Friday, 11 May 2012
The Face Magazine
The Face was a British music, fashion and culture monthly magazine started in May 1980. Its best selling period was in the mid-1990s, when editor Richard Benson brought in a team that included art director Lee Swillingham. Benson ensured the magazine's written content reflected developments in music, art and fashion whilst Swillingham changed the visual direction of the magazine to showcase new photography. By the time of its May 2004 closure, monthly sales had declined and advertising revenues had consequently reduced. The publishers EMAP soon closed the title in order to concentrate resources on its more successful magazines. In an ironic twist, Jason Donovan led a consortium that made an abortive approach to EMAP to save the title prior to its closure. In 2011 The Face was added to the permanent collection of the Design Museum, London, and featured in the Postmodernism exhibition at the V&A.
This risque picture of Gisele Bündchen on The Face in the 90's. The police tape reflects conflict and the barely-covered woman is perhaps reflective of the conflict inside herself.
Madonna on the cover of The Face. This image is reflective of conflict because Madonna is wearing a scowl and clothing which is traditionally threatening. The colours are conflicting; they only use red, white, black and navy blue. It makes it look harsh.
WET Magazine
WET: The Magazine of Gourmet Bathing was one of the most 'seminal' publications of the 1970s and early 80s. Founded by Leonard Koren in 1976 it ran thirty-four issues before closing in 1981. The idea for the magazine grew out of the artwork Leonard Koren was doing at the time—what he termed ‘bath art’—and followed on the heels of a party he threw at the Pico-Burnside Baths.
WET covered a range of cultural issues and was widely known for its use of graphic art. Started as a simple one-man operation that included artwork and text solicited from friends and acquaintances, the production, team, and circulation of the magazine would grow over the years. Its content also evolved to cover a wider expanse of stories that captured a smart and artsy Los Angeles attitude that was emerging at the same time as punk, but with its own distinct aesthetic. The magazine’s energetic creativity and flair for the absurd would remain a constant. As design problems arose, solutions were often improvised on the spot, creating a quirky editorial sensibility that remains one of WET's most enduring legacies. Its layout and design helped to catalyze the graphic styles later known as New Wave and Postmodern.
WET's covers always looked slightly weird, possibly due to the fragmented editorials. I think they look quite conflicted, as though several artists wanted to do several other things with it but were overruled. I feel that the mood of the artists influenced the front covers very much.
I think the yellow cover is the most conflicted because there are so many warring elements. Also the woman's eyes go sideways and she looks angry. The birds flying around her look like aeroplanes, a powerful war symbol.
Retro Style
This piece was fairly simple to make and I feel it looks retro.
I started with an image of a paper report on the Columbine shootings in 1999. Then I added an image of the london riots in 2011, contrasting between the old and new. I placed these so they looked like a double page spread in a magazine.
Then I set about changing the colours so they looked retro. I used curves to up the contrast and colours and put them on a pin light filter. Then I messed around with the contrast on the alterations screen until they both looked authentic. Finally I upped the light contrast on the jumping woman to make her look faded and washed-out.
I think this could be better but I have limited resources and I wasn't sure what to dp. Next time I would try putting the photo of the woman in black and white too.
David Foldvari - Big Active
David Foldvari was born in Budapest, Hungary, but has lived in the UK for the last 20 years. His work often tackles issues of alienation, identity and belonging, formed by a preoccupation with his eastern European roots, combined with his experience of growing up in the UK. David's work is bold, darkly humorous and often political in tone; his draftsmanship has led to a prolific output both personally and commercially. Some of his previous clients include the New York Times, Greenpeace, Random House, Penguin Books, Dazed & Confused and Island Records.
Foldvari has used Photoshop and draughtmanship with an ink pen to create this. The work is dark but still fun; the man with a rifle framed by bright colours and splashes. I think Foldvari is trying to say that war doesn't always need to be serious and that even the opposite side are human beings.
It is nicely balanced with the block black man on the right and then the colours ballooning out of him across the page.
The whole piece is focused on the gun. It pokes out unsurrounded by anything, black on a cream page, a focus point. For most of us guns, especially heavy-duty AKs like this man has, are accompanied by a host of negative connotations. However, Foldvari does nothing to take the focus away from the gun, as he has with the negative headscarf and Arabic features. These things also have negative conditioning in the mind of the public.
My Focus.
My piece is going to be about the riots across the world. Especially focusing on Egypt 2012/12 and London 2011.
First Magazine Layout Design
This is a first plan of a conflict magazine. I have decided to focus on the protests and riots which have rocked the world from Egypt to Libya to London to Dublin in the last two years. This double-page spread is focused on the London riots of August 2011.
This piece was surprisingly simple to make. I found a picture which I knew on the internet of a Polish woman jumping out of her window; the building below was on fire and she leapt to safety. The shot is a wonderful one of her silhouetted against the fiery blaze as the emergency services reach up to save her.
Once I had it the size I wanted (I didn't want to cut too much of the black off and lose the contrast between dark and light), I placed white writing in the blackness at the bottom left. I was following this magazine layout from Vogue.
The words read 'what do you think we wanted from this'. I chose these words because I believe the riots get a lot of bad press. In fact, they started out as a peaceful protest and the influence of negative outside factors (chavs) negated it into the looting and smashing that it turned into. I can't even blame those people very much. The world we live in today listens to the voice of the people, apparently, but the downtrodden and the given-up-on and the lost causes? No one listens to them. No one in government listens to people who want more jobs, who want more pay, who want better education, who want change which is impossible, because they are all power-greedy blind toads. There is no way to change this country because all politicians are corrupt. They care more about international relations than changing things in their own country. There is no way to change but we wish it was so, because everyone has a voice; but no one hears everyone's.
No one agrees with me on the way I see this, but I don't care. I like to make art about it to try and force people to see how unfair it is.
This was a very simple but very effective poster and I like it a lot. I wouldn't change anything, I think it has plenty of impact as it is.
Jasper Goodall
Jasper Goodall was born in 1973 in Birmingam, England.
His Father was an architect and his mother a fine artist and photographer who was instrumental in the UK Feminist Arts Movement during the 1970’s/80’s.
He Graduated from The University of Brighton in 1995.
Goodall was at the forefront of the reinvention of illustration in the late nineties and helped pave the way for the resurgence of the medium that Britain has witnessed in the last ten years. His work for The Face magazine has influenced many image makers. In addition to his normal work he teaches on the illustration degree course at the University of Brighton.
Visual Language of Typography
I am looking at how typography gives off a certain mood. For this lesson I will choose five themes and then find typography I think most accurately reflects them.
This typography represents horror. We are used to seeing this type of typography on the face of films such as Saw and 28 Days Later. The blurry letters and the stripy blocks give the impression of the letters blinking in and out of existence... Just as the TV screens in horror films do.
Brush writing has long been associated with love. The effort in producing a long letter written by brush is a real labour of love, and the typeface recalls the characteristically romantic Heian period of Japan. In this period it was fashionable to write small stanzas of poetry to friends, lovers and family. The subtle Japanese could interpret all sorts of meanings in the metaphorical poetry, and elegant brushstrokes were the mark of a true noble.
This typography represents calmness to me. A steady hand is needed to draw the calligraphic letters and someone in the grip of a strong emotion would not manage it. The script reminds me of schoolteacher's hand; a calm, collected young woman who teaches toddlers their letters. Probably in the West and then falls in love with the village blacksmith and lives happily ever after, probably ignoring the advances of a rich young man. Or whatever.
This one is supposed to feel like a machine or a robot. This reminds me of machines because the display on clocks and less developed computers is like this. It is a quite mechanical feel to it; the rigid, formed letters and the segmented pieces don't look as though they are done by hand.
This reminds me of conflict because it looks like army writing, on the side of boxes. I think it would probably remind most people of war because they have seen it in films. The chunkiness of the words reminds me of solidity and impossibility to die. I think it reminds me a lot of the words on the side of tanks.
Josh Vanover
Josh Vanover is a graphic designer who was born and raised in North Carolina. His graphic work is characterised by black and white colouring and a density of value. His style is informed by an encyclopaedic knowledge of visual sources ranging from cult film footage, erotica and video stills to cartoons, war photography and even psychedelic. Vanover’s signature style and workman-like approach have attracted the attention of clients such as Nike, Stussy and Hennessy, and most recently he has done album artwork for the likes of Linkin Park.
Typography Styles
I like this font and may use it for my final piece; however I am unsure what the overall tone of the piece is going to be, so this 'typewriter' style may not be sufficient.
This is a very pretty font but again I feel it may not reflect the overall tone of my final piece. There is no way to know this however until I have completed it.
This font is probably my favourite. I like it because it is gritty but still functional. I am thinking of using this one in my final piece as it will fit with anything.
This is another font which goes with anything. I am also thinking about using this one because of it's flexibility.
This font is another all-rounder, but I feel it may be too neat for my end result.
Ideas For Magazine Layouts - Looking At Vogue
This Vogue two-page spread is an interesting example of the classic magazine layout. A large photo dominates on the left-hand side of the page, while a bold title divides it from the columns on the right hand side. I like this magazine layout because it is nicely balanced and draws the eye to all the right places, but also I don't particularly want to use it because everyone does, and it's very unoriginal.
Another Vogue spread, this time very different. The bold colours blaze on the page, grabbing the eye. The whole thing is not so bright as to be overwhelming, but the different patterns and focuses bewilder the eye a little. The bright slash of red across the woman's eyes brings the focus firmly to her on the right-hand side, but on the left the eye is drawn mainly to the floating white writing.
I don't like this layout so much, because the lack of relief for the eye gives me a headache and I think it would anyone else.
The third and final Vogue spread. This one is by far my favourite. The photograph is the focus point, but the bright pink of the type ensures no attention is lost on it. The beautiful dress the model wears is the real inspiration behind the piece; everything it focused towards it. I like this style because it is simple but still very detailed.
Overall I think I am probably going to use the third design for my final piece.
David Carson
Possibly one of the most famed graphic designers to date, David Carson (born 1954) is renowned for his magazine design and 'experimental' typography. He has been a graphic designer for nearly 30 years, and is credited with the 1990 graphic movement of grunge typography. Having worked as a sociology teacher and professional surfer in the late 1970s, he art-directed various music, skateboarding, and surfing magazines through the 1980/90s, including twSkateboarding, twSnowboarding, Surfer, Beach Culture and the music magazine Ray Gun (1992-95).
he changed the public face of graphic designnewsweek
Fringe Postcards - girl on a wall
Evaluation
I am pleased with this piece because it was simple to make and looks good.
I hope it is not too complex for the simple brief given by Fringe. I think the contrast between grey and colour looks really nice.
The girl is meant to display the spirit of Brighton, freedom and freedom of speech.
See me for 'making of' document as it would not upload.
Fringe Postcards - Running Woman
Evaluation.
I found making this piece difficult, but I am glad I made the effort because I think it looks really good. I like the expression on the woman’s face. I like the grayscale with her dress going slightly pink. Next time I would try to make the woman in the sky’s face blend better with the background.
Please see me for 'making of' as it would not upload.
Fringe Postcards - Kitty Cointreau
Evaluation
This piece was very easy to make and it didn’t really tax me at all. Apart from the problem with the layers, which meant I didn’t quite get the effect I‘d hoped for, it all went quite smoothly.
I think the balance between the woman tipped backwards, and the straight woman in the background, as well as the slightly tilted sweet shop at the bottom, gives it a nice balance. The glimpses of yellow cracked wall behind it are meant to make it look like it's several posters that have been put on top of each other on a wall.
To see 'the making of' please see me as it would not upload.
Fringe Postcard Designs
For this term we had to create a number of novelty postcards for Brighton Fringe. However as I only had a small Brighton Fringe logo, the logo can only be seen in the postcard template; the larger images do not have it. Along with the images I have uploaded my evaluations and how I made them.
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