March 2010
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031  

Month March 2010

Design Anarchy

I come cross this recently, and I just found this mani­festo has got quite rad­ic­al approach against media and advert­ising industry ( in the mean time Kalle Lasn is mar­ket­ing his book through the media he is refer­ring ).  He is enfor­cing the idea that we, design­ers hav­ing a power­ful pro­fes­sion that can have nasty soci­et­al consequences.

Design Anarchy

Kalle Lasn | 2006

Cultural revolution is our business

We are glob­al net­work of artists, writers, envir­on­ment­al­ists, teach­ers, down­shifters, fair traders, rabble-rousers, shit-dis­turbers, incor­ri­gibles, and mal­con­tents. We are anarch­ists, guer­rilla tac­ti­cians, meme war­ri­ors, neo-Luddites, prank­sters, poets, philo­soph­ers, and punks. Our aim is to topple exist­ing power struc­tures and change the we live in the twenty-first cen­tury. We will change the way inform­a­tion flows, the way insti­tu­tions wield power, the way the food, fash­ion, car, and cul­ture indus­tries set their agendas.
Above all, we will change the way the inter­act with the mass media and the way in which mean­ing is pro­duced in our society.

Design Anarchy

Design anarchy is mad­ness. Choose it only if you are cer­tain the oth­er options will cor­rode your soul and give you a bleed­ing ulcer, only if you know you are among the chosen few design­ers who hold Prometheus’s holy fire in your hands. You will suf­fer for years and live like a stray dog, but you will have the joy of break­ing all the rules, of freely mix­ing art and polit­ics, of pour­ing your beliefs and con­vic­tions into your work. Eventually, if you are really as bril­liant as you think, you will have a crack at push­ing the bound­ar­ies of blob­al cul­ture with bold new forms and fresh ways of being.

What’s wrong with Gill Sans?

Gill Sans

Gill Sans — not as good as I thought…

I’m not sure how I came across it in the course of look­ing for inform­a­tion on Design Discourse top­ics but I found this art­icle on GIll Sans. I recall hav­ing declared my love for this typeface quite loudly in the pub after our vis­it to decode at the V&A. High on swiftly drunk alco­hol and nervous sit­ting next to Paul McNeil, I feel I was maybe a little too free with my praise of this typeface and the force­ful­ness with which I expressed it. Reading this very inter­est­ing art­icle was a little sober­ing (no pun inten­ded) and I sud­denly feel the urge to track down some dif­fer­ent typefaces…

First Things First and Context

First things First manifesto 1964

First things First mani­festo 1964

So far our group dis­cus­sion has­n’t been a dir­ect response to the First Things First mani­fes­tos; though we have been cov­er­ing many of the top­ics and themes that they address. With this in mind and in response to Ian Nobles brief com­ments last Wednesday and Eleanor’s earli­er post of the art­icle from Graphik, I thought it would be a good idea to col­lect togeth­er some online resources, such as links to both mani­festoes, to help us get a bet­ter under­stand­ing of their con­text, what has already been said about them and who are some of the prot­ag­on­ists. It is in no way an exhaust­ive list and I will add to it as and when we find fur­ther material.