Information

Content includes:
Good Design Yesterday and Tomorrow / Yusuke Sato
Koichi Tsuchiya’s people and works / Makoto Wada
interdesign2000 report / Masami Sekiguchi
Serialization: Bauhaus, a pioneer of modern design education Production workshop, significance of its design activities / Hisao Miyajima
Special feature: PR magazine editorial
Latest overall feeling / Shinichi Kusamori
Roundtable talk about editing PR magazine / Tsuneko Sesoko + Kazuko Koike + Hiroshi Takada + Kunio Kobayashi + Hiroshi Aoki + Atsuko Watanabe + Koichi Sato
Book review
Japan Shomei Tomatsu Photobook / Mitsuo Katsui
Yearbook Illustration / Yoshitomo Imae
Tadanori Yokoo’s collection of works / Ryuichi Yamashiro
Export Mark / Hideyuki Oka
Design digest
Customer as an interior element / Takashi Sakaizawa
Talk radar
Copyright that shuts out the design
Interior Kyoto Exhibition
Koike Koike, printing design

Details

Linked Information

Design (Japan), 109, 1968. Cover design by Tadanori Yokoo
Design (Japan), 109, 1968. Cover design by Tadanori Yokoo
Design (Japan), 109, 1968. Cover design by Tadanori Yokoo
Design (Japan), 109, 1968. Cover design by Tadanori Yokoo
More graphic design artefacts
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
More graphic design history articles

Members Content

Graphis is one of the industries most long-standing magazines. It was first published in 1944 and founded by Walter Herdeg and Walter Amstutz in Zurich, Switzerland. It was released bimonthly and was trilingual, with articles in English, French and German.
Every year the 20 best posters are selected in Germany and once more brought to the attention of the public. We do not publish all the twenty posters today; instead we add some which failed to be distinguished and which nevertheless are distinguished.
Ken was born in 1929, in Southampton and grew up in a small market town in North Devon. He was a principled man, with strong values and views against the hyper-consumerism we live with today. Ken studied at the London Central School of Arts and Crafts in the 1950s and was taught by Herbert Spencer, Anthony Froshaug and Jesse Collins. Whilst at the School he studied alongside designers Ken Briggs, Alan Fletcher and Colin Forbes.
From time to time members of the Graphic Design History group and others have asked for a number of recommendations for books related to design history, theory and specific areas of graphic design. This is the first of a series of articles from educators, designers and archivists featuring book recommendations and resources.