding, or propelled by locomotive power, the client’s name travels to its new location. 26. Seymour Chwast, poster protesting the bombing of Hanoi, 1968. A mundane advertising slogan gains new life when combined with a blue woodcut and offset printed green and red areas. 27. Seymour Chwast, display typeface designs. Chwast playfully echoes Victorian, art nouveau, op art, and art deco forms. 28. Barry Zaid, book jacket for Bevis Hillier’s Art Deco, 1970. Decorative geometry of the 1920s is reinvented in the context of the sensibilities of a half-century later. 29. Barry Zaid, cover for the Australian Vogue, 1971. The rotund geometric forms of Léger and modernist pictorial art are evoked. 30. James McMullan, Anna Christie poster, 1977. McMullan often calls attention to the physical properties of the medium; the red background changes into painterly strokes and then becomes lettering. 31. Paul Davis, poster for The Threepenny Opera, c. 1975. A sinister portrait of Mack the Knife is placed in front of a hanging yellow sheet on which the title is painted in blood. 32. Henrietta Condak (art director) and Richard Hess (illustrator), album cover for Charles Ives: The 100th Anniversary, 1974. A complex Victorian poster format frames many images from the composer’s time. 55. Gunter Rambow (designer/ photographer) and Michael van de Sand (photographer), S. Fischer–Verlag poster, 1976. The portability of the book is conveyed in memorable fashion. 49. Corita Kent. Feelin’ Groovy, serigraph, 1967. 56. Gunter Rambow (designer/ photographer) and Michael van de Sand (photographer), S. Fischer– Verlag poster, 1980. The book and the concept of reading as a window on the world gain intensity from the luminous sunlight streaming from this volume. 50. Corita Kent. Handle with Care, 51. Gunther Kieser, “Alabama Blues” concert poster, 1966. A concert announcement becomes a potent symbol of the longing for freedom and justice contained in the music. 36. Lou Danziger, poster for The New York School: The First Generation, 1966. 37. Herbert Leupin, poster for Tribune de Lausanne, 1955. 57. Gunter Rambow (designer/ photographer), Gunter Rambow and Gerhard Lienemeyer (typographers), poster for the play Antigone, 1978. Pathos and isolation are conveyed by the burning chair photographed from a low vantage point at dusk. 52. Gunther Kieser (designer) and 38. Raymond Savignac, poster for Gitanes, 1954. 39. John Berg, record album cover for the William Tell Overture, 1963. Complex visual organization was replaced by the simple presentation of a concept. 40. John Berg (art director) and Virginia Team (designer), record album cover for the Byrds’ Byrdmaniax, 1971. An enigmatic image transcends normal portraiture as masklike faces emerge from an oily fluid. 41. Woody Pirtle, logo for Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Hair, 1975. In this graphic pun, the comb relates to the client’s name, which is spelled by the comb’s teeth. 42. Woody Pirtle, poster for Knoll furniture, 1982. A hot pepper becomes a red and green chair, signifying the availability of Knoll’s “hot” furniture in Texas. Hans Hartmann (photographer), Frankfurt Jazz Festival poster, 1978. Symbolic fabrications are disseminated through photographs of sculpted objects. 53. Willy Fleckhouse (art director), cover for Twen, 1970. Graphic communications often become political symbols in the struggle between alternative value systems and generations. 58. Gunter Rambow, poster for the play Die Hamletmaschine, 1980. A chilling sense of anonymity is produced by this self-inflicted act of vandalism. 59. Gunter Rambow, poster for Othello, 1978. The pathos of the play is expressed by an image within an image: a tattered poster hanging on a wire fence in front a bleak apartment complex. 54. Willy Fleckhouse (art director), pages from Twen, 1970. Sensitive cropping, a full-page photographic symbol, and white space create a dynamic and expansive layout. 60. Gunter Rambow (designer/ photographer) and Michael van de Sand (photographer), theater poster for Südafrikanisches Roulette, 1988. A bandaged hand with a bloodstain shaped like Africa conveys the pathos of suffering and revolution. 61 through 64. Robert Massin (designer) and Henry Cohen (photographer), cover and double-page spreads from Eugene Ionesco’s La cantatrice chauve, 1964. The pictorial directness of the comic book is combined with the expressive typography of futurist poetry. 65. Robert Massin, pages from Eugene Ionesco’s Délire à deux, 1966. The words leap and run and overlap and smear into inkblots in a calligraphic homage to the nonrepresentational, surreal ideas of Ionesco, a master of the theater of the absurd. 66. Grapus, exhibition poster, 1982. A layering of emotionally charged graphic symbols contradict each other and unsettle viewers. 67. Raúl Martínez, poster honoring the Cuban people, c. 1970. Leaders and workers are cheerfully depicted in a comic book drawing style and bright, intense color. 68. Artist not identified, poster for COR, 1967. Clouds part to reveal an orange sun, symbolizing the ill-fated 26 July 1953 assault on the Santiago army barracks, which launched the Cuban Revolution. 69. Elena Serrano, “Day of the Heroic Guerrilla” poster, 1968. An iconographic image of Che Guevara transforms into a map of South America in a radiating image signifying revolutionary victory. 43. Wes Wilson, concert poster for The Association, 1966. Lettering becomes an image, signifying a cultural and generational shift in values. 44. Wes Wilson, concert poster for the Grateful Dead, Junior Wells Chicago Blues Band, and the Doors, 1966. Hand-drawn line art is printed in intensely vibrating colors. 45. Victor Moscoso, poster for the Chambers Brothers, 1967. The vibrant contrasting colors and Vienna Secession lettering inside of the sunglasses implies the drug culture of the period. 46. Victor Moscoso, concert poster for the Miller Blues Band, 1967. The shimmering nude female figure in the center of the poster reflects the uninhibited atmosphere of the 1960s. 47. Peter Max, “Love” poster, 1970. Max’s split fountain printing resulted in colors lyrically dissolving into one another. 33. Arnold Varga, newspaper advertisement for Joseph P. Horne, c. 1966. The joys of food and cooking are conveyed. (Reproduced from a proof not showing the Horne logo and text at the bottom of the page.) 6 3 18. Milton Glaser, record album cover for The Sound of Harlem, 1964. In this early example of Glaser’s contour line and flat color period, the figures are weightless shapes flowing in musical rhythm. 23 31 2 5 36 1 12 4 8 14 40 13 20 26 7 17 21 15 9 27 28 29 24 25 32 10 35 11 18 38 34 16 33 30 39 19 37 22 6 SKETCHES 7 CONCEPT SKETCHES The first step in any proj ect i s to generate as many sketches as possi bl e. Whi l e at the beginning I may not have thought m uch about the concept for my conceptual i mage poster I eventually buckl ed down and bel ted out qui te a few sketches here and there w hi ch l ed m e to my final design. I thought about what an i dea i s and w hat the “main idea” of the chapter w as that I had been assigned. A concept is def i ned as “ an ab st r a ct i dea; a general noti on.” O nce I had decided on m y i dea of desi gni ng a simplistic poster wi th very basi c geom etri c shapes I got down to work generati ng composition ideas. THE ASSIGNMENT Gr ap h ic De sign H i story Poster- (4 weeks) D evelop concepts to make graphi c desi gn history easier to com prehend and rem em ber. D esign a poster w hi ch sum m ari zes an assi gned chapter from Meggs’ H i story of G raphi c De sig n . Read assi gned chapter and take notes summariz ing the text and and answ eri ng study guide questions. Scan images and retype capti ons and pl ace into the grid pro vi ded based on hi stori c ti me sequence while incorporati ng styl i sti c devi ces. Index captions to i mages. A ll images and capti ons shoul d be used. Print production: I nDesi gn, ful l -col or, 20” x 32” vertical format. 8 COMPOSITIONS P R OC ESS T h e n e x t s t e p in my project was to start p r o t o t y p i n g d i fferent compositions. I finally s e t t l e d o n t h i s pencil and jaggy shaped design w h i c h I ’ m p r e t ty proud of as it happened i n a s e r e n d i p i t ous moment. 9 10 CON C L U S I O N W ith the f i nal desi gn cri ti qued and approved I moved on to the tedi ous process of adj usti ng type, fixin g i m ages, addi ng capti ons and maki ng sure everythi ng l ooked good. This project, al though i t took a very l ong time, was enj oyabl e and fun. I thi nk i t was a challenge for my creati ve m uscl e si nce I w as forced to i ncl ude al l the i m ages and capti ons, I do think more creati vi ty coul d’ ve happened with less im ages but you work wi th what you’ ve got to please the cl i ent. I n thi s case the cl i ent being my p rofessor and cl assm ates. FINAL 11 Typographic Specimen Booklet TYPOGRAPHY 2 14 SKETCHES 15 CON CE P T S K E T C H E S This project was an i nteresti ng one. We had to create a type dom i nant desi gn based off of a word we needed to defi ne. I n thi s com posi ti on I was given the words Expanded and Condensed type and D ingbats. I started out by defi ni ng the word. Then I played around w i th fonts l ooki ng for a legible one that al so fi t the cri teri a of expanded and condensed. I m oved the type around, added the graphic elem ent of bars to further em phasi ze the height and wi dth of the type. T HE ASS I G N M E N T T yp e S p e cimen B ookl et- (4 Weeks) D esign an 8-12 page, ful l -col or brochure. Research the history of a typeface and write a 300 word essay descri bi ng hi stori cal classification an d techni cal devel opm ents. Indicate earmarks ( l etters of parts of l etters which help to identi fy the typeface) . Fi nd examples of histori cal usage and current examples as well . D esign cover pag e, page w i th compl ete character set of each font styl e, page of earmarks, pages wi th hi stori cal and current examples, and co l ophon page l i sti ng producti on software and devi ces. D evelop page composi ti on concepts w hi ch reference historical page dynami cs from the time the typeface w as ori gi nal l y created. Recontextualiz e to address current approaches. P r in t p r o d u ct ion: Desi gn i n I nDesi gn. 5-1/8” wide x 7-5/ 8” ta l l . 16 COMPOSITIONS B P R OC ES S I n t h i s c o m p o s i t i o n I was given the magnificent subject o f D I N G B AT S ! I s tarted out by defining the word and t h e n l e a r n i n g t h a t it’s basically an infinite number of c h a r a c t e r s a n d p r inters marks. T h e n I p l a y e d a r o und with fonts, settling on W ingdings a n d F u t u r a . I w a s inspired by D avid Carson’s design in a m a g a z i n e c a l l e d RayG un. H owever I did not want to m i m i c h i s i d e a b ut I liked the idea of mirroring copy i n t w o d i f f e r e n t t ypefaces. I tried to carry that theme t h r o u g h o u t . A s i f looking in a mirror to a world made of s y m b o l i c g i b b e r i s h. 17 Pages of the 3rd rough layout for the booklet design. As you can see they’re not fully r e a lize d y e t . 18 T h e f inal bookle t d e si gn spre ads FINAL 19 CON C L U S I O N W ith th e fi nal desi gn cri ti qued and approved I moved onto the tedi ous process of adj usti ng type, fixi ng i m ages, addi ng capti ons and maki ng sure everythi ng l ooked good. This proj ect, al though i t took a very l ong ti m e, was en j oyabl e and fun. I thi nk i t was a challenge for my creati ve m uscl e si nce I was forced to i ncl ude al l the i m ages and caption s, I do thi nk m ore creati vi ty coul d’ ve happen ed wi th l ess i mages but you work with what you’ ve got to pl ease the cl i ent. In this case the cl i ent bei ng my professor and classmates. Image Translation PRODUCTION 1 22 IMAGE TRANSLATION Application: Adobe Illustrator Size: Sketches must be rendered a 7x7 page size. Due: January 25, 2012 : For this assignment we had to take photographs of an object of our choice and draw four geometric stylized thumbnail images of it. Then we had to pick one of the rough drawings, scan it into Adobe Illustrator at 300dpi and then 7x7 image. 23 The previous semseter I made a trip to the Akron Zoo and had taken some photos of the animals there. I knew I wanted to use one of them in this project and eventually settled on a flamingo. In class I made some inital sketches as shown on the right. I like to call it rambling on a page as I mostly just hold a conversation with myself pouring the ideas that spring forth onto the page regardless of what they look like. I tried to figure out not only an interesting composition but also what exactly makes a flamingo a flamingo. A little bit of playing around with basic shapes in Illustrator I managed to develop something I was happy with and was unashamed to turn in. I like how it turned out simple and basic and could easily see this turned into a logo or some sort of stuffed animal. PG 15 Design for Good TYPOGRAPHY 3 25 26 X X X X X 27 This project started with the idea that I would be making a comprehensive campaign for the local community gardens to draw attention to them and the wonderful opportunities they present to the community of Cuyahoga Falls. First I decided upon my target audience, of which I wanted to include younger children in the age range of 8-15. I figured the best way to go about appealing to this audience was through the use of quirky cartoon animals that would provide an open and friendly atmosphere for people to identify with. I picked animals that you would normally find in a suburban setting such as a rabbit, a fox, and a raccoon. Next on the docket was figuring out the layout and overall style of the illustrations. This was by far the most challenging part and looking back on the process I still can find things to improve upon. Compromises were made in the interest of time. After all, I would nitpick over style till the cows come home but something has to get done after all. The next few pages are examples of sketches I produced over the course of the project and various notes I made on the subject matter and execution of the project. 28 29 30 31 32 INITIAL SKETCH FOR POSTER 33 COLOR RENDER FOR POSTER MAGAZINE AD 1 MAGAZINE AD 2 36 MAGAZINE AD 3 37 TRANSPORTATION/BILLBOARD MOCKUP 38 WEBSITE HOMEPAGE 39 “EXTRA” ITEM - PLOT REPRESENATION 40 41 The final ideas in hindsight are a bit “cookie cutter” but at the same time I do feel there’s enough variation so as not to become boring. As mentioned previously, time has been immensely short during this project and bouts of depression mixed with poor time management as a result did not make any of this easy. An example of what “will” be done, should this campaign actually exist and be funded would be the construction of 4 identical 25ft x 25ft planters that would be placed in key locations around the city to draw attention to the scale of how large a plot you can get at the community gardens. By doing this it will give the average audience a playful interactive piece that will interrupt their day, and, combined with the colorful cartoon characters will draw attention to the plots. Flowers planted in these planters will help to improve the atmosphere of the surrounding area and allow for a comfortable atmosphere that the posters already encapsulate. All in all I want to continue to pursue this project as a portfolio item for my senior portfolio but time constraints inhibit any real progress before Junior Review. Contrasts & Phobias ILLUSTRATION 44 45 47 48 49 50 51 Justin Bastock