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Opinion:
Editorial Eye 53 by John L. Walters
Every now and then I run into an old acquaintance from my musical past – a…
Written all over the body by Rick Poynor
An ‘encyclopaedia’ of Russian prison tattoos exposes a complex graphic subculture. Critique by Rick Poynor
French library under threat – correspondence, Letter to the editor, Caroline Archer
Letter from Caroline Archer, Director, St Bride Printing Foundation
Unintended accidents – Letter to the editor, Eric Kindel
Art Without Boundaries – Letter to the editor, Philip Thompson
A glimpse of graphic hell – Agenda, Adrian Shaughnessy
Whatever ideological stance they take, designers must at least believe in design
Features:
The holiday of a lifetime by David Evans
In 1936, Herbert Bayer was faced with a difficult brief: promoting the Third Reich
Rubber stamps by Tim Easton
Rubber stamps. Collected and used by Tim Easton.
The steamroller of branding by Nick Bell
Art and culture are open to interpretation. Why must we give them fixed identities?
Brand discipline by Rob Camper
Branding is not design and it is not marketing. Branding is a discipline we have to define
A waking dream by David Thompson
The notion of the brand and its plausible functions have been derailed and abstracted
Reading On Brand by Terry Eagleton
A fresh look at Wally Olins’s highly regarded branding manual, now in paperback
The floating signifier by John O’Reilly
Branding a nation may be just a matter of saying everything there is to say about nothing
Reputations: Cal Schenkel by Dan Nadel
‘They were Frank’s identities, and he controlled them … I was really just satisfying these various concepts.’
Penguin crime by Rick Poynor
Romek Marber’s 1960s paperback identity is a landmark of independent British design
It is what it is by Steven Heller
Scott Stowell’s Open brings innovation, style and plain speaking to broadcast design
Dope cards from Amsterdam by Chris Vermaas
The image of Holland has switched from tulips to hemp in one generation
Reviews:
About Face: Photography and the Death of the Portrait
Saul Bass
Had Gadya: The Only Kid
Guide to Ecstacity
Add. 17469: A Little Dust Whispered
Karel Martens: Counterprint
Plop: Recent Projects of the Public Art Fund
The Fat Baby: stories by Eugene Richards
Afrikan Alphabets: The Story of Writing in Afrika
Bram de Does, Typographer & Type Designer
Motion Blur: Onedotzero: graphic moving imagemakers
I Love my India. Stories for a City
Conscientious Objectives: Designing for an Ethical Message
Shelf Life
Ed Ruscha
Working Title: Piet Gerards, Graphic Designer
S Book Two

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Eye, Issue 053, Autumn 2004
Eye, Issue 053, Autumn 2004
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
In Rau's case, the combination of graphic design and photo produces a particularly positive result, since he uses the photo not so much as an object of representation but rather as a suggestive means of expression.
Among the young graphic artists of Berlin, who set to work after the war, Hans Adolf Albitz and Ruth Albitz-Geiß can claim special attention. In a short time, at a period when economic conditions were pretty unfavourable, they worked themselves so to the fore that their names came to mean something in Berlin publicity, and in western Germany their posters are known and appreciated, too.

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Walter Ballmer was a Swiss graphic designer born in Liestal, Switzerland in 1923. He worked across various design disciplines including advertising design, packaging, typography and exhibition design.

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Crouwel was the successor to Willem Sandberg who used an avant-garde approach in his work, utilising torn-paper montage, mixing of sans serif and old Egyptian typefaces and often off-center positioning. Crouwel steered away from this artistic approach and implemented a cohesive design system and a strong identity that emulated the corporate identity boom of the 1950s and 60s.