Archive for the ‘Graphic Design’ Category

Nostalgic Design Decisions, by Chance

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010

Renewing New York State license plates online gives drivers a clear visual of their options for the appearance of the new plates. Keep the old number and blue and white plate ($130), opt for the new gold plates with a new number (add $25) or go for the gold but keep your old alpha-numeric string (add $45). I like the gold plates; the stark simplicity is more appealing than the fussy landscape trying to add some interest at the top of the former design. The “new” look is a throwback to NYS tags from the 1970’s, when I learned to drive, though the first license plate with a gold background debuted in 1962. My dad always held on to one plate for his collection hanging on the garage wall, and told the DMV he lost the other when it was time to exchange old plates for new.

I was surprised that I was willing to pay a little more for nostalgia, because mostly I agree with Diana Vreeland: I loathe nostalgia. In that case, why not keep the old plate number while I’m at it? Hardly a momentous decision but it was past midnight and I was already tired of thinking about the whole thing so I flipped a coin and allowed random chance to make the decision. It came down heavily on the side of nostalgia: gold plate, old number.

I finalized the transaction, then savored the Dept. of Motor Vehicle’s automatically-generated email response, below. Why should email be any different than actually going to the DMV, where you also will not receive a response? Some experiences generate no nostalgia at all.


Return of the Fugitive

Sunday, June 13th, 2010
When I first moved to New York in 1984, I fancied myself street-smart. Wrong. The city was a darker, scarier, and more raw place. Or perhaps I was just very young. In either case (and friends back me up on this) New York was a lot more perilous then, with fewer cops around, and trash and litter pretty much every where you looked—some of it fascinating. I didn’t know why I felt compelled to pick up ripped passports, trampled photographs, blurred notes scrawled in Bic pen on the back of Marlboro packages—but I did.
I made my collection of junk into a set of 100 2-sided collages, each about the size of a baseball card. I called the project 100 Fugitive Felons, after I saw a poster in the subway stating the NYPD was searching for just that many criminals on the lam. I felt like I was gathering evidence, might have crossed paths with some of these people; as if I was preserving some record of small scale despair. I was preserving the history of the city’s unknown, unwanted human flotsam by noticing and cataloging the ephemera left in their wake. I keep the set of collages in a black evidence binder; they remind me of mug shots, police blotters, other official record books.
I knew that the logical conclusion to the project would be to re-lose the felons: to take the collection to a grimy park somewhere or Madison Square Garden or Times Square, and just leave it behind, return it to time’s slipstream. Only I couldn’t bring myself to do it. So it sat around my studio; was photographed and exhibited a couple of times, was seen by some people. Last time I looked at the collection, I noticed that I only had 99 felons left. They are stored 4 to a binder page, and somewhere in the middle of the book was a page with one unoccupied slot.
One had escaped, been pilfered, gone missing in its travels. I couldn’t remember which felon was missing, and it disturbed me more than I’d care to admit that I had lost just that one. I tried to be zen about it. Did someone swipe it during a photo shoot? Did it fall out somewhere in my disorganized house? In any event, that day I also noticed the plastic binder pages were so old they had begun to destabilize and become sticky: I thought they were archival quality when I bought them but clearly they needed to be replaced. I stored the collages in 2 gallon-sized ziplock bags until I got around to ordering replacement pages.
Today, instead of undertaking a hideous project I never should have agreed to, I decided to procrastinate by refiling the felons back into the new pages. I had thrown them into the ziplock bags in a jumble, and it dawned on me that I’d never be able to put them back in their original order. Well, so what I thought? Embrace the randomness of life. Love chaos. Wabi-sabi. I just began grabbing the cards and storing them away. Lo and behold: when I finished, I had 25 pages with 4 collages each. I had never lost one; it must have been slipped into a case with another, and since they’re 2-sided I never noticed. There is a lesson in there of some sort, I think it’s about the larger meaning of fugitive, but beyond that I have no clue.

When I first moved to New York in 1984, I fancied myself street-smart. Wrong. The city was a darker, scarier, and more raw place than it is today, and it turned out I knew nothing about how things worked. Or perhaps I was just very young. In either case (and friends back me up on this) New York was a lot more perilous then, with fewer cops around, and trash pretty much every where you looked—some of it fascinating, and some of it on fire. I didn’t know why I felt compelled to pick up ripped passports, trampled photographs, blurred notes scrawled in Bic pen on the back of Marlboro and Parliament packages—but I did.

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Seeds, Part 2

Sunday, May 30th, 2010

I really don’t have a good reason for posting this except that it popped up on Google image search (I was researching the previous entry about seed package art) and I found it pretty great, in that 60’s moptop kind of way.

How many bands and album covers from this era relied on art direction along the lines of: take confused/stoned band to location, shoot, done? Concept pretty spare. “OK lads. This time, in a greenhouse. Things are growing. Look meaningful.”

Or: “OK lads, by the water. Look meaningful.”

Or: “OK lads, just look meaningful. Don’t worry about the dead leaves…”

Seed Package Art: Nice Tomatoes, Sweet Pea

Saturday, May 15th, 2010

Image via http://www.thelabelman.com/

It’s been a long time since my last post and I hope I still have some readers left…maybe three or four? Excuses, excuses: I finished my thesis and graduated from the Design Criticism master’s degree program at the School of Visual Arts on May 14, and now that I’ve caught up on sleep and regenerated some brain cells (maybe three or four) I plan to post on a more regular basis in the weeks to come. You’ve been warned.

Anyway, I did manage to write this last week for the excellent idsgn.org. It was an idea proposed for an assignment given by Michael Bierut at DCrit, but somehow I ended up writing about album art instead for his class. The notion to write about seed package art stayed with me, though, and here it is just in time for spring.

Tickets Please

Sunday, January 17th, 2010


Photo via L. Eckstein, All My Eyes

When I stumbled across this great blog All My Eyes today and spotted a post about gorgeous Argentinean bus tickets, naturally I had to keep reading. I wasn’t disappointed.

I have a personal interest in tickets; my great-grandfather Ruben Harry Helsel invented more than 45 different ticket dispensing machines between 1917 and 1958.


Photo by Angela Riechers

His Takacheck (above) is still a familiar sight anywhere people need a civilized way to take a number and wait their turn. (I wrote about my great-grandfather for a design research class taught by Steve Heller as part of SVA’s DCrit MFA program; you can see the finished book here.)

Changing Times

Monday, December 21st, 2009

This “digital” clock was created by artist Mark Formanek at Rotterdam Central Station (NL). For 24 hours from November 27th to the 28th, each wooden number was carefully adjusted by a total of 36 workers, making this a real clock that keeps accurate time. The performance was recorded on film and will be shown in Rotterdam throughout the city.

It’s kind of a great cosmic meditation: an analog version of the digital, recorded it so it will function into the future as part of the digital world. I wonder if the wooden components will simply become kindling?

Standard Time is an artwork by Mark Formanek commissioned by Bureau Binnenstad (City of Rotterdam). With thanks to Rotterdam Festivals and Rotterdam Centraal (NS, Prorail and Randstadrail)

Remedy for Monkey Mind

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

Ommwriter from Herraiz Soto on Vimeo.

I know, I know. No posts since October. Bad blogger! (what do you mean no one noticed? I’m going to overlook that snarky comment.) So I want to come back with something nice: take a look at this writing program. I just downloaded the beta and may seriously try it next time I have to work on something. It clears away all the visual clutter on your computer desktop, no toolbars except a few rollover options, and just lets you type over a snowy scene, with soothing electronic music. It’s its own little peaceful environment.
http://www.ommwriter.com/en/

Hacking Google Street View

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

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This offers all sorts of creative possibilities: an online promo piece for British band the Editors places custom panoramic photographs of band members into various London locations via Google Street view, hacked for the occasion. I really wish I knew how to do that.
via Gavin Lucas, Creative Review

Page Turners

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009


On view at the NY Art Books Fair. Left: J and L Books. Right: DAP.

It was heartening to see that as the publishing landscape makes room for Kindles and vooks and online magazines complete with flippable “pages,” there is still interest in beautiful, impractical artist’s books. Printed Matter, the world’s largest nonprofit organization dedicated to publications made by artists, presented the fourth annual NY Art Book Fair, October 2-4 at P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center in Long Island City. (more…)

Hungry Man and Skinny Cow

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

SkinnyVHungry

The doors of American supermarkets swing open to usher us into retail fever dreams, the fabulous fairy-tale world of who corporate brands would like us to be and who we wish we were. Meanwhile, who we really are gets lost in the vast landscape. Product package design meant to appear masculine says far more about hopelessly outdated cultural assumptions than it does about real shoppers, male or female. And reduced-calorie or lowfat products pitched towards women feel very out of touch now that it’s common for members of both sexes to be concerned with weight loss.

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