Showing posts with label Personal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Personal. Show all posts

Wednesday, 4 July 2012

What's The Point?

Sometimes I get the feeling (particularly as I try and explain what I do to people in a noisy, crowded club to drunken 20 something year olds, (or to some of my older relatives) that the graphic design industry on the surface seems shallow. I think I would be lying if I said it didn't concern me. Why do I get nervous or seem less of a professional by saying that I'm a graphic designer (don't even get me started trying to explain the term visual communication).

I really don't think any other related field has this sort of inferiority complex, such as fashion, industrial design and interior design. Each of these fields immediately conjure up instantly recognisable professions, however my vocation seems to have a vagueness about it.

I initially began my course as a non-current school leaver, whereby instead of being automatically accepted into uni through my marks, I had to go through an interview and present a portfolio. On the open day when I was sussing out the course, a great Typographer / Lecturer, Louise McWhinnie spoke about the interview process and her experience on having to sit and interview about 100 odd students. After a while of seeing unmotivated candidates, she began to ask the interviewees: What is the best piece of graphic design that they have seen? This question has stuck with me, as it pointed out that even then I couldn't answer that question. Even more frightening was that I was stuck on what the actual term "graphic design" even meant!

I guess it doesn't present an optimistic future for graphic design if even the students applying to study it don't even fully understand what it is... Or maybe we were just moody teenagers that just finished Art Express in high school...

Whenever I doubt my profession or start to feel that what I do is meaningless, I watch this gorgeous TED talk by Marian Bantjes, always an inspiration.

Marian's TED Talk

I really hope I can be as confident & eloquent as this great designer one day...


Monday, 2 July 2012

UTS Library

My very first blog! Currently I have finished my degree at UTS in Visual Communications (6 months ago) and I am now very happily placed in the UTS Library as their designer. It's funny that I have gone to Uni for 4 years just to simply moved 50 m down the road :)

The Library has most definitely provided a great break from the design scene in a sense, whilst still allowing me to be creative, there is such a relaxed, friendly environment.

It's also a major area of change in the University; just next door the Frank Gehry building is underway, and in a few years the Library will have a brand new building to move into (currently where building 02 is). The library is also trying to change itself: from an institute where one would just go for knowledge, to one where one would go for inspiration. The future library's motto is to become the heart of the University, a celebration of not only knowledge, but of culture and collaboration also. I sincerely think the library (with the help of branding, strategy and some groundbreaking design work) can reach this goal. The library is one of the very few areas within a university that is neutral, where a design student can be working on the same desk as an engineer or a business student.

And so began the exploration into trying to set up an identity that the UTS Library can own. I was called into a meeting with the Library directors to discuss creating a document that manages to visualise this vision, however rather than being presented with a fleshed out, simple statement, I was given a complicated brain dump (also known as a mind map) to flesh out. Luckily Artist In Resident, and former UTS Vis Com Graduate, Chris Gaul, was at hand to also sit in. Chris had worked for digital eskimo for a few years and used strategy techniques to nut out exactly what the library was after, e.g. if the library was a person, what music would they listen to, what would they eat etc, and in single words, explain what the library IS and ISN'T to create a word cloud (below).






These emotive words also fed into some initial designs, which were ultimately intended for branding the future library vision, however became much more of a springboard for other design development...

The colour spectrum really symbolised the vision of the library - to become the heart of the University.
I also thought the installation at the MCA by Rebecca Bauman was fantastic - the combination of colours and energy, and I think there is a direct correlation between this and books...