Monday, December 15, 2008

Paper: Milton Glaser - Final Draft

Christina Catarello

FA 027

December 16, 2008

Prof. Klinkostein

Graphic designer Milton Glaser

Final Copy

 

 

Milton Glaser is a leading American graphic designer, illustrator, art director and teacher who has had a long and distinguished design career. Additionally, he has worked in furniture, product, and interior design. He expresses his ideas through simplified images that become symbols of the subject and his work along with his style is as ever changing as his interests and is influential worldwide.

Glaser, born June 26, 1929 was raised and currently lives in New York City. After attending the High School of Music & Art, he graduated from Cooper Union in New York City in 1951. He later studied printmaking from 1952 to 1953 at the Accademia delle Belle Arti in Bologna, Italy under the renowned painter Giorgio Morandi. He cites Morandi along with Picasso as having the most influence on his work. Although they are polar opposites, Morandi’s work austere and Picasso’s work versatile, Glaser’s appreciation of both inspire him to reach his potential as a designer. He admires Morandi’s unemotional clear vision shown in his paintings and at the same time Picasso’s quest for self-expression and willingness to change.

After returning to the United States he founded the Push Pin Studios in New York in 1954 with former classmates Seymour Chwast, Edward Sorel, and Reynold Ruffins, establishing Push Pin Graphics magazine with Chwast and Ruffins in the following year. The work produced at Push Pin helped revive illustration in the 1960’s when photography and television had all but taken over the visual communications industry. Most advertising solutions at that time concentrated on television commercials and print ads using photographic images.

Glaser’s graphic style at that time was eclectic and original, drawing on a wide variety of sources and style ranging from the Italian Renaissance and non-Western art to modern art and his love of comics. 
He uses a conceptual approach in the field of visual communications in which the designer creates the concept, page design, image and type for a project or assignment. Because of this encompassing approach to design, Glaser often developed his own typefaces to be used in the final image produced in a design. An excellent example of his concern of the total design process and his earlier style was Glaser’s insert poster for a record album by Bob Dylan, 1966.


          In this poster, one of Glaser’s typeface designs, “Babyteeth”, spells out Dylan’s name in the image. The simple profile of Dylan and the use of curvy lines and bright, flat color in this illustration perfectly symbolize the culture of the 1960’s and the poster has become a design icon of that time. According to Glaser, "Part of my job is to make things look simple. To achieve a look that's inevitable, that, when you see it, you think it's the only thing that could have been done." (6.)
         Another example of this design philosophy is the “I © NY” logo he created for the New York state government in 1975 to match the words to their “I Love New York” tourism campaign.
Although the general public has no idea who created this simple yet engaging logo, it is the most recognized and copied in the world. Following the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001 Glaser took out an ad in the New York Times and revised the famous image to read I  NY More Than Ever, with a smudge in the "lower west side" of the heart.
          Glaser co-founded New York Magazine with editor Clay Felker and was Art director and vice-president from 1968 to 1976. He also was responsible for the design of many other publications including Paris Match, the Village Voice, and Esquire



The innovative layout first seen in New York Magazine has been copied by almost every American city magazine ever since. He remained editor and co-art director of the magazine Push Pin Graphics and president of Push Pin until he left in 1974. Shortly thereafter, he set up Milton Glaser Inc. to pursue other design interests such as interior, furniture and product design alongside his continued interest in print. He later became a partner in another New York City design studio, WBMG in 1984.

Sharing his love of design has been an integral part of Glaser’s career. From 1961 onwards Glaser has been teaching at various New York City schools including the Pratt Institute, the School of Visual Arts and Cooper Union. He is an articulate spokesman for the ethical practice of design. His current work has become increasingly personal and spiritual as exemplified by “Beatrice” from a commission for Dante’s Purgatorio


Collections of Glaser’s work can be found at the Museum of Modern Art, Cooper Hewitt Museum, both in New York; Israel Museum, Jerusalem; National Archives, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC to name a few. Throughout his career he has had a major impact on contemporary illustration and design. His work has won numerous awards from Art Directors Clubs, the American Institute of Graphic Arts and the Society of Illustrators. He is the recipient of many honors including the Society of Illustrators Gold Medal and the St. Gaudens Medal from Cooper Union, New York in 1979 and the Smithsonian Cooper-Hewitt Lifetime Achievement Award, New York, which he received in 2004. He has received honorary doctorates from various prestigious institutions such as the School of Visual Arts, New York and the Philadelphia Museum School both in 1979 and the State University at Buffalo in 1987.

Glaser insists, “Artistic courage is usually over emphasized. But it’s the ability to leave something behind and try something else when you don’t know where you’re going.” (3.) It is Milton Glaser’s constant experimentation and willingness to explore new avenues of design that has enabled him to produce a legacy of designs and inspiration for those in the design community.

Works Cited:

1. Glaser, Milton. Graphic Design: Graphic Design. New York: Overlook Press, 1990.

2. Glaser, Milton. “Ten Things I Have Learned.” Part of the AIGA talk in London. November 22, 2001,

http://www.miltonglaser.com/pages/milton/essays/es3.html

3. Holland, Brad. “Milton Glaser Interview.” Step inside magazine, March 15, 2002,

http://www.aiga.org/content.cfm/milton-glaser-interview

4. Martin, Roger L. “The Positive Spiral: Six Keys to Success.” BusinessWeek, February 28, 2007,

http://www.businessweek.com/innovate/content/jan2006/id20060103_370096.htm

5. New York Magazine. New York: New York Media Holdings, LLC, September 28, 2008.

6. Perman, Stacy. “The Heart and Mind of Milton Glaser.”  BusinessWeek, January 4, 2006,

http://www.businessweek.com/innovate/content/jan2006/id20060103_370096.htm




Sunday, December 14, 2008

Review: Bruce Nussbaum, "Steve Jobs' Inspirational Advice"

http://www.businessweek.com/innovate/NussbaumOnDesign/archives/2008/12/steve_jobs_chri.html

In this blog Steve Nussbaum shares with his readers his favorite inspirational speech he has ever heard. It is Steve Jobs' 2005 Stanford Commencement address, shortly after he was diagnosed with cancer. My favorite quote from that speech is: "Your time is limited, so don't waste it living someone else's life." Jobs says that believing that the dots will connect gives us the courage to follow our own unique path.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Class Notes: R 12/4/08

Layout of business card page:

8.5"x11"
Margins: top and bottom= 1/2"
                 left and right=3/4"
Center Guide at 3.5"
Guide every 2" from top to bottom (10 boxes)

Next week finish project
Final 12/16/08
Binder due 12/16/08

Monday, December 8, 2008

Review: WFS Outlook 2009

http://www.pantopicon.be/blog/2008/10/29/wfs-outlook-2009/

World Future Society recently published their top ten of future developments to keep an eye on in view of 2009 and beyond:

Some of the more interesting revelations that are relevant to the design industry are:

1.     Everything you say and do will be recorded by 2030. Because of  advances in nanotechnology, nanodevices will monitor and record people everywhere.— Gene Stephens, “Cybercrime in the Year 2025,” THE FUTURIST July-Aug 2008.

2.     The car’s days as king of the road will soon be over. A result of wireless communication, emission control restrictions, and futuristic flying delivery vehicles there will be reduced demand of the automobile— Thomas J. Frey, “Disrupting the Automobile’s Future,” THE FUTURIST, Sep-Oct 2008.

3.     Careers, and the college majors for preparing for them, are becoming more specialized. Niche majors  such as, entrepreneurship, nanotechnology and digital forensics will continue to grow.—THE FUTURIST, World Trends & Forecasts, Sep-Oct 2008.

4.     Professional knowledge will become obsolete almost as quickly as it’s acquired. Most professions willl require continual retraining and instruction due to rapid advances in technology.— Marvin J. Cetron and Owen Davies, "Trends Shaping Tomorrow's World, Part Two," THE FUTURIST May-June 2008.

5.     Access to electricity will reach 83% of the world by 2030. Electricity raises living standards and access to products and services.— Andy Hines, “Global Trends in Culture, Infrastructure, and Values,” Sep-Oct 2008.

Review: As the money dries up, product design to shift toward the ederly

http://www.core77.com/blog/object_culture/as_the_money_dries_up_product_design_to_shift_towards_the_elderly_12037.asp

According to the Wall Street Journal, companies such as General Electric and Whirlpool are focusing on “senior-friendly” designs for the aging population. At a time when consumer’s disposable income is at a low, this segment of the population might possibly have the income to buy their products.