Category: Resource (Page 2 of 2)

Course Resources

Links and support materials to help you succeed in this course and beyond. If you don’t find the resources you’re looking for, just ask!

 

Essays & Theory Collections

The Communication Design Theory OER bibliography lists many of the readings and essays used in this course and more.

Diversity & Inclusion in Design

Designers You Should Know

The People’s Graphic Design Archive, updated daily, a virtual archive built by everyone, about everyone, for everyone.

Design History

Blogs, Interviews, Podcasts

Scratching the Surface. a podcast about design criticism

Videos / Media

Library Subject Guides

Google Docs

Overview

Each week you will add to your online Research Journal, documenting and critically reflecting on your influences, history, culture, likes, and dislikes. This practice of being curious about your own design aesthetic is a way to gain experience engaging with critical design theory.

Your Research Journal is a place for collecting ideas, freewriting, images, links, videos, and other media to help you develop your ideas and formulate your research topic.

It can also be a place to reflect on the readings and write your rough drafts before they are put into a formal post, comment, or paper.

Your journal may be private or public throughout the semester but it should be submitted at the midterm and end of the semester for review.

Get Started!

We will be using Google Docs for our Research Journals because most students already use Google or Gmail. If you don’t have an Account, you can create one here.

  1. Create a new google doc: docs.google.com/create
  2. You may format your Research Journal in whatever way works best for you, but a good informational structure is helpful.
  3. Here is a starter doc with headings, table of contents, and footnotes: Template Research Journal
  4. Add headings and table of contents to structure your Research Journal.
  5. Use spelling & grammar check and word count.
    1. Google Help Center > Spell Check
    2. Google Help Center > Word Count

Submit your Research Journal

Twice during the semester, you will share your Research Journal with your professor. If there is anything in the journal you don’t wish to share, you may duplicate the journal, remove the parts you want to keep private and submit it for review.

Due Dates

  • Midterm
  • Final

Submission Process

  1. Get your Research Journal ready to share by creating a sharable link.
  2. Create a post with the title: Research Journal (your initials)
  3. Write a brief reflection about the experience of keeping this Research Journal.
  4. Paste the sharable link into the post.
  5. To keep your post private and so only the professor can see your Research Journal, choose Visibility > Private when you post.
Gutenberg - Content Visibility Private

Research Journal

Each week you will add to your online Research Journal, documenting and critically reflecting on your influences, history, culture, likes, and dislikes. This practice of being curious about your own design aesthetic is a way to gain experience engaging with critical design theory.

Your Research Journal is a place for collecting ideas, freewriting, images, links, videos, and other media to help you develop your ideas and formulate your research topic.

It can also be a place to reflect on the readings and write your rough drafts before they are put into a formal post, comment, or paper.

Your journal may be private or public throughout the semester but it should be submitted at the midterm and end of the semester for review.

Get Started!

We will be using Google Docs for our Research Journals because most students already use Google or Gmail. If you don’t have an Account, you can create one here.

  1. Create a new google doc: docs.google.com/create
  2. You may format your Research Journal in whatever way works best for you, but a good informational structure is helpful.
  3. Here is a starter doc with headings, table of contents, and footnotes: Template Research Journal
  4. Add headings and table of contents to structure your Research Journal.
  5. Use spelling & grammar check and word count.
    1. Google Help Center > Spell Check
    2. Google Help Center > Word Count

Submit your Research Journal

Twice during the semester, you will share your Research Journal with your professor. If there is anything in the journal you don’t wish to share, you may duplicate the journal, remove the parts you want to keep private and submit it for review.

Due Dates

  • Midterm
  • Final

Submission Process

  1. Get your Research Journal ready to share by creating a sharable link.
  2. Create a post with the title: Research Journal (your initials)
  3. Write a brief reflection about the experience of keeping this Research Journal.
  4. Paste the sharable link into the post.
  5. To keep your post private and so only the professor can see your Research Journal, choose Visibility > Private when you post.
Gutenberg - Content Visibility Private

Hypothesis: How to use

Using Hypothesis

Writing in the margins has always been an essential activity for students. Annotation helps in reading comprehension and in developing critical thinking about course materials. Hypothesis enables students to continue this essential activity with online readings. Digital annotation also offers new affordances, enabling students to respond to text using different media and empowering them to collaborate on understanding and developing ideas about their readings.

WEB.HYPOTHES.IS/EDUCATION

Hypothesis is a web-based annotation tool that will allow us to read our texts together, asking and answering questions, defining difficult words, and practicing the essential skill of close reading. Below is an image and link to a Hypothesis demo so you can see an example.

Hypothesis Annotations in Project Gutenberg ebook: Frankenstein

Get Started!

Follow the instructions and watch the video below to set up your Hypothesis account.

  1. Visit the Get Started page to create a Hypothesis account.
  2. Next, install the Hypothesis Chrome Extension.
  3. If you’re using a different browser simply drag the bookmarklet button from the Get Started page into your bookmarks bar. Note: you need to make sure your bookmarks bar is visible first.
  4. Using Hypothesis on mobile? If you are working on an tablet or phone, simply add “https://via.hypothes.is/” to the start of any web address (URL) or use the Paste a Link feature at the top of hypothes.is
Hypothesis – Getting Started

Join our Hypothesis group

The instructions and video provide instruction for joining our Hypothesis group.

  1. Log into your Hypothesis account.
  2. Join our group: COMD3504_s22
  3. The COMD3504_s22 group homepage will display links to the annotated readings.
  4. When you are using Hypothesis for this class, be sure to choose our group from the dropdown. That way, all of our annotations, notes and replies are collected in one place.
Join our Hypothesis Group

Start Annotating

The instructions and video below will give you an overview of how to use Hypothesis and the types of annotation tools available.

  1. Login: Make sure you are logged into your Hypothesis account.
  2. Review Types: Before you start annotating your first reading, Learn About Annotation Types below and/or watch the video.
  3. Enable Hypothesis: Navigate to an assigned reading or webpage to annotate. Try it out on the main course text on page 6 “Forward: Why Theory?“. Many of the assigned readings, like this one, will have the Hypothesis tools enabled automattically, but if not, activate the Chrome extension by pressing the greyed-out h. button on your Chrome extensions bar or select the Hypothesis Bookmarklet if you are using another browser or use Paste a Link.
    • NOTE: You can toggle Hypothesis on and off by clicking on the extension or bookmarklet.
  4. Enable the Group: Click on the little arrow on the upper right to extend the Hypothesis tools pop out. Make sure you are logged in and choose our group from the My Groups dropdown (IMPORTANT). By default it will be set to Public.
  5. Start Annotating:
    • Select a word or phrase on the page to bring up the Annotate and Highlight icons. Annotations can be shared with the group. Highlights are always private.
    • You may also leave a Page Note by selecting the note icon from the Hypothesis tools popout. Page notes relate to the whole text.
    • Click the Share icon to copy your relevant annotations and include in your Reading Responses and/or Research Papers as footnotes.
  6. View All Annotations: To view all of the shared annotations in our group, click on the “Show All” button in the sidebar or visit the group homepage. It will display links to the annotated readings.
Annotation Types – Start Annotating

Learn about Annotation Types

Hypothesis gives you a few different tools to help you annotate a reading. As a general rule, your annotations should add something to what is already in the text. What you contribute will also help your classmates. Here are some suggestions for each type of tool.

The Annotation Tool

Use the annotation tool to select a word or phrase in the text and add notes, images, links to share with the class. When others come across the annotation, they can also add an annotation or reply to yours. TIP: You can also use the annotation tool for your own research by choosing “Only Me” when posting.

  • Ask a question. Confused by a passage or word? Select it and pose a question to the class.
  • Define a word. Did you find an unfamiliar word or a word you don’t understand because of the context? Select it and add a definition plus a link to the source, preferably Websters or similar.
  • Add a reference. Is there a word or concept in the reading that you are unfamiliar with? Look it up and provide a link to a website, interview, or video. Or add an image.
  • Rewrite a sentence. Sometimes the way a writer communicates a concept can be confusing or too wordy. Rewrite the sentence in your own words after defining unfamiliar words, when necessary.

The Highlight Tool

A highlight is similar to swiping a yellow marker over a passage of text. There are no comments or tags, like the annotation, but it’s anchored in the document and is quoted in the sidebar. A highlight is always private (“Only Me”), which means only you can see it and only when you’re logged in.

  • Important concepts
  • Quotations
  • Statistics

Page Notes

A page note has similar functionality to an annotation, but it associates comments, images, links, and/or tags with the whole document, not an individual word or phrase. Like Annotations, you can make Page Notes private by choosing “Only Me” when posting.

  • Prompts / Questions. Your professor may use a page note to provide a list of prompts or questions for your reading response.
  • General Questions or Ideas. If you have a question or thought about the reading as a whole, you might leave it a page note for the class.
  • Associated Texts. If there are other texts that you think relate, you might add a page note with links to those texts.

Replies

You can add a reply to an annotation, highlight, page note, or a prior reply. Use the Reply icon to create a reply. Your reply can include text, links, images, and/or tags.

  • Ask or Answer a Question. A reply is a great way to communicate with your classmates and discuss the reading as you go along.
  • Responding to your own annotations. It’s also a good way of replying to your own highlights, annotations, and notes with additional thoughts as you learn more.

Share

Use the Share icon to copy links to your relevant annotations and add them to your Reading Responses and Research Papers as a footnote.

Annotating PDFs

In addition to annotating readings on a website, we can also annotate distributed PDFs that you’ve downloaded to your computer.

  • Refer to this Annotating PDFs Tutorial for instructions on how to set up the Chrome Extension to allow for PDF file annotations in the browser.
  • You may also use Firefox and the Hypothesis Bookmarklet
  • Here’s another tutorial for downloading PDFs, viewing them in the browser, and annotating in our Hypothesis Group.

HELP

  1. QuickStart Guide for Students
  2. Annotation Tips for Students for annotation guidelines.
  3. Taxonomy of Annotation Types for guidence on which type of annotation tool to use.
  4. Using Hypothesis on mobile
  5. Annotating PDFs Tutorial
  6. More helpful tips from Student Resource Guide

Homework assignment example

Course Assignments

This course requires the completion of two short paper assignments (from 2 to 3 pages), an academic Research Poster Project, and weekly writing (blog/journal), classroom exercises, and field trips.

 

Sample Course Assignments

Research Journal & Poster Outcomes:

  demonstrate professional research practices (written, verbal, visual)

  connect graphic design history and theory with the contemporary design field

  demonstrate the connection between student’s design practice and theoretical concepts covered in the course

  create an annotated bibliography and glossary

  demonstrate methods of primary and secondary source evaluation.

 

Throughout the semester students will keep a design theory research journal in which they will document and critically review/reflect on class readings, other media, and field trips. By midterm students will present a well-defined research topic and outline of a final poster to be presented at the undergraduate research poster presentation or similar at the end of semester.

  1. Writing / Blogging 1. Weekly Blogging (minimum 1 developed post / 3 comments) (15%)

  Discussions from the classroom will carry over to the class site. Commenting will be used to reply to an initial blog post or other comments.

  Topics presented in class will require independent research and will be presented as developed posts on the class site for discussion and feedback.

  Research project documentation will be presented on the class blog for discussion and feedback throughout the semester.

2. (2) Reading Response Papers (2-3 pp) (10% each)

  After reading and reviewing two articles in the text, online and/or on reserve in City Tech’s library, students write a critical analysis of the assigned readings.

Research Paper 1 (Example)

Research Paper 1 (Example)

Students: This example post demonstrates the format for Research Paper posts and how student posts are organized using the category “Research Papers.” This post is displayed under Student Posts > Research Papers” in the site menu. Make sure your work is accessible on the site and check the assignment instructions for the required category, tags, and title for your posts.

Research Paper Title (Heading H2)

Your Name

Brief introduction. Sed porttitor lectus nibh. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Vestibulum ac diam sit amet quam vehicula elementum sed sit amet dui. Curabitur aliquet quam id dui posuere blandit. Mauris blandit aliquet elit, eget tincidunt nibh pulvinar a. Sed porttitor lectus nibh. Mauris blandit aliquet elit, eget tincidunt nibh pulvinar a. Sed porttitor lectus nibh.

Reading reference

Assigned texts and relevant articles

including PDFs and links for many key texts. Updates will be posted regularly throughout the semester.

 

Abrams, Janet and Peter Hall, eds. Else/Where: Mapping New Cartographies of Networks and Territories. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Design Institute, 2006.

Adams, Hazard and Searle, Leroy, eds. Critical Theory Since 1965. Tallahassee: Florida State University Press, 1986.

Armstrong, Helen, ed. Graphic Design Theory: Readings from the Field. New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2009.

*Helen Armstrong, Introduction to Graphic Design Theory: Writings from the FieldArmstrongIntro

Rudolf Arnheim, Gestalt and Art, Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, Vol. 2, No. 8, Autumn, 1943: Arnheim_GestaltandArt

Arp, Hans, and El Lissitzky, eds. The Isms of Art. Zurich: Eugen Rentsch, 1925.

*Arnold M. Barban, The Dilemma of “Integrated” Advertising, The Journal of Business, Vol. 42, No. 4, Oct. 1969: Barban_DilemmaOfIntegratedAdvertising

Barnbrook, Jonathon, et al. “First Things First Manifesto 2000.” First published in Eye no. 33 vol. 9, 1999

Barthes, Roland and Stephen Heath. Image-Music-Text. New York: Hill and Wang, 1977.

Barthes, Roland and Annette Lavers. Mythologies. New York: Hill and Wang, 1972.

*Barthes, Roland. Rhetoric of the Image, 1977: Barthes-Rhetoric-of-the-image

Baudrillard, Jean. For a Critique of the Political Economy of the Sign. Translated by Charles Levin. St. Louis.: Telos Press, 1981.

*Herbert Bayer, On Typography, 1967: Bayer_OnTypography

Bennett, Audrey. Design Studies : Theory and Research in Graphic Design, Princeton Architectural Press, 2006. ProQuest Ebook Central [City Tech Library Card Required]

Bierut, Michael. 79 Short Essays on Design, Princeton Architectural Press, 2007. ProQuest Ebook Central [City Tech Library Card Required]

Bourdieu, Pierre. Language and Symbolic Power.Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1991.

*Denise Scott Brown, Steven Izenour & Robert Venturi, Learning from Las Vegas: The Forgotten Symbolism of Architectural Form (1972): Venturi_LasVegas

Buchanan, Richard and Margolin, Victor. Design: Explorations in Design Studies, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995.

Davis, Meredith. Graphic Design in Context: Graphic Design Theory. New York: Thames & Hudson, 2012.

Derrida, Jacques. Of Grammatology. Translated by Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1976.

Drucker, Johanna and Emily McVarish. Graphic Design History: A Critical Guide. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2008.

Eskilson, Stephen J. Graphic Design: A New History. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2007.

Fiell, Charlotte and Peter Fiell, eds. Graphic Design for the 21st Century: 100 of the World’s Best Designers.Cologne: Taschen, 2003.

Foucault, Michel. “What Is an Author?” In Josué Harari, ed. Textual Strategies: Perspectives in Post-Structuralist Criticism. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1979, 142–160.

Galloway, Alexander R. and Eugene Thacker. The Exploit: A Theory of Networks. Minneapolis: University of Minneapolis Press, 2007.

*Karl Gerstner, Designing Programmes, (1964): Gerstner_DesigningProgrammes

*Walter Gropius, The Theory and Organization of the Bauhaus (excerpts), 1923: Gropius_Bauhaus

Hall, Sean. This Means This, This Means That : A User’s Guide to Semiotics, Laurence King Publishing, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central [City Tech Library Card Required]

Hara, Kenya. Designing Design. Translated by Maggie Kinser Hohle and Yukiko Naito. Baden: Lars Müller, 2007.

*Jessica Helfand, Dematerialization of Screen Space (2001): Helfand_ScreenSpace

Helfand, Jessica. Screen: Essays on Graphic Design, New Media, and Visual Culture. Princetone Architectural Press (2001).

Heller, Steven. “The Cult of the Ugly.” Eye No. 9, Vol. 3, 1993. http://www.graphicdesigntheory.net

*Steven Heller , Underground Mainstream, 2008: Heller_UndergroundMainstream2008

Heller, Steven, ed.I Heart Design : Remarkable Graphic Design Selected by Designers, Illustrators, and Critics, Quarto Publishing Group USA, 2011. ProQuest Ebook Central. [City Tech Library Card Required]

Heller, Steven, and Greg D’Onofrio. The Moderns : Midcentury American Graphic Design, Abrams, 2017. ProQuest Ebook Central. [City Tech Library Card Required]

Heller, Steven, and Mirko Ilic. Stop, Think, Go, Do : How Typography and Graphic Design Influence Behavior, Quarto Publishing Group USA, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central [City Tech Library Card Required]

Heller, Steven and Veronique Vienne, eds. Citizen Designer: Perspectives on Design Responsibility. New York: Allworth Press, 2003.

Hollis, Richard. Graphic Design: A Concise History (World of Art). London: Thames & Hudson, 1994.

Hollis, Richard. Swiss Graphic Design: The Origins and Growth of an International Style, 1920–1965. London: Laurence King, 2006.

Ilyin, Natalia. Chasing the Perfect: Thoughts on Modernist Design in Our Time. New York: Metropolis, 2006.

Jeffery, Ken. Design and Print Production Fundamentals.OpenText BC. (Blog post)

Johansen, Jørgen Dines, and Svend Erik Larsen. Signs in Use : An Introduction to Semiotics, Routledge, 2002. ProQuest Ebook Central. [City Tech Library Card Required]

Jones, John Chris. Design Methods: Seeds of Human Futures. New York: Wiley-Interscience, 1970.

Jubert, Roxane. Typography and Graphic Design: From Antiquity to the Present. Translated by Deke Dusinberre and David Radzinowicz. Paris: Flammarion, 2006

Kepes, György. Language of Vision. New York, Dover, 1995.

*György Kepes, Language of Vision, excerpt: Kepes_Language_of_Vision_exc

Klein, Naomi. No Logo. New York, Picador, 2000.

*Naomi Klein, No LogoChapter 12: Culture JammingKleinNoLogoExcCh12

Kress, Gunther & Theo van Leeuwen. Reading Images: The Grammar of Visual Design. 2006

Kroeger, Michael. Paul Rand : Conversations with Students, Princeton Architectural Press, 2008. ProQuest Ebook Central. [City Tech Library Card Required]

Lasn, Kalle. Design Anarchy. in Armstrong, Helen. Graphic Design Theory: Readings From the Field, Princeton Architectural Press, 2009.

Lasn, Kalle. Culture Jam: The Uncooling of America. New York: Eagle Brook, 1999.

Laurel, Brenda. Utopian Entrepreneur. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2001.

Leborg, Christian. Visual Grammar, Princeton Architectural Press, 2006. ProQuest Ebook Central [City Tech Library Card Required]

Lévy, Pierre. Cyberculture. Translated by Robert Bononno. Minneapolis: University of Minneapolis Press, 2001.

*El Lissitsky, Our Book, 1926: Lissitsky_OurBook

Lupton, Ellen and J. Abbott Miller. Design Writing Research: Writing on Graphic Design. New York: Kiosk, 1996. Excerpt: LuptonMillerDesignWritingResearch

Lupton, Ellen. “Deconstruction and Graphic Design: History Meets Theory.” http://www.graphicdesigntheory.net.

Lupton, Ellen, Designer as Producer, 1998: Lupton_Producer

Lupton, Ellen, ed., Graphic Design Thinking : Beyond Brainstorming, Princeton Architectural Press, 2011. ProQuest Ebook Central [City Tech Library Card Required]

Lupton, Ellen. Thinking with Type : A Critical Guide for Designers, Writers, Editors, and Students, Princeton Architectural Press, 2010. ProQuest Ebook Central [City Tech Library Card Required]

Lupton, Ellen. “Writing Lessons: Modern Design Theory”, 1988

Lupton, Ellen and Julia. “All Together Now,” Print 61, no. 1 (January/February 2007): 28–30.

Lupton, Ellen, and Jennifer Cole Phillips. Graphic Design : The New Basics, Princeton Architectural Press, 2008. ProQuest Ebook Central [City Tech Library Card Required]

Maeda, John and Antonelli, John. The Laws of Simplicity, MIT Press, 2006. ProQuest Ebook Central. [City Tech/CUNY Library Card Required]

*Lev Manovich, Import/Export, or Design Workflow and Contemporary Aesthetics, 2008: Manovich_ImportExport

Manovich, Lev. The Language of New Media. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2002.

Marchand, Roland. Creating the Corporate Soul: The Rise of Public Relations and Corporate Imagery in American Big Business. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2001.

Marchessault, Janine. Marshall McLuhan : Cosmic Media, SAGE Publications, 2004. ProQuest Ebook Central. [City Tech Library Card Required]

Margolin, Victor and Ashwin, Clive. “Drawing, Design and Semiotics” in Design Discourse: History, Theory, Criticism, University of Chicago Press, 1989.

*F.T. Marinetti, Manifesto of Futurism, 1909: Marinetti_Manifesto_Futurista

McCoy, Katherine with David Frej. “Typography as Discourse.” in Armstrong, Helen. Graphic Design Theory: Readings From the Field, Princeton Architectural Press, 2009.

McLuhan, Marshall. Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1964.

*Marshall McLuhan. Understanding Media, 1964 (excerpts): McLuhan_UnderstandingMedia_exc

McLuhan, Marshall, Quentin Fiore, and Jerome Agel. The Medium is the Massage. New York: Bantham Books, 1967.

Meggs, Philip B., and Alston W. Purvis. Meggs’ History of Graphic Design, John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, 2016. ProQuest Ebook Central [City Tech/CUNY Library Card Required]

Millman, Debbie. How to Think Like a Great Graphic Designer. New York: Allsworth Press, 2007.

Moholy-Nagy, László. Painting, Photography, Film. New York: MIT Press, 1969.

*László Moholy-Nagy, Typophoto, 1925: MoholyNagy_Typophoto

*Josef Müller-Brockmann, Grid and Design Philosophy (1981): MullerBrockmann_Grid_Des-Phil

Müller-Brockmann, Josef. The Graphic Designer and His Design Problems. New York: Hastings House, 1983.

Müller, Lars, ed. Josef Müller-Brockmann. Baden: Lars Müller, 1994.

Neurath, Otto. International Picture Language. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Tubner & Co., 1936: Neurath_Otto_International_Picture_Language

Norman, Don. Emotional Design : Why We Love (or Hate) Everyday Things, Basic Books, 2007. ProQuest Ebook Central. [City Tech Library Card Required]

Oxman, Neri. “Age of Entanglement”, Journal of Design and Science (JoDS).

Poulin, Richard. Graphic Design and Architecture, A 20th Century History : A Guide to Type, Image, Symbol, and Visual Storytelling in the Modern World, Quarto Publishing Group USA, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central. [City Tech Library Card Required]

Poyner, Rick. No More Rules: Graphic Design and Postmodernism. New Haven, Yale University Press, 2003.

Rick Poynor “First Things First Manifesto 2000,” AIGA Journal of Graphic Design 17, no. 2 (1999): 6–7.

*Paul Rand, Good Design is Goodwill (1987): Rand_Goodwill

Rand, Paul. Design, Form and Chaos. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1993.

Rawsthorn, Alice. “Design Gets More Diverse,” New York Times, March 20, 2011

Rock, Michael. “The Designer as Author. Eye 5, no. 20 (Spring 1996): 44–53.

*Aleksandr Rodchenko, Varvara Stepanova, Aleksai Gan. Who We Are: Manifesto of the Constructivist Group, c. 1922: RodchenkoStepanovaGan_WhoWeAre

Aleksandr Rodchenko, Slogans, 1921 (from Experiments for the Future…): RodchenkoSlogans1921

Rodchenko, Aleksandr; Lavrentiev, Alexander; Gambrell, Jamey. Aleksandr Rodchenko: Experiments for the Future, Diaries, Essays, Letters and Other Writings. New York, Museum of Modern Art, 2004.

Ross, Rodney. “Diversity in Graphic Design,” Pulse VCU (blog), 2012.

Saussure, Ferdinand, Charles Bally, and Albert Sechehaye. Course in General Linguistics. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1966.

*Ferdinand de Saussure, Course in General Linguistics, 1916 (excerpt): Saussure_GeneralLinguistics_exc

Scher, Paula. Make It Bigger. New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2002.

Siegel, Dmitri. “Designing Our Own Graves.” Design Observer blog. http://www.designobserver.com

Slavin, Kevin. “Design as Participation”, Journal of Design and Science (JoDS).

Smock, William. Bauhaus Ideal Then and Now : An Illustrated Guide to Modern Design, Chicago Review Press, 2009. ProQuest Ebook Central. [City Tech Library Card Required]

Terranova, Tiziana. Network Culture : Politics for the Information Age, Pluto Press, 2004. ProQuest Ebook Central. [City Tech Library Card Required]

Thackara, John. In the Bubble: Designing in a Complex World. Cambridge: MIT, 2006.

van Toorn, Jan. “Design and Reflexivity.” in Armstrong, Helen. Graphic Design Theory: Readings From the Field, Princeton Architectural Press, 2009.

van Toorn, Jan. Design’s Delight: Method and Means of a Dialogic Approach. Rotterdam: 010 Publishers, 2006.

*Jan Tschichold, The New Typography (1928): Tschichold_NewTypo

Tselentis, Jason, et al. Typography, Referenced : A Comprehensive Visual Guide to the Language, History, and Practice of Typography, Quarto Publishing Group USA, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central. [City Tech Library Card Required]

Tyson, Lois. Critical Theory Today: A User-Friendly Guide. New York: Routledge, 2006.

Vit, Armin, et al. Graphic Design, Referenced : A Visual Guide to the Language, Applications, and History of Graphic Design, Quarto Publishing Group USA, 2014. ProQuest Ebook Central [City Tech Library Card Required]

*Beatrice Warde, The Crystal Goblet, Or Why Printing Should Invisible, 1930: Warde_CrystalGoblet

Washington, Michele Y. “Why Black in Design Matters: Learnings from Harvard’s Black in Design conference,” AIGA, (2018)

Wild, Lorraine. “The Macrame of Resistance.” in Armstrong, Helen. Graphic Design Theory : Readings From the Field, Princeton Architectural Press, 2009.

ADDITIONAL ONLINE RESOURCES

100 Years of Design. AIGA.org [Website]

PaulRand.design – Articles by Paul Rand [Website]

The Observatory– Michael Bierut and Jessica Helfand on design, current events, and current enthusiasms. [Soundcloud/Podcast] 

Design Matters – Debbie Millman features interviews with designers, artists and cultural leaders. [iTunes/Podcast]

Citizen Designer Now! AIGA NY. http://www.citizendesignernow.org/ [Website]

Dutch Profiles – Jan van Toorn [Vimeo – interview]

Kress and van Leeuwen on Multimodality [text and video]

Kress and van Leeuwen on Multimodality [text and video]

“Hans Arp and El Lissitzky, The “isms” of art” The Charnel-House, blogpost.

“Is the Man Who Is Tall Happy?: An Animated Conversation with Noam Chomsky” 88 min | Documentary, Animation | 25 November 2013 (USA)

Synopses

ASSIGNMENT 1b Title: Introduction: Revisiting the Avant Garde Author: Helen Armstrong Year: 2009 Source: Graphic Design Theory: Readings from the Field. Princeton Architectural Press, 2009, pp. 9-15. Context: This essay was written as the introduction to the Graphic Design Theory reader that Helen Armstrong compiled and edited. This introduction briefly mentions many of the designers, movements and texts that are included in the collection (and which we read in class) while also describing the author’s own interest in the theoretical aspects of the design process Key Themes and Takeaways: – Revisiting the Avant Garde: Armstrong believes that the ambitions of avant garde artists from the early 20th century should be questioned but should inspire designers of today  –  Collective Authorship is an constantly evolving aspect of design, in which the producer-consumer relationship plays a key role – Universal Systems of Connection have been envisioned a means of uniting people through design, but remain restrictive in many ways – Social Responsibility must be a part of the design process, as designers play a key role in shaping society – We should ask what role the avant-garde of the new millennium will play

ASSIGNMENT 1b Title: Design as Art; What is a Designer?; A Living Language Author: Bruno Munari Year: 1966 Source: Design as Art. translated by Patrick Creagh, Penguin Classics, 2008. pp. 25-33, 37-40. Context: These three essays are selected from a collection of Bruno Munari’s writings, originally published as a regular column for the Italian Newspaper Il Giorno.  Munari had a very long career as an industrial designer, fine artist, member of the Futurist group, and author. Key Themes and Takeaways: – The fields of Fine Art, Design and Engineering are often confused – Designers rarely consider the distinctions between these fields – Usefulness or function are key features of design – Different fields of design: Visual, Industrial, Graphic, Research – “A Living Language” of images, forms, colors, symbols, etc. are employed in design

 

ASSIGNMENT 2 Title: Excerpts from Course in General Linguistics Author: Ferdinand de Saussure Year: 1916 Source: Course in General Linguistics. Edited by Charles Bally and Albert Sechehaye, Translated by Wade Baskin, McGraw Hill Paperbacks, 1966. pp. 65-78. Context: Saussure’s Course in General Linguistics is assembled from the lectures that he gave on the subject between 1911 and 1915. He was a highly influential thinker and professor in the field, but never compiled his own textbook on the subject. After his death, his former students compiled their notes to create the book as we now know it. Key Themes and Takeaways: – Chapter I of Part 1: General Principles addresses the Nature of the Linguistic Sign – A sign is composed of a signifier and a signified. The signifier is the sound-image that we speak or hear to refer to the sign. The signified is the concept that our mind conjures in relation to the sign. The sign is the whole of these parts. – Principle I states that the sign is arbitrary, meaning that we do not actively choose the components of language. The sign emerges from collective behavior, with no motivations or natural connections. – Principle II states that Signifiers are linear, meaning that meaning develops over time as we speak to one another – Chapter II address the Immutability and Mutability of the Sign – Signs are immutable, or unchanging, because of (1) the arbitrary nature of the sign, (2) the multiplicity of signs that make up a given language, (3) the over-complexity of language systems and (4) collective inertia toward innovation. – Signs are Mutable because time allows for shifts in the relationship between the signified and the signifier, language is powerless to defend itself against change, no one controls a language, a community of speakers make the social nature of a language one of its inner characteristics.

ASSIGNMENT 2 Title: Counting Sheep, Modern Hieroglyphs, Language of Dreams Author: Ellen Lupton, J. Abbott Miller Year: 1996 Source: Design Writing Research: Writing on Graphic Design. Kiosk Books, 1996. pp. 24-32, 41-45. Context: Design Writing Research compiles essays that Ellen Lupton and J. Abbott Miller wrote for various exhibition catalogs and publications in preceding years. Each essay in the collection explores designers or design projects that place strong emphasis on research and theory. Key Themes and Takeaways: – Counting Sheep: A Brief History of Written Numbers examines the ways that numerical notation have existed outside of alphabetic or linguistic writing systems, instead using tally marks, tokens, digits (ie. fingers and toes) and devices such as the abacus. – Modern Hieroglyphs examines the lasting impact of Otto Neurath’s Isotype system, which served as the basis for standard symbol sets such AIGA’s. Neurath’s system, like many other typographic ideas of the 1920s, strives for universal communication and objectivity. – Language of Dreams examines the fundamental graphic systems that are used for written languages. The basis for these systems are the pictograph, ideograph, rebus, syllabary, and alphabet.

 

ASSIGNMENT 3 Title: The Founding and Manifesto of Futurism Author: Filippo Tommaso Marinetti Year: 1909 Source: Marinetti: Selected Writings. Edited by R.W. Flint, translated by Arthur A. Coppotelli. Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1972. Context: Marinetti, along with a group of young Italian artists, composed this manifesto to declare their ambitions, in opposition to the traditional values dominating Italian art and culture of the time. Many aspiring artists at the time published manifestos for their movements. The Futurist Manifesto, published in Italian and French newspapers in 1909, stands out due to its fiery tone. Key Themes and Takeaways: – The introductory paragraphs contain allusions to traditional, mythological imagery with references to the latest machine technologies. – The narrative of this introductory portion portrays the Futurists as both heroic and machismo – Machinery is portrayed as both dangerous and thrilling – The 11 point manifesto lists the values and ideals that the group will celebrate, including courage, aggression, speed and violence – The closing paragraphs emphasize the Modernist idea of rejecting past art movements in favor of progress

ASSIGNMENT 3 Title: Who We Are: Manifesto of the Constructivist Group Author: Aleksandr Rodchenko, Varvara Stepanova, Aleksei Gan Year: c. 1922 Source: Aleksandr Rodchenko: Experiments for the Future. Edited by Alexander N. Lavrentiev. Museum of Modern Art, 2005. pp. 143-145. Reprinted in Graphic Design Theory, pp. 22-24 Context: The Russian Revolution of 1917 offered hope for a new society in which workers would replace the aristocracy as the ruling class. The Constructivists, led by Aleksandr Rodchenko envisioned a new form of art that would replace traditional painting and sculpture with new forms of mass produced graphics and engineered objects. Who We Are is one of many manifestos to emerge from this group Key Themes and Takeaways: – This fragmentary text enumerates the areas of life in which Constructivists will be involved – The authors reject being labeled as ‘artists’ in favor of the designation ‘constructor’ – Technology is seen as both a tool and the ‘mortal enemy of art’ – Geometrical forms are a necessary component for expressive art and everyday objects

ASSIGNMENT 3 Title: Our Book Author: El Lissitzky Year: 1926 Source: El Lissitzky: Life, Letters, Texts. Edited by Sophie Lissitzky-Kuppers. Translated by Helen Aldwinckle and Mary Whittle. Thames and Hudson, 1968. Reproduced in Graphic Design Theory, pp. 25-31 Context: In his travels throughout Europe, the Russian artist El Lissitzky played a critical role in connecting European avant garde movements of the early 20th century. His Essay Our Book considers some of the new technologies and visual strategies that artists could use to communicate their ideas both to international colleagues and to mass audiences at home. Key Themes and Takeaways: – Technical innovations in the arts immediately produce the highest achievements possible – New technologies led to the dematerialization of art – The book form is altered by technological inventions and by innovations in communication systems – Collaboration between painters and poets to create new book forms offers many possibilities for educating the masses – While the cinema and illustrated magazine add to social development, book artists must keep pace by developing new forms that will sharpen the optic nerve.

 

ASSIGNMENT 4 Title: The Theory and Organization of the Bauhaus Author: Walter Gropius Source: Bauhaus 1919-1928. Edited by Herbert Bayer, Walter Gropius and Ilse Gropius. Museum of Modern Art, 1938. Reproduced in Art in Theory 1900-2000. Edited by Charles Harrison and Paul Wood. Blackwell Publishing, 2003. pp. 309-314 Year: 1923 Context: The architect Walter Gropius, founder and first Director of the Bauhaus composed this text to articulate the ideals of the now-famous institution. In it Gropius criticizes traditional art academies while outlining a positive vision for an education that combines architectural concepts with aesthetic questions and everyday problem-solving. Key Themes and Takeaways: – Individuals must orient their attitude to the spirit of the times to create solutions for bettering society – The traditional art ‘academy’ fails by isolating artists, detaching skill from reality and ignoring traditional folk arts. – Creative work should ‘give form to space’ meaning artists should be able to express inner visions through their materials – The goal of the Bauhaus is to unify training in fields of art and design – Preliminary training should ‘break down conventional patterns of thought.’ As students progress they should take on more advanced form problems and incorporate theory, eventually understanding ‘all processes of creation.’

ASSIGNMENT 4 Title: Typophoto Author: László Moholy-Nagy Year: 1925 Source: Painting Photography Film. Translated by Janet Seligman. MIT Press, 1973. pp. 38-40. Reproduced in Graphic Design Theory, pp. 32-34 Context: This text initially appeared as a short chapter in Painting Photography Film, a publication that Moholy-Nagy wrote and designed for the Bauhaus press. Throughout this book, the artist and Bauhaus instructor articulated his vision for a new form of art that would incorporate a range of media. Key Themes and Takeaways: – Artists must participate in society’s ‘collectivity of interacting events.’ – Printers, Photographers, and all artists must consider ways that art can connect people – ‘Typophoto’ is a new form of making, combining typography and photography for ‘the most exact rendering of communication.’ – The combination of these printing technologies will create new possibilities for visual expression, thereby creating a ‘new visual literature.’

ASSIGNMENT 4 Title: On Typography Author: Herbert Bayer Year: 1967 Source: herbert bayer: painter, designer, architect. Rheinhold, 1967. pp. 75-77. Reproduced in Graphic Design Theory, pp. 44-49 Context: Bayer was first a student then an instructor at the Bauhaus before emigrating to the U.S. where he would continue his career as a graphic designer, typographer, architect, and artist. Though composed later in his career, this text is a reflection on the ambitions and ideals that Bayer held for a new form of typographic expression; one that would simplify language and create new possibilities for improved communication. Key Themes and Takeaways: – Typography is a ‘service art’ that provides the means for expressing ideas through mechanical techniques – Traditional book forms and writing techniques lack principle and structure, thereby limiting the expressive power of type. – A typographic revolution will come from (a) increased demand on perception, (b) a new alphabet and (c) physical forms for typography – Universal Communication might come about from improved typographic form and ‘true text-picture integration.’ – Layout and printing techniques such as the square span, or colored type and pages that create a change of impact, improve perception.

 

ASSIGNMENT 5 Title: The Crystal Goblet, or Why Printing Should be Invisible Author: Beatrice Warde Year: 1930 Source: The Crystal Goblet: Sixteen Essays on Typography. World Publishing, 1956. pp. 11-17. Reproduced in Graphic Design Theory. pp. 39-43 Context: Warde composed this text, and delivered it, as a lecture to the British Typographers Guild where she appeared as a representative for the Monotype Corporation. In addition to outlining a notion of typography as a tool to be used in service of ideas, this text advocates the “new traditionalist” mentality, shared by Stanley Morison and Eric Gill, also working for Monotype. Key Themes and Takeaways: – The Crystal Goblet analogy compares typography to a wine glass, in that both are vessels to contain something without obstruction or distraction – The ‘modernist’ asks ‘What must it do?’ instead of ‘How should it look?’ – Typesetters forget that ‘printing is meant to convey specific and coherent ideas’ – Readability can be compared to a good speaking voice – Printing should serve economic or educational purpose rather than ‘expressing beauty for its own sake’ – Printing demands humility and discipline, while avoiding ostentation and stunts

ASSIGNMENT 5 Title: Language of Vision: Painting, Photography, Advertising-Design (Excerpt) Author: György Kepes Year: 1944 Source: Language of Vision: Painting, Photography, Advertising-Design. Dover edition, Dover Publications, 1995 Context: Kepes was an influential designer and educator who combined practical Bauhaus ideas with a formal approach inspired by Gestalt Psychology. Though never directly associated with the Bauhaus, Kepes worked for Moholy-Nagy’s design firms in Berlin and London, then taught alongside him at Chicago’ Institute of Design, where Language of Vision was composed. Key Themes and Takeaways: – Abstraction emerged in Cubism and subsequent movements as a means for depicting reality from a dynamic point of view, rather than a fixed perspective – ‘Values’ in art should supersede static isolated order – All representations contain associative qualities, which the mind organizes and resolves to form meaningful configurations and signs – Social contradictions and problems led to the disintegration of meaning in images. The role of the artist is to reintegrate meaning. – Photomontage is a meaningful way for artists to make sense of, and function within, the ‘complexity of machine culture’ – The great challenge for advertising is to ‘disseminate socially useful messages.’

 

ASSIGNMENT 6 Title: The Principles of the New Typography (Excerpt) Author: Jan Tschichold Source: The New Typography: A Handbook for Modern Designers. Translated by Ruari McLean. University of California Press, 1998. pp. 64-84. Reproduced in Graphic Design Theory. pp. 35-38 Year: 1928 Context: Tschichold was trained by his father in calligraphy, possessed a deep knowledge of traditional graphics and type, but rejected virtually all pre-modern conventions after visiting the first Bauhaus exhibition in 1923. He published The New Typography three years later. In 1933 the ruling Nazi party imprisoned him for spreading Communist ideas. Shortly thereafter Tschichold fled to Switzerland, where he remained for the rest of his life, continuing to design, but rejecting the modern typographic principles of his early work. Key Themes and Takeaways: – The new typography is defined by clarity and economy of expression, as opposed to ideas of beauty and ornamentation – Typography must not arise out of preconceived ideas, but by developing form from the function of the text – Asymmetry is optically effective, as it establishes definite, logical relationships within the text – Standardization of type achieves clear and objective forms, as standardized building materials are necessary for architecture – For the typographer ‘the most important requirement is to be objective’

 

ASSIGNMENT 6 Title: Designing Programmes (excerpt) Author: Karl Gerstner Source: Designing Programmes. Facsimile edition. Lars Muller, 2019. pp. 8-9, 11. Reproduced in Graphic Design Theory. pp. 58-62 Year: 1964 Context: Karl Gerstner’s approach to design embodies the International Typographic Style, aka the Swiss Style, in its systematic methods and formal rigidity. In Designing Programmes Gerstner describes the quasi-scientific technique of establishing a programme to address design problems. Key Themes and Takeaways: – There is no ‘absolute solution’ for design problems, only ‘programmes for solutions’  – ‘The creative process is to be reduced to an act of selection.’ – Systematic tools such as the ‘morphological box of the typogram’ provide the necessary components for the selection process – The grid can be a ‘proportional regulator’ but is not a programme onto itself

ASSIGNMENT 6 Title: Grid and Design Philosophy Author: Josef Müller-Brockmann Source: Grid Systems in Graphic Design: A Visual Communications Manual for Graphic Designers, Typographers and Three Dimensional Designers. Niggli, 1981. p.10. Reproduced in Graphic Design Theory: Readings from the Field. Pp. 62-63 Year: 1981 Context: Grid Systems is a practical manual for grid-based design solutions, a theoretical treatise on working in this way, and a brilliant example of the grid system at work. Müller-Brockmann’s strict rule-based methodology anticipates the digital workspaces that would come to dominate design in subsequent years. The short excerpt that we read briefly defines the philosophy behind this way of working. Key Themes and Takeaways: – The grid is ‘an expression of a certain mental attitude’ – The designer’s work should be a ‘contribution to general culture’ – Design should be ‘objective, committed to the common weal…the basis of democratic behavior’ – The grid represents a ‘will to systematize, to clarify’

 

ASSIGNMENT 7 Title: Understanding Media (excerpt) / The Medium is the Massage (excerpt) Author: Marshall McLuhan Year: 1964 / 1967 Source: Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man. McGraw-Hill, 1964. / Marshall McLuhan, Quentin Fiore and Jerome Agel, The Medium is the Massage: An Inventory of Effects. Bantam Books, 1967 Context: Though trained in English literature, Marshall McLuhan began writing on the subject of media in the late 1950’s. His ideas not only became a popular sensation, with numerous TV interviews, documentaries, and film appearances, but it also disrupted traditional academic fields, while leading to new disciplines such as Media Studies. His collaborations with Quentin Fiore utilize graphic design to question the conventions associated with print media. Key Themes and Takeaways – Media can be defined as any technology that extends the human body, particularly through the sense or perception – Media ‘work us over completely’, meaning they affect or altar all aspects of our lived experiences – Visual spaces dominate western culture, as the printed book has traditionally been our primary means of accessing information – Electric circuitry, and the media that have subsequently emerged from it, extend our nervous systems into a collective space, or a ‘global village’ – Artists must begin by understanding the effects of media, then invent new forms, to arrive at an ‘integral awareness’ of the media

 

ASSIGNMENT 8 Title: The Whites of Their Eyes: Racist Ideologies and the Media Author: Stuart Hall Source: Reproduced from: Gail Dines & Jean M. Humez, eds.; Gender, Race and Class in Media: A Text Reader. Sage Publications, Thousand Oaks, CA. 1995. Year: 1981 Context: Stuart Hall was a Jamaican-British cultural theorist who utilized the ideas of the Structuralist and Post-Structuralist philosophical movements to examine questions of race and identity in culture. This particular essay illustrates some of the ways in which Hall viewed mass media outlets such as film, comics and advertisements as institutions that perpetuate racist stereotypes. Key Themes and Takeaways – The media produces, articulates, and transforms complex networks of ideas and beliefs, or ideologies – These ideologies construct ‘positions of identification and knowledge’ which subject consumers to often-stereotypical ideas that appear ‘natural.’ – Media is therefore a powerful source for the ideologies concerning race and racism in our culture – ‘Inferential’ racism can be more complex, and more problematic, in the media than ‘overt’ racism – Racist stereotypes still circulate widely in mass media.

 

ASSIGNMENT 9 Title: Rhetoric of The Image Author: Roland Barthes Year: 1977 Source: Image – Music – Text, Translated by Stephen Heath. Hill and Wang, 1977. pp. 32-51 Context: Roland Barthes was a prominent French thinker associated with the Structuralist movement. This essay was written in response to a series of articles that Barthes had been following in a well-regarded linguistics journal. In his essay, Barthes attempts to demonstrate that images contain most of the same semiological elements, ie, signs, signifiers, signifieds, as spoken or written language. Key Themes and Takeaways: – Semiological elements are present in an image, yet they differ from language in that they imitate nature, and are non-linear. – Every image, especially photographs in advertisements, consist of 3 messages: (1) a linguistic message, (2) a non-coded iconic message, and (3) a coded iconic message – The linguistic message of an image is the textual component that works alongside representational aspects of an image – A linguistic message can serve the purpose of anchorage, meaning that it directs the viewer toward a clear interpretation, or relay, meaning that it invites unexpected interpretations – The non-coded iconic message of an image is the objective, denotational, literal, perceptual, innocent meanings that can be understood from the image. – The coded iconic message of an image is the subjective, connotational, cultural, symbolic, ideological meanings that can be understood from the image. – Images are rhetorical in the sense that coded elements perform functions similar to those of persuasive linguistic devices

 

ASSIGNMENT 10a Title: Good Design is Goodwill Author: Paul Rand Year: 1987 Source: Design, Form and Chaos. Yale University Press, 1993. Pp. 11-42. Reproduced in Graphic Design Theory. pp. 64-69 Context: Paul Rand was one of the most influential American graphic designers of the 20th century, known for the clear aesthetics that he adopted from European Modernism. Rand was prompted to write this article in response to what he considered poor design decisions from major corporations. The essay first appeared as a stand-alone pamphlet designed by Rand and distributed by Yale University Press. In 1993 it was reprinted in Rand’s essay collection Design Form and Chaos. Key Themes and Takeaways: – The relationship between designer and client should be a reciprocal one, at the highest level of management. – Neither the field of design nor that of marketing require any accreditation, which can lead to the proliferation of poor design that does not work well – Design is “a calling” rooted in the “creative impulse of an individual” and “self-realization.” Thus designers must dedicate themselves to uncovering good ideas based on instinct, aesthetics and taste. – The contrast between the modern surroundings of an office and the traditional setting of most homes confuses notions of quality and good design – Contributions of good design build the reputation and integrity of a company, which in turn has a “cultural responsibility” to “help shape its environment” and to develop goodwill toward consumers.

ASSIGNMENT 10b Title: Learning from Las Vegas Author: Robert Venturi, Denise Scott Brown, Steven Izenour Year: 1972 Source: Learning from Las Vegas: The Forgotten Symbolism of Architectural Form. MIT Press, 1972. pp. 3-18 Reproduced in Graphic Design Theory. pp. 70-76 Context: In 1968 the architects Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown, along with their research assistant Steven Izenour, created a studio course for Yale University wherein instructors and students visited Las Vegas to study building design and urban planning. Las Vegas was chosen because of its perceived status as a “non-city,” with a lack of historical structures and deliberate planning. The resulting publication, including essays on their findings and graphical representations of the city, is considered foundational to post-modern thinking in architecture. Key Themes and Takeaways: –  Architects and designers should look everywhere non-judgmentally to understand the analogies, symbols, and images present in their environment – To understand the language, or vernacular of architecture, one must separate the values or morals from the methods employed to communicate them. – Space is the medium in which architects work. Pre-Modern architecture regularly employed space to directly communicate via text and images. – Modern architecture attempts to abandon iconology, but fails to recognize the message communicated by many buildings and billboards. – Graphic signage becomes the dominant architecture on commercial strips dominated by high speed automotive traffic Billboards and sculptural symbols define the American landscape, much in the same way that landscapes such as the gardens of Versailles are defined by symbolic, picturesque thoroughfares and monuments.

 

ASSIGNMENT 11 Title: The Underground Mainstream Author: Steven Heller Year: 2008 Source: Design Observer blog, April 10, 2008. Reproduced in Graphic Design Theory. pp. 98-101. Context: In addition to his accomplished careers as a designer and educator, Steven Heller may be the most prolific design writer and critic alive today, or ever. The Underground Mainstream first appeared as one of the thousands of articles published on his long-running column The Daily Heller. Key Themes and Takeaways – Mainstream, corporate culture steals ideas from underground counter-cultural movements – ‘The avant garde is usurped when its eccentricity is deemed acceptable.’ – Psychedelia is one example of an ‘alternative code’ that spread through youth culture before it was commodified and diluted for the mass marketplace – Culture-jamming appropriates the visual language of the mainstream to critique or undermine mass culture – In contemporary advertising, underground and mainstream have been folded into one

Title: Dematerialization of Screen Space Author: Jessica Helfand Year: 1999 Source:  Screen: Essays on Graphic Design, New Media and Visual Culture. Princeton Architectural Press, 2001 Context: Jessica Helfand is a designer whose work explores new critical and theoretical limits by incorporating a range of media and practices. She is an educator, the author of dozens of articles, co-founder of Winterhouse Studio, and co-host of the Observatory podcast, which produced by Design Observer, a site that she also co-founded. Helfand’s writings explore a broad range of themes, often relating to the ways that we engage with design. Key Themes and Takeaways – The computer screen has become our connection to the world, but we are also ‘prisoners’ to a series of ‘commands and regulations’ – While avant garde artists (of the early 20th century) reacted to the machine age, there is not yet an avant-garde of the new media – Virtual space is ‘circumscribed by a steadfast box’ but the viewer is a ‘moving target’ constantly interacting with real-world surroundings – Internet space is lacking the ‘temporal references’ that make time material – Most designers have only reacted to the new frontiers of digital technology, very few are shaping the new space

 

Assignment 12 Title: Import/Export, or Design Workflow and Contemporary Aesthetics Author: Lev Manovich Year: 2008 Source:  manovich.net, March 2008. Reproduced in Graphic Design Theory Context: Lev Manovich uses design, multimedia environments, and information technology to better understand the role of technology in our daily lives. Hi projects often organize complex datasets into visual appealing, interactive platforms. This particularly text invites a re-thinking of the designer’s role in the digital world. Key Themes and Takeaways – The Import and Export commands are central to the digital design process – Creatives working with analog media, such as filmmakers, graphic designers, animators, etc., were limited by the capabilities of their media – Digital technologies allow designers to cross boundaries between media, thus establishing ‘parallel visual languages’ for print, film, screens, etc. – The ‘remixing of working methods’ in different media can be defined as ‘metamedia’ – Today’s media are ‘hybrid, intricate, complex,’ sharing a ‘basic logic of remixability’

Course Tools Set up (30 – 60 Minutes)

We will be using multiple tools and methods to facilitate the process of reading, writing, collaborating, and presenting. Each of the links below will give you step-by-step instructions on how to get set up with the following tools.

Complete the (3) exercises below before starting your Reading Response Assignment – DUE 9/5 by 6pm

a. Setup Hypothesis

Follow the instructions in the tutorial Using Hypothesis to become familiar with the tool.

  • Create a Hypothesis account
  • Download and install the Hypothesis extension
  • Join our Hypothesis group
  • Learn about Close Reading and Annotation Types

b. Setup your Research Journal

Follow the instructions on the Research Journal page to get started with your journal.

  • Create a new Google Doc for your Research Journal
  • Format the Doc for ease of use

c. Review OpenLab Posting and Commenting

Review the instructions for posting and commenting.

Reading Response (Example)

Revisiting the Avant-Garde (Heading H2)

Armstrong, Helen. Graphic Design Theory: Readings From the Field, Princeton Architectural Press, 2009. Pages 9-15.

Questions / Prompts (Heading H3)

  • According to this author, what role should design play in society?
  • What distinguishes the field, or fields, of design from other creative occupations?
  • Why should designers concern themselves with unsolvable theoretical questions?
  • What role does technology play in shaping design?
  • What are the most urgent problems facing designers today?
  • How, and why, is a designer responsible for solving these problems?

Response (Heading H3)

Sed porttitor lectus nibh. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Vestibulum ac diam sit amet quam vehicula elementum sed sit amet dui. Curabitur aliquet quam id dui posuere blandit. Mauris blandit aliquet elit, eget tincidunt nibh pulvinar a. Sed porttitor lectus nibh. Mauris blandit aliquet elit, eget tincidunt nibh pulvinar a. Sed porttitor lectus nibh.

What is the Avant-Garde?

Vestibulum ante ipsum primis in faucibus orci luctus et ultrices posuere cubilia Curae; Donec velit neque, auctor sit amet aliquam vel, ullamcorper sit amet ligula. Curabitur arcu erat, accumsan id imperdiet et, porttitor at sem. Curabitur aliquet quam id dui posuere blandit. Proin eget tortor risus. Curabitur aliquet quam id dui posuere blandit. Curabitur non nulla sit amet nisl tempus convallis quis ac lectus. Quisque velit nisi, pretium ut lacinia in, elementum id enim. Cras ultricies ligula sed magna dictum porta.

Anni Albers, Design for a Rug, 1927, Harvard Art Museums/Busch-Reisinger Museum, Gift of Anni Albers

Nulla porttitor accumsan tincidunt. Nulla quis lorem ut libero malesuada feugiat. Vestibulum ante ipsum primis in faucibus orci luctus et ultrices posuere cubilia Curae; Donec velit neque, auctor sit amet aliquam vel, ullamcorper sit amet ligula. Curabitur aliquet quam id dui posuere blandit. Nulla porttitor accumsan tincidunt. Vestibulum ac diam sit amet quam vehicula elementum sed sit amet dui. Quisque velit nisi, pretium ut lacinia in, elementum id enim. Cras ultricies ligula sed magna dictum porta.

Annotation Links: (Heading H3)

  1. Reference Image: El Lissitzky
  2. Rephrasing / Question: The avant-garde effaced the artist/designer through the quest for impartial communication
  3. Definition: Aesthetic

Posting and Commenting

Please submit your coursework by creating a post and following the guidelines below. Provide feedback by adding a constructive comment on another student’s posts, following the guidelines below. Your work and your classmates’ work can be found in the Student Posts section of this site.

Creating a Post

  1. In the Dashboard, click on the tab Posts > Add New to create a new post.
  2. Add a title in the title box at the top. Each of the Assignment instructions will provide a suggested title, category, and tags.
  3. Add the suggested Category and Tags from the existing list. Example: Category = Reading Responses, Tag = Reading Response #1
  4. To add a link, see Add a Link below.
  5. All linked or embedded media MUST contain a caption indicating the original creator. See Add Media below.
  6. All sources should be attributed using the “Add Attribution” tool. See Add Attribution below.
  7. Click “Save Draft” to publish later or click “Publish” to publish immediately.
  8. For more information, visit OpenLab Help> Writing a Post
  1. You can add a link to your post by selecting a word or words and clicking the link icon in the toolbar.
  2. Enter or paste the URL address into the link box and press return.
  3. For more information, visit OpenLab Help> Adding a link to a post

Adding Media to a Post

  1. To add images or other media to a post, click the + Add Block button and search for the media type: Image, Image Gallery, Slider, YouTube, Vimeo, File, Google Drive, etc.
  2. You can select files saved to your computer by clicking Upload. Then, click Select Files.  You can also select images or other files from your media library by clicking the Media Library tab or Insert from URL.
  3. You can make adjustments to the media file by selecting the media block and using the settings on the right-hand side of the screen (toggle the gear icon).  Here you can you can adjust the Style, Size, Dimensions, and Alt Text to an image.
  4. You can also make adjustments using the tool bar. Here you can change the Alignment, Link, Crop, Add Text, or Duo tone of an image.
  5. Remember to add a caption or link underneath the media and a credit, if the media is not yours.
  6. For more information, visit OpenLab Help> Adding image and other media
  7. To add an image gallery, visit OpenLab Help > Adding an image gallery

Adding Attribution to a Post

All sources referenced in a post should be attributed to the original author using the Attribution Tool.

  1. Insert your cursor at the end of a sentance or phrase that needs attribution.
  2. Click the “Add Attribution” icon in the tool bar. Find it next to the link icon.
  3. Fill in the required information in the dialog box. Your attributions will be listed at the bottom of the page after publishing your post.
  4. For more information, visit OpenLab Help > Add Attributions

Adding a Comment

  1. Make sure you are logged into OpenLab and click on the link found below or above a post. Sometimes it’s called “Comment”, “Reply”, or similar.
  2. For more information, visit OpenLab Help> Commenting on a Site

Commenting Tips

    1. When critiquing your classmate’s work, your job is to help them to improve and to achieve the assignment goals.
    2. Review the assignment guidelines before commenting.
    3. Start by sharing what your feel is successful (positive feedback) and what is unsuccessful (constructive feedback) about the work presented.
    4. Comments such as “I like it.” or “Needs improvement” are not helpful unless they are expanded to clarify WHY you like it or WHAT needs improvement.

Approving Comments

  1. When someone comments on your post, you or your professor may need to approve the comment before it is visible to others.
  2. OpenLab will notify you via email when someone comments on your post. You can simply click on the link to approve the comment in your Dashboard.

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