Information

Opinion:
Have you ever really looked at this poster? by Agenda, Richard Hollis
A critical design history should explore the relationship of form, content and production, argues the author of a new concise history.
I don’t use a Mac but I know a man who can by Monitor, Michael Horsham
British design has split down the middle. Should its priority be art or analysis, and is the computer a new ‘language’ or simply a tool? By Michael Horsham
Features:
Reputations: Anthon Beeke by Carel Kuitenbrouwer
‘I don’t think I could have come out on the streets with these posters in Berlin, Paris, or London – not to mention America’
Typography by Eye writers
Robert Harling’s eclectic magazine, published in the 1930s, is the first in a new occasional series.
Information sculpture by Rick Poynor
Tomato are a group of friends, a physical space somewhere in Soho, a multimedia workshop, descendents of Warhol’s Factory… anything but a design group. ‘Graphic design?’ they say. ‘We don’t know what it is’
Sweet smell of excess by Julia Thrift
Perfume packaging must evoke the indescribable. It has its own designers, conventions and codes.
[Sutnar] by Steven Heller
Born in Czechoslovakia, Ladislav Sutnar was a pioneer of information design. Working in America in the years after the war he synthesised European avant-gardisms into a functional commercial lexicon, made Constructivism playful and used its geometry to forge the dynamics of catalogue organisation. ‘The designer must think first, work later,’ Sutnar declared. His writings — in which the bracket was a favourite motif — are as timely today as his designs.
Clarity and contradiction by Liz Farrelly
Irma Boom’s work is lucid yet challenging. It upsets her colleagues, while pleasing her clients.
In the beginning was the picture by Jim Davies
How are publishers coping with the advent of new media? Two ambitious series expand the format of the illustrated book.
There is such a thing as society* by Andrew Howard
It is time to think again about design’s social function and the way it is determined by our culture.
Reviews:
April Greiman graphiste-designer / Los Angeles
TED5
Kirei: Posters from Japan

Details

Linked Information

Eye, Issue 013, Summer 1994
Eye, Issue 013, Summer 1994
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

Rudolph de Harak designed over 50 record covers for Westminster Records as well as designing covers for Columbia, Oxford and Circle record labels. His bright, geometric graphics can easily be distinguished and recognised.

Members Content

The typographic designs produced for the National Theatre by Ken Briggs are not only iconic and depict the Swiss typographic style of the time, but remain a key example of the creation of a cohesive brand style.

Members Content

I first came across Kens work in the Unit Edition’s superb monograph, Structure and Substance, published in 2012. Although I had owned a few of the British industrial design magazines, Design, for a few years before, in which Ken had designed numerous covers for.
In the ambitious new monograph Rational Simplicity: Rudolph de Harak, Graphic Designer, Volume shines a light on the complete arc of the exceptionally rich and varied career of Rudolph de Harak, showcasing his vibrant, graphic, formally brilliant work, which blazed a colourful trail through the middle decades of the twentieth century.