Observed
Black designers, curators, and more.
How do you stop deep-sea trawlers from harming ecosystems?
Commission 10-ton marble sculptures and place them on the ocean floor, of course.
For ten years, Matt Needle has
reimagined every best picture award nominee by redesigning their posters.
Coca-Cola...
and art?
Don Norman‘s new book—
Design for a Better World: Meaningful, Sustainable, Humanity Centered—is out March 21, from MIT Press. (Watch him discussing
twenty-first century design on Youtube!)
Can design be a way to say “
be careful”?
While Vermeer’s ‘Girl with a Pearl Earring’ is on loan, the Mauritshuis showcases
170 imaginative renditions in its place.
David Lance Goines, who “adamantly rejected the title of artist” has died. The iconic poster designer was 77.
Now you can get a
Masters degree in graphic design—online!
How much do you know about “Swissness” legislation?
The case of the Toblerone rebrand!
Oh, Brother (ly love)! Philadelphia needs a new ...
flag?
Parisian opera house that inspired ‘Phantom of the Opera’
becomes an airbnb.
A new episode of
Print Is Dead. (Long Live Print!) is out for your weekend listening pleasure. On this episode George Gendron visits with the creators of the 1980s-90s interior design juggernaut —
Met Home — editor Dorothy Kalins and designer Don Morris. [BV]
Celebrate the launch of Dean of Design at OCAD Dori Tunstall‘s new book,
Decolonizing Design, out now from MIT Press with a launch party and conversation between Dori and Holly Harriel, Director of the MIT CoLab. [BV]
On design—
and dogma. [JH]
When
beauty meets grief. [JH]
Design and disability: the urban way. [JH]
History—and controversy—at Cooper Union. [JH]
Brian Collins on
design clichés. [JH]
The Tate Modern’s “public” viewing area allows museum visitors to
look straight into the homes of the residents of a nearby building: interested readers can nerd out on the forty-seven page ruling that explains why a design decision can fall prey to the laws of public nuisance. [JH]
Lou Dorfsman and Al D’Amato’s powerful advertisement from 1962:
an appraisal. (Via Natalia Pangaro.) [JH]
Remembering
Carin Goldberg. [JH]
Coming soon to The Design Museum in London,
an exhibition on design and history—organized by the Chinese dissident artist Ai Weiwei. [JH]
Will the future of design be collaborative? Figma’s
Yuhki Yamashita thinks so. [JH]
Designers and layoffs. [JH]
Proving that America really is in crisis,
the US State Department changes its official font to Calibri. Discuss! [JH]
The artist whose book covers
distilled the nineteen-eighties. (via Mike Errico) [JH]
Ruth Adler Schnee, one of the more important textile designers of midcentury modernism, dies at 99. [JH]
In Denmark, thinking—and designing—
out of the (grey) box. [JH]
Jerald Cooper’s aim is to make architecture and design more accessible by using layman’s language to break down barriers typically set up by white academics with advanced degrees. [JH]
Corn husks were just the start:
a Mexican designer in London writes his own rules. [JH]
Wieden+Kennedy London launches standalone branding and design studio—called—
NOT Wieden+Kennedy. (Play their logo generator yourself,
here.) [JH]
Inclusive design, at Microsoft. [JH]
Best design stories of 2022, from
The Guardian. [JH]
Penmanship, cursive, handwriting—what’s the point? [JH]
Set on half an acre in the lovely hamlet of High Falls, New York,
the studio that once served Marc Chagall is for sale. [JH]