Michael Bierut, illustration for sixth grade social studies report, "Disaster at Sea: The RMS Titanic," 1968 I was in the first grade when I made the discovery that changed my life. We were given a reading assignment that involved drawing something in the room that began with the letter F. I drew a flag that stood in the corner of the classroom. I still remember the drawing: the flag, complete with folds, the stand with its five-prong base, the storage closet next to it, the window on the other side, and the trees and portions of rooftops outside the window. I didn't think there was anything particularly special about it. But my teacher, Mrs. Kinola, sent it home with a note:
It looks like Mike is quite an artist!That single sentence established the defining characteristic of my childhood. I got good grades, but so did a lot of people. You could get good grades by studying hard, something that many of my peers, especially the boys, felt reflected a misguided attitude about priorities. I seemed to have no real talents. I couldn't throw or catch a baseball with authority, punch someone in the face, or shoplift. But now I had something I could call my very own. I was good at art.
At St. Theresa's School in Garfield Heights, Ohio, in the early sixties, being good at art enjoyed a special status. It wasn't just a skill, it was a God-Given Talent. I made the most of it. I was shy and socially inept, but now I had something with which to gain purchase in elementary school society. My interest in art was encouraged by my parents, who bought me progressively more exotic tools: pastels, watercolors, charcoal pencils. These alone made useful conversation starters in the lunchroom, but I always made it a point to have some of my most recent work casually available for review. As my skill increased, so did the predictability of the response I got. It took the form of a single question, almost always phrased the same curious way: "Did you draw that freehand?"
Of course, that was the trick. What was admired wasn't the artistic impulse — this was something that to this day I'm not sure I actually possess — but something else: the ability to do realistic drawings, the more photographically representational the better. By this standard, the highest possible compliment was "C'mon, you fuckin'
traced that!" And naturally, the more painstaking the detail, the more time-consuming the execution method, the greater the acclaim I received. Despite my growing fame as an artist, I had no social life. Thankfully, this permitted me to turn my undivided attention to epic six-hour sessions of crosshatching, creating work as awe-inspiring to my fellow sixth-graders as a magic trick.
Being the local go-to guy for art had another advantage: it permitted me to cut across the schoolyard's Byzantine clique structure. I made posters for the drama club, banners for the football team, campaign buttons for the student council candidates. And with acquisition of a
Speedball lettering pen set in junior high, the last piece fell into place. Once it was learned I was a fellow who could bang out a convincing Fraktur my popularity soared among the the school's hard core fans of Judas Priest and Black Sabbath.
It goes without saying that my God-given talents usefully augmented my academic ambitions as well. I never turned in a report or term paper without an elaborate cover and a lengthy appendix filled with predictably overwrought drawings of the subject at hand, whether it was unicellular flagellates, the buildings of Washington, D.C., or the sinking of the Titanic. Was it unfair that my grade often went up a notch because of these elaborate but usually irrelevant embellishments? Sure. But it was also a useful lesson on the relationship of form and content.
In fact, when I look back today, I can see a clear pattern. My eagerness to please, my enthusiasm about working with as many different groups as possible, my discovery that a good-looking package could improve the impression made by its contents: these are all traits that led me not into art, but into graphic design. Today my clients are usually more sophisticated than those Black Sabbath fans in eighth grade study hall; the content I work with hopefully has more substance than my landmark opus from 1968, "Disaster at Sea: The RMS Titanic." But the process, and the impulse that motivates it, has been much the same for the last 40 years.
I wonder if I would have made the same discovery about myself if I'd been born 40 years later. A few weeks ago, I went to my daughter Martha's middle school science fair. In my day, this would have been an excuse to unleash every gimmick at my disposal, mounting an orgiastic display of three-dimensional lettering techniques, full-color diagrams, and impeccably rendered views of...well, whatever. Hamsters, nuclear reactors, the inner ear, the solar system. Who cares? No matter that very little actual
science would be on offer. I would still get crowds and spend the evening answering the same question over and over: yes, I
did draw it all freehand.
Today, affluent kids enjoy nearly universal access to programs like Photoshop and Powerpoint. So everywhere I looked I saw lettering and images that would have put my handcrafted efforts to shame. In some ways, it was inspiring. The tools of graphic design, even manipulated by seventh and eighth graders, brought the content to the foreground in every instance. It was easy to see who was good at science. But it was hard to see who was good at art.
Comments [57]
03.19.07
02:37
"no social life."
I can now say I definitely have two things in common with Michael Bierut... or a young Michael Bierut, at least.
I was totally an art kid, but it helps when both your parents hold MFAs in Fine Arts (Father is Painting MFA, Mother is Jewelry Design MFA)... Even to this day, I find any artistic endeavor I can do as refreshing and inspiring and something I can bring to the table as a designer. Anyone who knows me knows that art plays a huge role in my life... and in my design.
Thanks for an interesting article that well worth reading!
03.19.07
03:04
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03.19.07
08:15
Honestly, Michael, sometimes you're too self-effacing for your own good.
Sure, I can probably assume that your efforts along these lines weren't the prodigious output of a budding Einstein. At the same time, your visual expositions were, no doubt, pleasantly inviting to viewers. They probably felt compelled to linger a bit longer at your visual explanations. I'm guessing that they found themselves wanting to understand the content behind the drawings and diagrams (besides just being impressed with your artistic flair).
While presentation and communication certainly aren't substitutes for the content (nor should they ever be used to distort it), they are important aspects that are all too often dismissed as "fluff".
Working with a lot of scientists and engineers who occasionally have to present information in a public forum, we've both come to realize that the best science in the world won't do anyone any good if it's not understood and accepted by those who control decision-making. A good visual explanation can sometimes make that understanding and acceptance a reality.
It was easy to see who was good at science. But it was hard to see who was good at art.
For students who aren't good at art, the digital tools available today must be a welcome relief. No more painstaking, hand-lettered science displays!
However, I'm just enough of a curmudgeon to worry that -- without having to attempt to draw something as part of a visual explanation -- kids may not be taking the time to actually see. It's so easy to download whatever visual support is needed. But actually seeing it involves a patient level of study that I fear may be getting overlooked.
Thought-provoking post, Michael.
03.19.07
09:16
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03.19.07
09:58
And now I design websites.
03.19.07
10:29
Graphic Design may have had to take one for the team to keep the skies safe.
03.19.07
11:34
I drew the human in my report as bow-legged as a person could be, and showed everyone (parents, brothers, teacher, friends) the finished masterpiece. Everyone exclaimed on the humans' absurd legs which made me cry. I pointed to my own legs and came to the realization that not all humans have legs like mine.
That's the first time I realized not to draw the world as I saw it, but rather, to lie...
03.19.07
11:57
(1964)
Art was a rare subject in grade school. Smaller, Catholic schools didn't always have this scheduled in the weekly plan. And supplies and paper? We had the cheapest manilla colored construction paper that seemed to begin its recycling cycle in midproject. To make a mark on that crude facsimile of parchment: crayons brought from home, and because of limited desk space it was usually the 16 color box. Every now and then someone would come with that big 64 box snuck away in their plaid school bag. For some one day a year feast we got to use tempera paints to be splattered on some special bulletin board paper. It was basic stuff in the basic grades. Despite and because of all this I loved art and I loved the process, but when there wasn't art, there was penmanship practice. Penmanship, art or design? For a comparison, think back to the Olympic ice skating. Peggy Fleming. Ice skating, art or sport discipline? I suppose penmanship is like compulsory line figures they had to skate.
Fast forward
(2003)
My first college level drawing class. I had taken design 101 in 1978, and repeated it in 2003. But that was design, and now drawing class was art. Halfway art, anyway. I was taught more to see than to draw. And that was the clue. We had a good teacher, very kind teacher, but he had toughened up in his demands. Lots of time consuming compulsory homework. One weekly assignment was to take four letters and reaarange them in at least six frames to form a picture. It was glorius spreading the wings of a w, or flattening an o, or distrorting a k to draw something else. Drawing our faces in three shades was part of another week's work. Lots of kids (ages 20-40) went home to their computers, pulled the letters around in Illustrator, and used a filter in Photoshop to do their faces. Trace on paper. The computer is a good light screen, isn't it. HOW COULD THEY? How could they miss the chance for this learning process. The next week in class we were given time to work on basic letter drawing. We not only had to draw the letters, we had to draw the grid. I remember getting the drawing board and going out of the classroom and wanting to be alone in my world doing this. Methodical drawing like this is time for quiet contemplation of the process. One person came by and said, "What's with you? Are you too good to sit with the rest of us in the classroom?"
Gads, no I wasn't. I enjoyed thee people and conversing with them.
But maybe, just may be I needed less social time to get my work done, and more me time than the rest of you, cause I don't understand the quick and easy way out.
03.19.07
12:21
As for me, my artistic career started at an early age too. I loved watching war movies with airplanes, so I drew notebooks full of little airplanes in convoluted dogfights. The pages were full of little dotted lines from the tracer bullets, terminating in carefully rendered explosions in red pencil. My parents sent me to a child psychologist.
03.19.07
01:36
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03.19.07
04:31
Delightful, familiar. Many thanks.
03.19.07
04:43
03.19.07
07:46
Sadly I never gave up the copying/tracing style and thus I, opposite to Michael's experiences always ended with "Nah, I traced it."
And THAT doesn't help ya in social circles! :)
03.19.07
08:49
I was always so jealous/spiteful of my art-nemesis: the guy who drew all of the cartoon people. I could never understand the appeal of this whole genre, but that was clearly where it was at in terms of "artist" action. He stole all of my "most-likely-to..." designations, "best-of-show" awards, and overall public adulation with his goofy, outlandish comics while I plaintively rotated my compass toward scads of new automotive dream machines.
For all of this, my highest compliment/most obnoxious feedback when someone did notice my handiwork was "Wow, what kind of car is that?" To this, I would always fumble over the same awkward reply: "It's my own kind of car... I made it up," which almost always garnered the same annoyed rebuttal: "So, it's not real?"
03.19.07
10:37
Like most of us, I was the artsy kid. Encouraged by parents who went to college (continually), I remember my dad (therefore I) took Western Civ in the 2nd grade (me). To trace the regimes as they spread and retracted around Europe, he used purchased outlines of the continents and colored in and shaded in the maps and the changes of different eraswith Prismacolor pencils. To me, those pencils were the most alluring thing in our house. I have buckets of Prismacolors around my house, including nubs that go back to 2nd grade.
In the fourth grade "Our Weekly Reader" had an article about the opening of Disneyland and suggested that students design their idea of a theme park. I scornfully observed those around me drawing boxes on lined paper with crayons. I began cutting out paper, coloring and assembling boxes, with doors. The teacher was so thrilled that she let me build an entire amusement park in the back of the room for (it seemed like) a week.
I couldn't believe that I got away with drawing illustration booklets in high school instead of writing book reports. Though, once a coach called me over in the hall and said "How do you spell Tigers?" Like any little pepster I spelled it out in a cheer. Then he pointed to a sign with a cheerleader drawn on it that was quite the self portrait. It said "Go Tigrs!" There is no spell check for hand lettering. (Sadly, it had been up the entire year without anyone else noticing.)
After years in design, I went back to that 4th grade teacher, thinking she had seen some special spark of brilliance, and thanked her for encouraging my art.
She said "Honey, I had to do something to keep you quiet."
03.20.07
01:39
So, when I was around the age of 14, my art teacher would tell me I couldn't draw at all. And I knew he was right. Some of the kids in my class could draw crazy good and I kept on trying to draw something that actually looked like the thing it was supposed to look like. Not a big success.
I focused myself on writing for all kinds of magazines and making music. After that I went to university to study writing. But I always wanted to go to art school. So after graduating, I went to art school to study graphic and typographic design.
There I learned I might not be very skilled when it comes to realistic drawings, but I sure as hell can draw. It's like with music. I, as a drummer, can go to a concert of a super skilled jazz drummer and think:"wow, I wish I'd have the same technical abilities as him." but at the same time the music doesn't touch me. It's not music anymore, but merely technique. I admire that and have respect for it, but I don't like listening to it when I want to hear real music. Then I'd much rather listen to a three-chord punkrock band who have so much energy and creativity and know how to write a good song.
I guess in drawing I admire and have respect for the technical skilled artists, but much rather look at the drawings of CoBrA artists like Lucebert since those are the ones that really touch me.
03.20.07
06:20
Great post!
03.20.07
09:32
03.20.07
10:31
Thank you for the post.
PS. That was a kickin' drawing for a sixth grader.
03.20.07
10:52
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03.20.07
11:38
The article and one of the replies above reminded me of drawing with my Grandmother when I was a kid:
She looked after me during lunches and after school when I was in grades 3 and 4. She didn't tolerate noise well and she didn't like to keep toys around, because she didn't want to have to pick them up. Her method was to stick a piece of paper and a pencil in front of me. I drew boyishly gruesome combat scenes, inspired by Sergent Rock comic books and war movies, complete with explosions, dotted lines of machine gun fire, aerial dog fights with more dotted lines of machine gun fire, even space ships bristled with machine guns. When I was finished, I'd show her my work and invariably, she'd look and say, "there is still more room on that page" - So I'd dutifully squeeze another bomber or two into the sky, or menace the poor soldiers with more explosions, because if I didn't I didn't get another page. Her Baroque tastes in children's art, inspired by the Great Depression and her impatience with small children, gave her a very clear and unambiguous set of criteria for what constituted being "good at art". (White space = bad art)
03.20.07
01:13
I`ll never forget that..and I hated school and teachers ever since.
03.20.07
02:56
I had one child attend two different schools in second grade. In the first school the art teacher was glorified by zhe community. zhen we moved to the wrong side of zhe tracks. It was really not the tracks. It was the wrong side of zhe Bach. My sohn did such wonderful work. I zhink it was the wunderbahr teacher.
She spoke to the kids in pictographs. Good ol' (icon symbol of heart/ican symbol of house).
03.20.07
03:11
03.20.07
04:01
I really enjoyed this piece, Thanks for posting it.
03.20.07
04:11
03.20.07
05:38
Furthermore: interesting topic with some interesting comments.
I had this girl in my class at art school and she could draw amazingly good. Realistic drawing that is. She could draw an exact copy of a person's face and it would look like a photograph. I admired her skills, but then again: why look at a drawing that looks like a picture and not just at a picture?
In first year she received much praise because of her skills, but in second year the teachers thought her work became boring and she wasn't trying to experiment and reinvent herself. In third year she ditched doing realistic drawings and instead, after some experimenting, drew the greatest stuff without it really looking like something.
Now THAT's drawing, I think. Trying to reinvent yourself, finding out where you strengths and weaknesses lie and trying to develop a personal style. Ofcourse with the concept being the most important.
03.21.07
04:48
I hate Michael Bierut. I really do.
03.21.07
09:27
In contrast, I was never shy as a kid. I used to sing the latest pop song infront of my aunts and uncles. My parents were so proud that I had little stage fright.
I was never good at art either. I used to bring home my art homework from elementary/pre-elementary classes and ask my mom for help. I remember specifically, for some class I needed to make a mask out of a paper plate and I couldn't even do that. Most recently, I had to make a model of two planes disecting in grade 12, and I asked my cousin's help.
And now, I am a third year design student who struggles with image making, and resorts to photography for "creative" projects. No wonder, I focus all my energy at information design and data visualizations. In most cases, I am just "drawing" abstract things like numerical data. Nothing realistic. I still cant draw, and I still envy my friends who are so good at it (just like in elementary school).
No wonder my parents were shocked to see me not going for Computer Science (I had a thing for computers since Grade 4, I still do) and opting for Design for my University education. My mom, when she heard of my decision to go into design, said something along the lines of "but, you used to hate drawing things by hand"... she is so right. I still hate drawing things, but I love it when one of my projects get printed. I like making things, but not drawing them. I love to program, but hate to sketch out ideas. I have my ideas in my head, I just dont like when I try to draw them out in my sketch book, becasue they look so bad compared to all of my other peers.
I love design, esp analytical design. But, I definitely dont have a nice story to tell (nor the storytelling ability) like Michael.
03.21.07
04:57
FFL: Freehand For Life!
03.21.07
06:24
I used to draw the members of Kiss on A2 sheets of card, paste on glue and glitter, and sell them as posters to my friends.
03.21.07
08:26
b
03.21.07
11:34
I recently had to take a break from design and to occupy my time helped teach art classes to Grade 1 boys. Not knowing what to expect and being totally out of touch with a 6 year olds life I was amazed at their lack of skill to draw 'realistic' pictures. I was equally surprised that their teacher would not 'correct' or show them 'how' to draw a whale or a sailing boat etc.
As a co-incidence I picked up Johannes Itten's book Design and Form in which he shares the fundamental principles he taught all his pupils. One idea particularly lept out. In brief it was: encourage and praise your students as this will nurture creativity.
It was delightful to see how individual each of these little 6 year old drawings were when they were not prescribed a formulae for a successful result. How praise encouraged them to experiment and continue putting paint to paper.
03.22.07
02:38
VITAMIN D FOR DRAWING DRAWINGS FROM LIFE (No.6)
"GOOD" DRAUGHTSMANSHIP OR REAL DRAWING (No.1)
Both essays are available on the website of artspace gallery london (http://artspacegallery.co.uk/frameSetASG.htm)
I see the same obstacles for good drawing and painting. The influence of the computer is detrimental to the development of creativity and own "handwrite".
03.22.07
03:08
I have always liked to draw, although since I have graduated from college and have a real job, I dont think I have sat down to draw just for the hell of it in years.
I do remember winning a "DARE" poster contest once when I was in maybe 3rd grade, and I still have a folder of drawings I made of the ninja turtles, darkwing duck and numerous other cartoon characters I tried to draw as close to the real thing as possible.
My brother happens to also be very artistic (maybe because we are both Aquarians?), but in a totally different way than me. I can draw something if I look at it - usually pretty close to life. He can look at something and then draw it a week later... always made me jealous.
I have also also been very "crafty" and enterprising with my creations. I sold keychains made of leather and conchos, pot holders weaved on looms (anyone remember those plastic kits with the stretchy bands?), hand painted glasses, dreamcatchers, jewelry, etc.
I guess it was fate that I ended up being a graphic designer...
03.22.07
02:20
I am really surprised to hear you say this. As Daniel Green mentioned, above, the act of drawing helps to see and understand: both in the doing and in the telling. Not only did your teachers appreciate the effort, I'm sure they were drawn into the writing by your drawing, and either consciously or unconsciously realized that you had made some kind of connection with the work you were discussingpossibly even researched! And isn't this, after all, what designers do (whether they can draw or not)?
03.23.07
11:15
03.25.07
07:12
Every since I was young I was always really bad at drawing and stuff... and even still today I find it pretty hard to draw. Still I think it's really important and I hope to be good at drawing one day.. but yeah.
anyway.. I found this article really interesting. The fact that he grew up and his life was fully surrounded by art.. amazing..
it would've been really cool to grow up with this guy and see him going through this!! haha.. cool.
03.26.07
11:04
The interesting thing for me about being 'good at art' in my early schooling was the way it cut across socio-economic clicks. Normally the poor kids hung together, as did the townies, the culchies (out-of-town country boys), the 'hurlers' (irish GAA equiv of jocks) and the rich kids.
But the 'good at art' mob knew, admired (and envied) each other's work. It made me some lasting friendships and some transient ones, long lost now. I sometimes wonder what happened to those great 'drawers' who didn't come from very comfortable backgrounds, where their talent wasn't seen as valuable as a sporting skill, for instance, might have been.
BTW One of my career breakthroughs, around age 10, was winning an anti-smoking poster competition in my class, comprising of a neat rendering of a filthy, butt-filled ashtray with the unwittingly memorable line "don't be a drag - stay off the fag!' I'd say I won by giving the teacher (and probably the staffroom) a good laugh.
03.27.07
11:41
03.27.07
12:30
My 13 year old daughter has been saying she "wants to be a graphic designer" for a year or so, because "I want to design cool stuff like CD covers."
She loves painting, drawing and various crafts and has a feel for it for sure, but like many kids I suspect, says "I can't draw.".
She also spends HOURS on the Virtual Horse Ranch site where she posts images she has made using photoshop.
Well yesterday she informs me"I don't want to be a graphic designer anymore", because "My art teacher said you can't be a designer unless you know how to draw." I think the teacher could maybe have phrased it better but I understand her point. I will, of course, continue to encourage my daughter, both in digital media AND hand methods.
Michael, didn't know where you were from...I'm from Willoughby Hills...
03.28.07
01:34
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04.04.07
10:44
My 8 year old son is not really an introvert but can surely be one at times. He feels he is not as fast as the other kids when it comes to running around or playing some game that requires running. But there is something he does which is not a very common thing amongst his peers. He can play some really soothing music on the keyboard without any training at all. I showed him your post and even he really liked it.
Art(incl music) can be a very physical thing too and in certain cases can even demand more physical energy than throwing a ball with authority or running a bit faster than the rest. Maybe children who do not really show much proficiency in a physically demanding activity at a younger age are probably in a subconscious way conserving the energy for bigger pursuits. And maybe this conserved energy releases itself in great artistic endeavors which pleases the masses. This energy is not available to all and people feel that u have to be born with it!
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