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RISD MFA Graphic Design exhibition 2012

Rhode Island School of Design MFA Graphic Design exhibition 2012
RI Convention Center, Providence
May 19 – June 1, 2012

Statement: «GRAPHIC DESIGN MFA 2012 is an exhibition of books, printed matter, websites, interactive works, and videos from this year’s graduating class of MFA graphic design students at RISD.
In order to stay in line with rapidly developing technology and shifting channels of communication, educational institutions must constantly re-articulate their mission and re-situate their place within society. We, as graphic design students, have a unique opportunity to consider our own educational experience within this evolving landscape. We believe that graphic design education offers a framework for a practice that is free of the pressures and limitations of client work — a structure within which we can shape our own motives and methodologies. It is an environment which encourages learning through experience and a setting to create design for varied contexts.
We feel it appropriate to recreate this experience within the gallery — a space that helps orchestrate participation, interaction, and therefore a deeper comprehension of our work. Drawing influence from a traditional classroom environment, our exhibit is an enclosed space that houses a series of activity areas. We invite visitors to engage with each type of work within its given context.
The exhibit acts as a reflection of our educational foundation. It situates graphic design as a practice that relies on interaction, and points to design’s role in creating systems, structures, and products that exist within particular interactive contexts.»

Presentation, Università Iuav di Venezia

The research project was presented at the Facoltà di Design e Arti dell’Università Iuav di Venezia, on May 14. The appointed researcher was invited by professors Mario Lupano (History of Exhibition Design and Museology) and Fiorella Bulegato (History of Visual Communication) to introduce students of the master degree program in Design and PhD candidates in Design to the topic of the research and main features of the current relationship of graphic designers with exhibition making and the curatorial.

Catalog
Yale MFA Graphic Design Grad Show 2011

Catalog
Yale MFA Graphic Design Grad Show 2011
Green Hall Gallery of the School of Art, located at 1156 Chapel Street in New Haven, Connecticut

Statement: As both noun and verb, book and exhibition, CATALOG recasts the deconstructed components of finished design projects as new work. The result is an exhibition that is an exploded book, and a book that is a collapsed exhibition. CATALOG represents the work of Yale School of Art MFA candidates Lauren Adolfsen, Juan Astasio Soriano, Keri Bronk, Benjamin Critton, Lauren Francescone, Brendan Griffiths, Bona Han, Sara Hartman, Hank h. Huang, Zeynab Izadyar, Zakary Jensen, Zachary Klauck, Michael Mikulec, Mylinh Trieu Nguyen, Lindsay Nordell, Ji Eun Rim, Sally Thurer, and Brian Watterson.»

See also http://yalegraphicdesign.info/

Zak Kyes Working With…
London

Zak Kyes Working With…
Architectural Association, London, April 28 – May 26, 2012

See the older post about Zak Kyes Working With… in Leipzig.

TDM5, Grafica Italiana catalogue

A paper on the topic of Italian graphic design and exhibition is published in the accompanying catalogue of the 5th edition of the Triennale Design Museum in Milan, devoted to the history of Italian graphic design. The exhibition/museum is curated by Giorgio Camuffo, Mario Piazza and Carlo Vinti.
Ref.: Maddalena Dalla Mura, “Mostrare, esporsi, comunicare / Showing, Exhibiting, Communicating”, in TDM5: Grafica Italiana, Mantova, Corraini.

Rick Poynor: We need more galleries

On the rare occasions that an exhibition of graphic design appears, it’s a safe bet that one complaint will always be heard. Graphic design, someone will say, just doesn’t work in a gallery. It isn’t art and it can’t possibly be properly understood out of context. It only has meaning out in the world in the places where it was intended to communicate. Curiously, the people making this criticism will usually be graphic designers.

The quotation is from an article by Rick Poynor, appeared in Print magazine two years ago. Poynor is a design critic and writer, the founding editor of Eye magazine, and the curator of retrospective exhibitions such as Communicate: Independent British Graphic Design since the Sixties (2005) and Uncanny: Surrealism and Graphic Design (2010). Moved by a visit he made to a private gallery in Melbourne specialising in exhibitions at the convergence of art and design, The Narrows, in this article Poynor reflects on the poor number of galleries that have an interest in exhibiting graphic design and graphic communication. Beside The Narrows, he mentions Galerie Anatome in Paris and the Kemistry Gallery in London. He points out how it is the small galleries – rather than the big museums, which are usually focused on big overviews – that can be the place for «the small-scale, immediate, topical responses» which are «needed to foster the sense of a thriving discursive culture, a community sharing a common aim, a vibrant and active scene». This is certainly an interesting point that we must consider, and it is important to call, how Poynor does, for more galleries to exhibit graphic design. However, it would also be interesting to find out if and how the “immediate response” and the “discursive culture” of the graphic design community that constitutes the public of such galleries, actually enter into the wider discourse and criticism of design and visual culture, and become relevant for it.

Read online the full article by Poynor at http://www.printmag.com

ABC Primer – Rainbow Series
Magazijn, Amsterdam

ABC Primer — Rainbow Series
Magazijn, Amsterdam, NL
March 30 – April 1, 2012

Designer: Cobbenhagen Hendriksen

ABC Primer – Rainbow Series includes 26 silkscreened posters (A–Z), size 72 X 102 cm in different print runs, in a total of 900 posters, which are for sale and on view at Magazijn.

Statement: «Using the ABC-Primer of design ‘principles’ (A is for Awareness, B is for Beauty, C is for Commitment …etc.), originally written for the exhibition on the identity for De Hallen Haarlem (December 2009), we (re-)appropriate our design related solutions, typography and aesthetics from works made for several commissioners. Playing around with characteristic, distinctive or typical elements and re-using these in a different context, resulted in this poster series containing a colorful remix of sketches, ideas, projects and proposals.»

Richard Hollis

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Richard Hollis
traveling exhibition, first held at the Libby Sellars Gallery, London, March 23 – April 28, 2012 (later held at: Centre Pompidou, Paris [February 2013]; ECAL, Lausanne [April 2013]; and Artists Space, New York [September 2013])

Curator: Emily King
Statement: «As part of the team that turned John Berger’s epochal BBC TV series Ways of Seeing into a book, the graphic designer Richard Hollis invented a revolutionary system for combining word and image that was based on the television format. Still in print, the book remains the staple of art syllabuses worldwide and, over the years, Hollis’s layouts have awakened generation after generation to the notion that pictures are political. Alongside designing Ways of Seeing, Hollis worked for the Whitechapel Gallery from the late 1960s to the mid 1980s, the latter years under the directorship of the young Nicholas Serota. Working closely with the Gallery’s curators and artists, he produced a series of posters, flyers and catalogues that have lost none of their impact over the last four decades. Beyond institutions, he has also sustained long term collaborations with artists including Bridget Riley and Steve McQueen, through which he has developed brilliant strategies for the reproduction and dissemination of individual art works and entire oeuvres.
In spite of these significant bodies of work, Hollis’s preference for anonymity has led to him being little known beyond professional circles. He is the graphic designer’s graphic designer; a man who tends to be rediscovered every generation by students, many of whom know him as the author and designer of the Thames and Hudson book Graphic Design: a Concise History. Hollis claims his output has “no particular style”, yet his
attention to detail is discern[i]ble throughout. He not only integrates text and pictures with unparalleled intelligence, he also pays intense attention to the techniques of production, his goal in every instance being maximum graphic engagement at minimum cost.
Curated for the gallery by design historian and writer Emily King, the Richard Hollis exhibition will consist of approximately 100 items drawn from the designer’s own archive.
It will reflect his entire professional life, including his travels in the 1950s and 60s to Cuba, Zurich and Paris, his part in founding a new art school in Bristol in 1964, his role in the design of radical politics in the 1960s and 70s and his career-long investigation intothe graphic design of culture. Ranging in time and scope from personal collages made in the mid 50s to the graphic framework of Steve McQueen’s artwork ‘Queen and Country’, the exhibition will demonstrate Hollis’s singular ability to shape thought through the arrangement of word and image.»

Exhibition design: Simon Jones

(Continued)

Exhibition Prosthetics

In analyzing the points of view of some graphic designers and curators about design exhibition, as they appeared in “Graphic” magazine (n. 11, 2009), we noticed their tendency to regard curatorship and exhibition making, on the one hand, and editorial design and editing, on the other, as practices that can be alternative and complementary, as parts of a wider chain of contents’ production and distribution. One could say that a territory exists, where editorial practice, publishing, graphic design, and the curatorial meet, connect, and overlap. In order to try to read this territory, some hints can be drawn from the notion of “exhibition prosthetics,” as it has been proposed by artist Joseph Grigely.
In 2009 Joseph Grigely gave a lecture – entitled Exhibition Prosthetics (later published by Bedford Press, 2nd ed. 2010) – at the Architectural Association, which was followed by a conversation with Hans Ulrich Obrist, Zak Kyes and the public (video available online at http://www.aaschool.ac.uk). In his lecture Grigely dealt with the range of conventions that are usually produced and experienced on the occasion of exhibitions in galleries and museums, with a special, but not exclusive, focus on printed materials such as labels, checklists, guidebooks, press releases, catalogues as well as «exhibition publications that manifest themselves outside the physical space of the gallery». These texts and materials, that “re-present” the real by means-of language and images, actually are part of the “machinery of exhibiting:” they are different forms of dissemination that aim to bring the arts to the audience of readers, viewers and listeners. Hence, the question: «[T]o what extent are these various exhibition conventions actually part of the art – and not merely an extension of it?»
To answer this question, Grigely proceeds to outline the concept of “prosthesis,” as the most suitable to describe the nature of such conventions. Clearly the metaphor of the prosthesis is not accidental, but is clearly connected to Grigely’s experience: being deaf since the age of ten (1967), in fact, he necessarily uses writing as a means to communicate with people, inviting them to write on paper their questions and thoughts to communicate with him. This process of communication has resulted in a rich archive of “conversation papers,” of portions of speeches that range from the banal to the poetic, which, in the last fifteen years, have become central to the artist’s work.

As Grigely explains in his lecture, a prosthesis is an extension, indeed, but one that “belongs,” that «originates from a desire to make whole, while acknowledging that the task is an impossible one» – like a wheelchair lift added on the rear of a building, a road sign stating “dead child area,” or body prostheses. Just like the human body or buildings, exhibitions too can be described, metaphorically, as bodies, and have their extensions. These are captions, labels, guidebooks etc. as well as all other conventions that exist, are produced and used in the framework of an exhibition in order to make it “complete.” In fact, Grigely argues, an exhibition is like a discourse that «involves the doubling of both showing and telling.» Consequently, texts, informative or visual material that support this discourse are something more than just “paratext” – what is alongside the main text –: they are important «in terms of how we read art – how we work our way to it and through it» (maybe we could add, “how we read material and immaterial culture in general”). Some examples are given to help clarifying the point: the label “Merda d’artista” on Piero Manzoni’s can, and not the latter’s real content, is what makes the meaning of the artwork; and the guidebooks prepared by Sir John Soane for people to visit his Museum, and which are the only way to read the display and to move within the museum, since this has no labels. Moreover, Grigely notes, material such as booklets, announcements, labels or brochures usually survive beyond the period of an exhibition. What he suggests then – at least this is how we read it – is that prostheses extend the exhibition in time, not just in space: it is the ephemera, in fact, «that outlive and outlast the exhibition» – which makes it rather contradictory to call them “ephemera.”
Certainly, texts and information material of museums have received attention from visitor studies, that are interested in how visitors actually respond to them (here Grigely suggests that it could be intriguing to investigate the role of titles and press releases as well, and he reminds how artworks by Jackson Pollocks have often been re-titled by critics and collectors). Beside that, however, the art world itself has started to show a specific interest in exhibition prostheses, and this has happened particularly since the early 1990s – a period, it should be noted, when the art world witnessed the outburst of a new phase of institutional critique. Grigely goes on by illustrating a number of performative works that have explored the relationships of exhibition prosthetics with art, and which, we would add, in turn extend the meaning and interpretation of the very notion advanced by the author. Among the examples, in fact, we find a performance such as Andrea Fraser’s Museum Highlights (1989) but also the project Novaphorm Hotel by Martin Eder and Lisa Junghans, for Documenta in Kassel 1997 – basically a bed and breakfast and a number of services operated by the artists, and promoted through printed materials, designed by Peter Hankel, that relate to hotel culture, such as postcards or business cards. Grigely mentions also projects by Hans Ulrich Obrist that created opportunities for artists to «de- and re-materialize their work in new situations outside the museum», as well as inside the museum space: the collaboration with mip (museum in progress), which resulted in turning the newspaper “Der Standard” into an exhibition space, to host artists’ works; the collaboration with Alighiero Boetti when, again, a magazine space – in this case the magazine of Austrian Airlines – was used to present art; but also the exhibition Migrateurs, curated by Obrist at the Musée d’art moderne in Paris, for which artists were invited to use the public space of the museum, from bookshop to cafeteria, to present their installation.

Finally Grigely comes to his own artworks, and specifically to those developed from his research on the «disjunction between visual and auditory experience.» As he explains, this body of work is «inflected» by his deafness, not really for deafness itself but because of the implication of it: «What does the world look like with the sound turned off? How might it be that language can be said to caption human experience?» This is clear in projects such as Songs Without Words, that is based on the removal of captions from images, and the series of installations of his “conversation papers with hearing people” that has engaged him for over fifteen years. But it is the kind of “publication projects” that he mentions later which are probably closer to the idea of prosthesis and dissemination that Grigely has introduced in the lecture. The Barbican Conversations (1998), for example, dealt with information brochures and used the Barbican Center as both «a source of conversational discourse and a place of dissemination» (conversations of visitors were sampled and then printed in the form of information brochures which, in turn, were distributed in the hall of the centre). And then two other projects that show of prostheses such as cards and announcements «have the possibility of taking an exhibition to places the exhibition itself does not go,» extending it well beyond the gallery space, consequently taking art «to people rather than mak[ing] people go the the art.» The first project was conceived for the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford: Grigely engaged with the exhibition announcement cards, he designed cards showing a well-known painting on the front, and reproducing a conversation of his on the rear. The second project, Grigely says, is his own favourite publication project: on the occasion of the Berlin Biennale in 2001 he created a work not to be displayed within the exhibition space but to be dispersed in the city – a number of his conversation papers printed and placed in different places, from restaurants to buses’ seats.
After these examples, Grigely concludes his lecture with some reflections that suggest that exhibitions (maybe here it would be useful to recall the idea of the “exhibition machinery”) fit particularly well in the present epoch, which is an era of fragmentation. While exhibitions and publications are both forms of dissemination that allow the work and audience to meet, the exhibition is «inherently discursive» and is a kind of discourse that – compared to the linear experience of reading – is «unstable, incomplete, uncontained, and uncontainable.» «Like film trailers that offer clips and previews of upcoming films, contemporary exhibitions involve the fragmentation of an entity and its dispersion into a variety of representations. Our age is one of fragmented narratives, a culture of bits and pieces that in themselves become, like the ruins and fragments in Sir John Soane’s Museum, a synecdoche for the whole. As the global economy implodes and exhibition practices reinvent themselves to take into account radical shifts in our aesthetic economy, we can assure ourselves that we have not seen the end of this fragmentation.»

The lecture of Grigely leaves the impression that it entails different layers of meaning and possible interpretations, and even some “gaps” that require further reflection. What interests us here, is that it sheds some light on the (material and immaterial) features of the region that forms between (art)works, exhibition context and the construction and dissemination of contents via texts, images and other forms of presentation and representations – both inside and outside the gallery. Clearly this is a region which is relevant to visual communication.
First of all, the idea of using forms of publication such as books and postcards to take the work «somewhere the exhibition doesn’t go» – i.e. to extend the space and time of the exhibition – is certainly intriguing. As Zak Kyes underlined, when introducing the conversation with Grigely: «To question the extent to which publications and their representations are actually a part of the work, rather than merely a documentation of it, is particularly essential to consider as art and design discourse is increasingly articulated through an ever-increasing flood of books and magazines.» Secondly, this flood of contents, media and artifacts is one that specifically involves graphic design. In this regard, it is interesting to remark what Grigely notes, at some point in his lecture, when he says that, just like exhibition design, publication design «involves the construction of visual paths, and pushes the possibilities of the publication as an exhibition.» Now, if a proximity between publications and exhibitions exists, and if publication can be regarded as a form of exposure, maybe that proximity can tell something of the the greater interest and confidence that graphic designers have shown in the past years in relation the space, the practice and the conventions of exhibiting and curating.

Presentation or re-presentation?
Our Polite Society and Na Kim

One of the issue that exhibiting graphic design poses, especially when displaying already existing work, is that of presentation/re-presentation.
Collaborating with Our Polite Society for their exhibition held in 2011 at HBKsaar Gallery, Saarbrücken (DE), the Amsterdam-based photographer and artist Paulien Barbas reflected about this very issue.
As he writes from his website, they decided to “emphasize” «the problem of presenting graphic design work in the context of a gallery.» (See images above.) He explains the idea as follows: «In such a setting the work loses its functionality and to a certain extent represents itself: when the work is hung on the wall in order to be ‘viewed’ and not to be ‘used’ it turns into a representation of an idea rather than a functional object. Trying to not fall into this trap the exhibition focused on the aspect of (re-)presentation of the work in general. In collaboration we showed a series of screen printed sheets (70 × 100 cm) that functioned as backgrounds in a series of photographs made as work documentation for the studio’s website. On an opposite wall this series of documentation photographs was shown as C-prints in 1:1 scale depending on the object shown on the photograph – the representation of a poster would be bigger in size than the representation of a business card. A third part of the exhibition was a (conventional) display of original works on walls and tables. In the interaction of these 3 elements (screen prints, C-prints, originals) the exhibition tried to activate the above mentioned problem within the presentation itself.»

This solution reminds us of the work that Na Kim realized for the Graphic Design Worlds exhibition at the Triennale Design Museum in Milan, 2011. For this exhibition graphic designers were invited to present/represent their idea of graphic design, their “graphic design world.” As a response to this brief, Na Kim decided to show a collective portray of her work. Collaborating with photographer Anu Vahtra she finely displayed her most significative graphic works in the space of her studio and took a picture of it. The portray was then printed on paper and glued on a wall of the exhibition. (See image below of the process of installation.)

(It may be interesting to note that Na Kim and Our Polite Society share their work space in the building of the P/////AKT gallery, in East Amsterdam. As Na explained to us in the interview we made for the book Graphic Design Worlds /Words, «the gallery is the main space in [the] building; the rest of it is divided into small working spaces, rented by people who are involved in the cultural field». The gallery is also used by these people to display their works, especially self-initiated projects, and organize events.)