Thursday, February 24, 2022

your turn #5

Aubrey Beardsley, Illustration for Oscar Wilde's Salomé, 1894


dear class, there is plenty to talk about: Art Nouveau, Aestheticism, Pre-Raphaelites,  Arts and Craft, Gesamtkunstwerk, then the artists: Toorop, Wilde, Beardsley, Mucha, Livemont, Cheret, Gaudí, van de Velde, Charles Mackinstosh and Margaret McDonald, Morris, Thomas Nast, (even my arts & craft manifesto). remember, no echo chamber, research a bit, be original.

go ahead.

Thursday, February 17, 2022

your turn #4

Chromolithographs above, by David Ferland, circa 1850

i had fun with your presentations. thanks! guess what, i'll bring your typeface projects to class next wednesday, so you can take pics & send them back to me for a digital exhibit here. 

we are approaching 19th century fin-de-siècle.  there's plenty to talk about yesterday's class: gutenberg, political satire (punch, charivari, puck), newspapers, postcards, children's books, daguerrotype, camera oscura, pictorialism, dana gibson, talbot's pencil of nature, 19th century fashion, the dandy, etc. 

pick a theme and develop it, no echo chamber, no derivative comments (be meaningful).

this is a history class. my focus is epochal & anthropological. the trend today is to revise history without proper focus. they miss the epoch's weltanschauung! our 2022 glasses don't work in 1822.  

click here for my discussion on the anthropology of myths (this is the deep level i referred to that we all share. cultural differences are very important, but they represent surface level. karl jung called this deep level collective unconscious.  

Tuesday, February 15, 2022

is punk the other "romantic"?




 
there are punk & romantic connections. like romantic, punk is an urban working class manifestation of informal anti-establishment sensibility. 

in the early 1970's british punks expressed their nihilistic views with the slogan drawn from the title of the sex pistols' song No Future

a bit anti-modern punk is nihilistic in that is not concerned for the present with a deep disaffection from "both middle and working class standards". punk nihilism was expressed in the use of more self-destructive, consciousness-obliterating substances like heroin.

trends include:

anarchism,
anti-authoritarianism,
environmentalism,
vegetarianism,
psycho-billy death-rock, horror punk, goth, etc.

the examiner (circa the spanish/american war)


Editorial cartoon by Leon Barritt for June 1898 issue of 'Vim' magazine, showing Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst both attired as the Yellow Kid comics character and competitively claiming ownership of the war.

The Yellow Press, an illustration from 1910 depicting William Randolph Hearst as a jester tossing newspapers with headlines such as “Appeals to Passion, Venom, Sensationalism, Attacks on Honest Officials, Strife, Distorted News, Personal Grievance, and Misrepresentation” to a crowd of eager readers.

Detail from Honor to McKinley! (1898), showing Pulitzer and Hearst, caricatured as a parrot and monkey respectively, battling it out amid a flurry of pages from the Yellow Press. The rest of the picture shows President McKinley below them ignoring their cries for war. 

Instead, he reads a paper entitled “The People of the United States have full confidence in your Patriotism, Integrity, & Bravery. They know you will act justly and wisely: decent press”. 


Atlas Joe, or, The Fearful Responsibilities of a Self-Appointed Manager of the Universe (1896), note the message hanging on the wall: “Our Motto – Sensation! Sensation! Sensation!!”

Uncle Sam’s Dream of Conquest and Carnage – Caused by Reading the Jingo Newspapers (1895)

Tuesday, February 8, 2022

do you know camera obscura?




principle of camera obscura and camera obscura box

light from an external scene passes through the hole and strikes a surface inside, where it is reproduced, inverted (thus upside-down), but with color and perspective preserved. the image can be projected onto paper, and can then be traced to produce a highly accurate representation.



vermeer amazing view of delft (above) was done using camera obscura.

or these drawings by canaletto:

printers learned their trade through an apprentice system, whereas training in the design of printed material was informal

1- newspapers are aimed at a broad spectrum of readers, 2- usually geographically defined, 3- some focus on groups of readers defined more by their interests than their location


there are daily and weekly business newspapers and sports newspapers.

more specialist still are some weekly newspapers, usually free and distributed within limited areas. these may serve communities as specific as certain immigrant populations, even the local gay community.

romanticism took flight, partly as a negative response to industrialization


 romantic landscape with ruined tower, thomas cole, 1832

lloyd's (the wall street journal of 18th century)


This is a 'Lloyd's List' of exchange rates, 1740. 

See that the exchange rates are given for individual ports rather than for countries. 

The prices of Bank (Bank of England), East India and South Sea stock are listed. The high tide is also noted. A bit rudimentary, but this is an early example of design for commerce!

the public sphere is this virtual arena where opinion is created and legitimized


the solid gray stream of news was soon broken into columns and then departments, separating local and foreign reports

the first newspaper according to modern definitions was the Strasbourg Relation, in the early 17th century. 


the term newspaper became common in the 17th century, but germans had newspapers since the 16th century: 

1- they were printed & dated, 

2- appeared at regular and frequent publication intervals, 

3- and included a variety of news items (unlike single item news mentioned above).

steps in the process of modern paper

paper remained expensive through the centuries, until the advent of steam-driven paper making machines in the 19th century, which could make paper with fibres from wood pulp. 

although older machines pre-dated it, the Fourdrinier papermaking machine became the basis for most modern papermaking. Nicholas Louis Robert of Essonnes, France, was granted a patent for a continuous paper making machine in 1799. At the time he was working for Leger Didot with whom he quarrelled over the ownership of the invention. Didot sent his brother-in-law, John Gamble, to meet Sealy and Henry Fourdrinier, stationers of London, who agreed to finance the project. 

here are the steps:

1. PULPING-forming section, commonly called the wet end, is a continuous rotating wire mesh which removes water from the paper by sucking it out of suspension via vacuum.

2. press section, where the wet fibre web passes between large rolls loaded under high pressure to squeeze out as much water as possible.

3. drying section, where the pressed sheet passes partly around, in a serpentine manner, a series of steam heated drying cylinders. 

4. size-press section, where the semi-dried paper is applied with a thin layer of starch and/ or other chemicals to improve several paper properties reduce dusting and air permeability, increase stiffness, bursting strength and short span compression.

5. calender section: where the dried paper is smoothened under high loading and pressure. only one nip (where the sheet is pressed between two rolls) is necessary in order to hold the sheet, which shrinks through the drying section and is held in tension between the press section (or breaker stack if used) and the calender. extra nips give more smoothing, but at some expense to paper strength.

6. reel section, where paper coming out of the machine is wound onto individual spools for further processing.

Voila!

Friday, February 4, 2022

your turn #3 (typeface is to design what the atom is to physics)

gazetta di mantova, 1664 the oldest surviving newspaper

it was good to meet and get a feel of the class. nothing like the real thing. 

we left the low middle ages, moved to high middle ages, right now bordering pre-renaissance. we're at the point of Gutenberg's pivotal invention. the epoch is pregnant for a paradigm shift. 

again: pick a theme and develop it. look for something that strikes your fancy (the more particular the better). research. no echo chamber. 

this is a history class. we look at the past to learn about the present.   

1. exhibit utmost curiosity (you absorb everything) 
2. don't judge (your 2022 glasses don't work)
3. immerse yourself with the common folk doing what they do on a daily basis (start from the bottom to understand the top) 

design is about marks. graphic design's mark is, well, typeface. thus,

typeface is to design what the atom is to physics.

Wednesday, February 2, 2022

italics are cheaper! (and sort of look greek)

compare roman capitals with manutius' italics

the main advantage of Manutius's italics is that the new character is economical. 

why? italics are a little tighter than the traditional roman. italics allow the printer to save space and money on the cost of a book.

however, in the spirit of Manutius, italics should imitate the Greek writing of the time, which was decorated with many ligatures and other frills. WHY? 

they were very appreciated in Venice. WHY?

Venetian is a romance language with familiar proximity to Greek and Albanian! roman italics was the character used in "Virgil," published in 1501 by Manutius.

 


GPS as mapping territory



we're still fascinated with maps, though they've gotten way smaller. our world is also smaller and faster. we use GPS technology.

don't forget, GPS is design. 

 


the diagram above is quite abstract, this is not what you see on your application. which is more like a MAP-TERRITORY RELATION.

 


the map–territory relation describes the relationship between an object (the actual site) and a representation of that object (on your GPS), 

your present GPS receiver shows:

*maps (including street maps, displayed in human readable format via text or in a graphical format),
*turn-by-turn navigation directions to a human in charge of a vehicle or vessel via text or speech, *directions fed directly to an autonomous vehicle such as a robotic probe,
*traffic congestion maps (depicting either historical or real time data) and
*suggested alternative directions,
*information on nearby amenities such as restaurants, fueling stations, and tourist attractions.


would you go back to traditional maps if need be?

I gave them up.