Student name: Maribel Royer

Professor Name: Tanya Goezt

Subject Name: Designer research

December 6, 2021

Paula Scher is an American graphic designer, painter, and illustrator and the first female principal at Pentagram. She studied at Temple University’s Tyler School of Art and earned her BFA in 1970. She began her career as an art director in the 1970s, and over the years her work has been exhibited all over the world. She has remained at the forefront of graphic design and has paved the way for experienced and beginning designers alike.

Paula Scher article photo by UX Collective
Popular Work

Scher has created a large portfolio of globally recognized logos, maps, and posters. She has designed such memorable works as the logos for Citibank, CNN, and Windows 8. Her most notable work includes the new Windows 8 logo and the Office 2010 logo. She updated the iconic Windows logo by reimagining the four-color symbol as a modern shape that would provide a new eye-catching perspective on the beloved brand.

Her iconic work has spanned more than just the pages of Print.  She has created a number of promotional graphics systems and the exterior artwork of the New Jersey Performing Arts Center.  She masterfully displays type in 3D works of art and stated that the best piece of advice she ever received is to “illustrate with type.”

Scher has been the recipient of hundreds of honors and awards over the years.  First Lady Michelle Obama recently presented Scher with a National Design Award. The First Lady also quoted Scher at the ceremony with “you have to misbehave to make breakthroughs”

Part of the Bring In ‘Da Noise Bring In ‘Da Funk series designed by Paula Scher (and Lisa Mazur?), photographer Richard Avedon for Pentagram Design for The Public Theatre 1995 or earlier.
These are a few of Paula’s big corporate logos she has designed in her career.
Paula Scher – Inspirational design quote poster
’25 Years at the public: A Love Story’

 

Design Strategy

The first detail that drew my attention to write this report about Paula was her design strategy, which explains her belief in the philosophy that practice makes perfect. “It’s through mistakes that you actually can grow. You have to get bad in order to get good,” as she also has stated on some of her most popular posters: “ It took me a few seconds to draw it, but it took me 34 years to learn how to draw it in a few seconds.” I feel inspired by her persistence and own reality. She believes in real live human interaction as opposed to only exposing ones work virtually. During an interview she had with a Madrid, Spain designer’s company, she describes her concern about social media as a self-aggrandizement that she finds very strange. Also, that measure of success really is not as significant because she sees pieces of work that are online and they get twenty million hits and to her they’re really nothing. 

“…nothing happened there, and they weren’t even made you know and then they’re gone the next day…it’s like a false landscape and the reason it’s a false landscape is because it’s virtual. It’s not real…”

– Paula Scher interviewed by posterposter.org

Her eclectic approach to design and typography continues to shape contemporary designs today. Her philosophy is that all that matters is how the user perceives the design.  Whether the design takes seconds or months to come to fruition, all that is important is that the design is a success.

Scher continues to design impressive works through Pentagram, where she has served as partner since 1991.  She also continues to pursue her passion of painting and designing complicated large-scale maps. In addition, she continues to teach design students through inspirational speeches, courses and TED talks, where she expressed:  “Great design is serious, not solemn” as she looks back at a life in design (she’s done album covers, books, the Citibank logo …) and pinpoints the moment when she started really having fun. Look for gorgeous designs and images from her legendary career. 

An outspoken voice in the world of graphic design for more than twenty years, Paul Scher has developed a worldwide reputation for her bold, modern graphics and her incisive critiques of the design profession.

Works Cited

Scher, Paula. Make It Bigger . 1st paperback ed. New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2005. Print.

Creative Titans: How Paula Scher Helped Shape Graphic Design

MadridDesignPRO by Cosentino – Paula Scher – https://youtu.be/KD-NqJZd3l

Poster, Public; Designed by Paula Scher (American, b. 1948); USA; digital offset lithograph on paper; 91.4 x 68.6 cm (36 x 27 in.); Gift of Paula Scher; 2013-25-10 https://collection.cooperhewitt.org/objects/51689477/#image-rights

Paula Scher – What Design Can Do 2012 – https://youtu.be/-0T3L-UC4iA

Paula Scher – What Design Can Do 2012 – https://youtu.be/-0T3L-UC4iA

Paula Scher Posters gallery by posterposter.org – https://youtu.be/nB7S6p6eSwY

TED Paula Scher talk: Paula Scher¡Serious Play 2008 Great design is serious, not solemn

https://www.ted.com/talks/paula_scher_great_design_is_serious_not_solemn?utm_campa ign=tedspread&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=tedcomshare