Tuesday 27 October 2015

OUGD402: Events in November

During our last talk with Penny Lee, we had to have a look into events that are going on during November, ones that we could potentially attend. Whether that be to give us inspiration for our current on going studio work, or to attend simply because it interests us.

After looking on websites such as Leeds List, Leeds Inspired and also Eye Magazine, I found a few events that looked interesting, ones that I would considering going to.


Gaming & Grill Festival
(7th November)


"Video games, burgers and booze? It’s no dream, it’s the Leeds Gaming and Grill Festival that’s coming to The Warehouse on Saturday 7th November 2015."


Carry Akroyd - Print Exhibition 
(7th Nov - 27 Feb)

"Carry showcases a beautiful selection of screenprints which explore fields and fens, the natural habitats of birds and other wildlife and rich landscapes. Her style is bold and her colour palette vibrant and exciting."

Craft Centre & Design Gallery

Leeds Print Fair
(7th November)

A selection of different artists with their own stalls, selling a range of prints such as the ones shown below.


With the events that each person had found, we created a few big sheets of paper full of sticky post it notes:


Sunday 18 October 2015

OUGD402: Current & Potential Influences

"BE A SPONGE"


We had a talk from Penny Lee about how we should be more open and receiving when it comes to everyday inspirations regardless of what form it's in. Not everyone, me included, necessarily has a habit of reading blogs, books, magazines etc. on a regular basis or even going to see performances and visiting galleries every now and then.

She put emphasis on how getting into a routine of checking blogs daily, reading books and visiting art related events can give you inspiration, even when you least expect it to. This is in turn will help a lot when it comes to coming up with ideas for briefs, tasks etc.

Some of Penny's suggested ones that she quite often reads/watches include Ted Talks, Do Lectures, The Chicken Shed Chronicles, Dazed & Confused and Medium. 


After being in groups and writing down between us our current inspirations, we then regrouped as a class and discussed, with reasoning, why we read and watch, what we do on a regular basis.

From this talk we had to find 10 sources of inspirations from other groups and find out a little more about them as they could potentially become some of our own influences.


1. My Modern Met

- Website containing blogs about art, design, photography, architecture and everyday ongoings.
- Has it's own online shop selling prints & photographs.


2. Design Milk

- Design Milk is a design blog featuring interior design ideas, architecture, modern furniture, home decor, art, style, and technology founded by Jaime Derringer.
- They also have another website named Dog Milk, the idea behind the website is the same as their main site except it's based entirely around dogs, blogging about designer dog sweaters and dog beds.


 

3. Colossal Blog

- Colossal is a Webby-Nominated blog that explores art and other aspects of visual culture. It is also one of the top 50 blogs on the internet.
- They have an online shop selling a mixture of art pieces and various goods such as Ferrofluid Displays, playing cards and cups.



4. Goodtype

- Goodtype is a website dedicated to sharing pieces of lettering and typography. There is now a community of over 250,000 people worldwide, that follow the website and their blogs.

 

5. One Minute Briefs

- One minute briefs is a Twitter page & blog that is dedicated to hosting design briefs everyday. The idea behind it is that they post a brief and people come up with ideas within a relatively short period of time to see how different people interpret these briefs.



6. Sight Unseen

- Sight Unseen is an online magazine that explores the world of design and visual arts.
- They also curate exhibitions and pop-up shops, produces events, and provides editorial and marketing services

 

7. Friends of Type

- Friends of Type features original typographic design and lettering pieces, with new posts everyday. 
- They claim that their "Posts are meant to log ideas, express ourselves, and inspire each other and our readers".

 

8. People of Print

- Established in May 2013, they have a team of art directors, project managers, graphic designers, illustrators, developers and printmakers that post regularly about all things print related.

 

9. Booooooom

- Booooooom was set up in 2008 by Vancouver-based artist Jess Hamada. It is now one of Canada's highest traffic art blogs and also one of the biggest on the internet. They post pieces of contemporary artwork from many different artists including up and coming young artists. 

 


10. Medium

- Medium describe themselves as 'a different kind of place to read and write on the internet'. This is down to the fact that they think more about the quality of the ideas that matter, not how many page views they get. Their website has high quality blog posts about various topics, some art related others just general everyday topics, either way for the most part they're interesting to read.





Monday 12 October 2015

OUGD402: The John Peel Lecture

"Art is everything that you don't have to do"

"There are certain things you do have to do to stay alive. You have to eat, for example. But you don’t have to invent Baked Alaska or sausage rolls or Heston Blumenthal."

"You have to wear clothes. But you don’t have to come up with Dior dresses or Doc Marten boots or Chanel little black frock."

Brian Eno described art in such a way that I would never have thought of putting it. He talks about art as stylisation of things such as the way we dress, the way we style our haircuts etc, they aren't random they're stylised. His overall main point is that we can survive without a lot of things that we do or use in everyday life, and that these things come under his broad definition of art.

He makes a point also about how art is very much different to other subjects such as science and maths, as to a certain extent, no matter who you ask, these subjects do only a range of things. Whereas art can be described in many different ways by different people, for example my answer to what art does could and probably would be entirely different to the next person's.

"When you go into a gallery, you might see a most shocking picture. But actually you can leave the gallery. When you listen to a terrifying radio play you can switch the radio off. So one of the things about art is it offers a safe place for you to have quite extreme and rather dangerous feelings"

This quote, I think, supports the idea of art being so much different to regular academic subjects in the sense that it's possibilities are endless as far as combinations of what mediums you use to portray you ideas, no matter how bizarre or ridiculous they are, onto paper.

"We need to be thinking about art and culture not as a little add on, a bit of luxury, but as the central thing that we do."





Sunday 11 October 2015

OUGD402: Study Task 1 - Getting to Know People



For this brief, we were been split into 12 separate groups and were each given a design studio to research and to answer a list of questions then present it all to the other 11 groups.

1. Ah Ha Studios

Communication & graphic design studio established in 2011 based in Lisbon, Portugal. Created by Carolina Cantante & Catarina Carreiras. Between them they work with various mediums such as brand strategy, interior design, identity work, advertising, new media, traditional and fine print, retail and product design, photography and illustration. Their studio started as an experiment as at the time they were friends in university but eventually developed into a studio who now collaborate with other designers.

"Studio AH—HA has a holistic approach towards design and branding, working together with clients through every stage of the process, filtering their inspirations, ideas and motivations into fresh, engaging and compelling brand messages."


2. Hey Studio

Small studio founded by Veronica Furte in 2007 in Barcelona, Spain. They specialise in brand identity, editorial design and also illustration. "We love geometry, color and direct typography." They have their own online shop which opened back in 2014 which they use as a place to share their passion for typography, illustration and bold graphics.



3. Sagmeister & Walsh

Studio of 4 designers based in New York. Made up of Stefan Sagmeister, Jessica Walsh, Zipeng Zhu and Molly Brunk. They create identities, commercials, websites, apps, films, books and objects for both clients and themselves.

Fugue IdentityAishti Identity


4. HeyDays





5. Lust

Dutch design studio founded in 1996 by Jeroen Barendse, Thomas Castro, and Dimitri Nieuwenhuizen, based in The Hague, Netherlands. Their name originated from the magazine they created named 'Lust'. They work with many different mediums including traditional printwork and book design, abstract cartography and data-visualisations, new media and interactive installations, and architectural graphics. 



6. Studio Dumbar

Studio Dumbar was founded in 1977 in the Netherlands and is the 3rd most awarded design outfit after Apple and Pentagram. They work with a variety of clients both large and small, from business and government to cultural and non-profit. 1/3 of their work goes unpaid due to doing work for non profit organisations. They produce designs primarily based on passion for the cause rather than profits.



7. Build

Originally based in London but moved to Yorkshire in 2015 and was founded by Micheal C. Place and Nicky Place back in 2001. They've worked with plenty of big name companies such as Nike and Microsoft. Their work is very type orientated and simple with a limited colour palette. Their studio consists of only 4 designers and they are soon to open a physical shop.



8. Elmwood

Founded on the 1st of January 1997 and are the worlds most effective brand design company after having won more ‘International Design Effectiveness Awards’ than any other business ever. They're currently number one in current and historic effectiveness league tables. They have created their own design tools, own tea and beer brand. They are very serious about sustainability and specialise in commercial branding and product packaging. They have studios in London, New York, Singapore, Leeds, Hong Kong and Melbourne.


9. Bleed

Bleed are a multidisciplinary design company based in Vienna, Austria and also Oslo, Norway. They work a lot on identity and have worked for companies such as Ikea and Diesel.



10. Face

Face are a supermodernist design studio specialised in developing honest branding projects across the world. The studio was founded by Rik Bracho and Ricardo Tejada and amongst them are 8 other designers that work within the studio also. They focus on identity, branding and also web design.



11. Dessein

Founded by Geoff Bickford and Tracy Kenworthy in Perth, Australia back in 1987. Their work is very clean, modern and colourful. They focus on branding, signage, websites and also packaging. Within their studio they have a range of employees working for them including Koreans, Italians, Indians and Australians.


12. Wolff Olins

Founded by Micheal Wolff and Wally Olins. "We were founded in 1965 to help organisations shake off their corporate camouflage and take their place in the world." They're based in several locations including London, San Francisco, New York, and Dubai and they now employ 150 designers, strategists and account managers.