Chapter 18 Flashcards
International Typographic Style
A design movement that emerged from Switzerland and Germany and has also been called Swiss design. The visual characteristics of this style, include a unity of design achieved by asymmetrical organization of the design elements on a mathematically constructed grid; objective photography and copy that present visual and verbal information in a clear and factual manner, free from the exaggerated claims of propaganda and commercial advertising; and use of sans-serif typography set in a flush-left and ragged-right margin configuration
Art Concret
A manifesto formulated by Max Bill calling for a universal art of absolute clarity based on controlled arithmetical construction. Paintings in this style were constructed entirely from pure, mathematically exact visual elements-planes and colors. Because these elements have no external meanings, the results are purely abstract
semiotics
the philosophical theory of signs and symbols
semantics
a branch of semiotics that focuses on the study of the meaning of signs and symbols
syntactics
a branch of semiotics that focuses on the study of how signs and symbols are connected and ordered into a structural whole
pragmatics
a branch of semiotics that focuses on the study of the relation of signs and symbols to their users
tectonic element
an underlying element relating to architecture found in Anton Stankowski’s design program for the city of Berlin
Univers typeface
A visually programmed family of 21 sans0serif fonts designed by Adrian Frutiger in 1954. The palette of typographic variations- limited to regular, italic, and bold in traditional typography- was expanded sevenfold. Numbers replaced conventional nomenclature. Because all 21 fonts have the same x-height and ascender and descender lengths, they form a uniform whole that can be used together with complete harmony
Helvetica typeface
This new sans-serif, with even larger x-height then that of Univers, was released as Neue Hass Grotesk by Edouard Hoffman and Max Miedinger. When this design was produced in Germany by the now defunct D. Stempel AG in 1961, the face was renamed with the traditional Latin name for Switzerland
Manuale Typographicum
These 2 volumes, published in 1954 and 1968 by Herman Zapf, are outstanding contributions to the art of the book. Encompassing 18 languages and more than a 100 typefaces, they consist of quotations about the art of typography, with a full-page typographic interpretation for each quotation
Golden Mean
a 3 to 5 ratio considering the most beautifully proportioned rectangle by the ancient Greeks.
Ernst Keller
- 1891-1968
- The quality and discipline found in the Swiss design movement can be traced to this designer more than to any other individual. Rather than espousing a specific style, Keller believed the solution to the design problem should emerge from its content. Fittingly, his work encompassed diverse solutions. His poster for the Rietburg Museum demonstrates his interest in symbolic imagery, simplified geometric forms, expressive edges and lettering, and vibrant contrasting color (Fig. 18–1).
Theo Ballmer
- 1902-65
- studied briefly at the Dessau Bauhaus under Paul Klee, Walter Gropius, and Hannes Meyer in the late 1920s, and applied De Stijl principles to graphic design in an original way, using an arithmetic grid of horizontal and vertical alignments. In 1928 his poster designs achieved a high degree of formal harmony, as he used an ordered grid to construct visual forms.
Max Bill
- 1908-94
- His work encompassed painting, architecture, engineering, sculpture, and product and graphic design. After studying at the Bauhaus with Walter Gropius, Hannes Meyer, Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, Josef Albers, and Wassily Kandinsky from 1927 until 1929, he embraced the concepts of art concret, a universal art of absolute clarity based on controlled arithmetical construction. During the 1930s, he constructed layouts of geometric elements organized with absolute order. Mathematical proportion, geometric spatial division, and the use of Akzidenz Grotesk type (particularly the medium weight) are features of his work of this period (Figs. 18–2 and 18–3).
Otl Aicher
- 1922-91
- played a major role in developing the graphic design program for the Hochschule für Gestaltung (Institute of Design) in Ulm, Germany