Context of Practice 2 - Study Task 1

"Century of the Self" - Psychoanalysis


List the ten most important points raised in Adam Curtis’s documentary ‘Century of the Self’

Relate these points to a critical analysis of one image from the mass media which, in particular, focuses on the nature of consumerism, desire and the unconscious.


Ten most important points

- Edward Bernays, Sigmund Freud's nephew, was the first to apply Freud's findings about human ideas and the mind to controlling the masses
- Bernays linked products with subconscious desires
- Bernays introduced the idea of promoting a lifestyle, rather than simply a product
- Bernays suggested that if you could use propaganda for war, then you could also use it for peace, which coined the idea of Public Relations.
- He created the techniques of mass consumer persuasion we use now.
- He was the first person to tell car companies they could sell cars as symbols of male sexuality and also  started the practice of product placements in movies. 
- Bernays staged a dramatic experiment by putting on an event in a New York Mayday parade to break the taboos of women smoking cigarettes. Cigarettes were seen as a symbol of male sexual power, so Bernays attempted to find a way to connect cigarettes with challenging male power.
- The single symbolic act of the experiment with women smoking cigarettes made the practice more socially acceptable and gave women more power and independence. 
- Products changed from something that was needed and instead, they could become powerful emotional symbols of how you wanted to be seen by others. 
- Products became linked with desirable famous people.
- The citizens became the consumers.
- Bernays attached goods to peoples innate human desires.
- Bernays and Freud's theories showed that humans cannot make completely irrational decisions. 

Critical analysis of an image from mass media

The 'Cult Shaker' - 'Party Now Apologise Later' campaign from Denmark 




These two images from the Cult Shaker campaign use sex and suggestive imagery as the selling point for the product, where they encompass desire and unconscious to appeal within the consumer market. Both images from the campaign contain evocative imagery which draws the viewers attention with the pure shock value that the advertising has the audacity to use images as provocative as these. In terms of being suggestive, the advertisements are promoting a brand of cheap alcohol, and along with the slogan 'Party Now Apologise Later', the campaign seems to be promoting the partying and sex lifestyle. The consumer buys into the idea that if they were to drink the product, they would be incorporated into this lifestyle too. Vivid and expressive graphics such as these play on the consumers want for this explicit and daredevil kind of behaviour, as the adverts suggest that the product can provide the consumer with a sense of courage and appeal, yet in their simplest forms, they are merely couples posed in different positions, dressed in the clothes one would wear on a night out. They are a symbolic representation of a basic human desire, and through the situations in which the models are placed, the positions of their bodies and the text added to the images, there is an almost unconscious connotation to the way that they are verging on being powerful emotional symbols of what people want to be like. 

What is also interesting about these images is that the focus is not entirely on the woman in the image, but that the man also plays a role in the sexual connotations. This targets the adverts at both a male and female audience as although a bold statement of the woman being the focus may attract a woman's attention through the idea of power, it also neutralises the power struggle by making them both a focal point of the different images. In terms of the theory of Bernays, this style of imagery attaches a product with innate human desires, and although the subject of sex has been used repeatedly in the advertising for alcohol, these images hold possibly a stronger sense of 'breaking the taboos' of present day society as unlike in other advertisements, the models are fully dressed rather than revealing large amounts of skin. It could be said that this then taps further into the sense of subconscious, innate desires, and the way that these adverts have taken the approach of depicting the lifestyle rather than simply semi-naked models means that the audience they are aiming them at is also the audience that will have more of a subconscious link to the message of the images. 

Sunday, 21 October 2012 by Andrea Hannah Cooper
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OUGD401 - End of Module Self-Evaluation

End of Module Self-Evaluation




What skills have you developed through this module and how effectively do you think you have applied them?

My contextual knowledge of graphic design, both past and present, has grown considerably throughout this module, along with my general knowledge of art practices and theories. I have developed the skills of critiquing and analysing work and being able to coherently comment on art works with a fairly strong vocabulary. I feel as if I have developed the skill of interpreting theories, such as in my essay, and applying them to different concepts and images. 
The publication aspect of the module has helped me with technical skills, such as working with InDesign and putting together a publication. I read heavily into the subject and attempted to condense the information content I was putting into the book to fit the concept of the publication which was to present semiotic theory to design students in a way that was easy to understand and follow. I think I successfully managed to break down the topics and give a brief, basic overview of the subject, and I feel as though I managed to turn theory into practice in the way that my publication still looks like a textbook as it should do, but where the layouts and colours have added more of an interesting, visually appealing side to it. 

What approaches to/methods of design production have you developed and how have they informed your design development process?

The approaches to and methods of design production I have developed throughout this module have come in the publication part. I have learnt how to take content and develop it into a publication which fitted my original concept. Before the publication brief I had very little knowledge of how to set out a book properly in InDesign, and although we had been taught how to use grids for laying elements of an editorial design out earlier in the course, this has been my opportunity to take what I had learnt and put it into practice. I can definitely see an improvement in my skills with layouts and using type and colour from the beginning of the course because of the publication brief. 

What strengths can you identify in your work and how have/will you capitalise on these?


I think one of my strengths in this module has been with theory and how it relates to practice. I was pleased with the essay feedback I received as it had been my chance to use a subject I studied in school, Social and Cultural Anthropology, and apply it to art practices. Theories are a particular interest of mine and I enjoy reading further into them than just what we are given and taught in lectures and seminars, so in the future, I want to be able to take theories and express them through graphic design, such as I did for my publication, but also to apply them to graphic design. I intend to read further into semiotics and bring the theory side of the practice into my work. I also feel that one of my strengths is essay writing and this module has been the chance to show that. I enjoyed writing the essay and the topic I chose and this is an area which I want to look in to again. Also, the essay writing element is a step of preparation towards writing my dissertation in third year so the feedback I received for my essay has given me more confidence towards the essay/dissertation writing elements of second and third year. 

What weaknesses can you identify in your work and how will you address these in the future?


Although I feel I am generally quite competent with understanding and applying theories, one thing I have struggled slightly with in this module is classifying designers and their work under different categories, such as modernist or post-modernist. I enjoyed the 45 Designers task, yet did find it surprisingly difficult in certain areas, so in future, I would use my lecture notes as more of a resource for further research and start my own investigations into each subject.
I also felt that one of my weaknesses was thoroughly putting the theory into practice. Knowing what I know now from completing the publication, I would have done something which would have allowed me to express theory through practice more if I could go back to the beginning of the brief again. I could have created a publication about modernism in a modernist style to put more emphasis on the putting theory into practice element of the brief. 

Identify 5 things that you will do differently next time and what do you expect to gain from doing these?

- Use lecture notes as a starting point for more thorough self initiated research to gain a stronger understanding of each topic.


- Keep a more comprehensive list of designers/artists for reference back to as this will aid my contextual research in the future in all areas of the course.


- Read more into the subject of essays to give myself a wider range of content to use to further my understanding and to make my essays more comprehensive. 


- Research further into different designers when I come across them to gain a wider knowledge of the graphic design scene at present. 


- Plan out publications more thoroughly before digitalising them to avoid printing/binding problems.


5= excellent, 4= very good, 3= good, 
2= average, 1= poor
1
2
3
4
5
Attendance



x

Punctuality



x

Motivation



x

Commitment



x

Quantity of work produced


x


Quality of work produced


x


Contribution to the group



 x

Tuesday, 22 May 2012 by Andrea Hannah Cooper
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Publication - Finished Printed Book

Printed and bound book


- front and back cover:




- binding:


 - content:








Monday, 21 May 2012 by Andrea Hannah Cooper
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Publication - Finished Book

Digital version of finished publication

by Andrea Hannah Cooper
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First Year Essay - Finished Essay

Finished Essay
- changes from original essay are in red (quotation marks plus one reference on a quotation)

by Andrea Hannah Cooper
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First Year Essay - Feedback Tutorial

Feedback from first draft & changes to be made


Feedback form from Richard:





I'm really happy with the feedback I got as I wasn't expecting to have done so well, and Richard said there wasn't much to change within my essay for the final hand in. I enjoyed researching and writing it because it is a topic I am genuinely interested in and in which I can use the knowledge I have of social theories from when I studied Anthropology at school. 


Changes to be made:
- a few small stylistic changes concerning quotation marks
- referencing a quotation in the 2nd body paragraph as I was unsure where the quote was from and referenced it as 'Anon' as the website I found it on had no author
- could rewrite sections to make it more coherent, yet it works as it is so it would just be touching up and refining sentences
- could expand the bibliography by researching more into the subject and rewriting sections in more detail, but the problem with this is the word count constraint 

Sunday, 20 May 2012 by Andrea Hannah Cooper
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45 Designers Task - History of Type

5 Graphic Designers Relating to the History of Type


Adrian Frutiger
- Switzerland - 1928 to present
- Typeface designer who influenced the direction which the modern digital typeface and typography scene took in the second half of the 20th century. Best known for creating the Univers and Frutiger typefaces.


- "I first experienced the power of type to make the whole intellectual world readable with the same letters in the days of metal. This awakened in me the urge to develop the best possible legibility. The time soon came when texts were no longer set in metal types but by means of a beam of light. The task of adapting the typefaces of the old masters from relief type to flat film was my best school. When we came to the “Grotesk” style of sanserif, however, I had my own ideas which led to the Univers® family. Technological progress was rapid. Electronic transfer of images brought the stepping, followed by my feelings for form. But today, with curve programs and laser exposure, it seems to me that the way through the desert has been completed.
From all these experiences the most important thing I have learned is that legibility and beauty stand close together and that type design, in its restraint, should be only felt but not perceived by the reader. In the course of my professional life I have aquired knowledge and manual skill. To pass on what I had learned and achieved to the next generation became a necessity."

http://www.linotype.com/720/adrianfrutiger.html



http://theredlist.fr/wiki-2-343-917-998-view-type-profile-frutiger-adrian.html


- "Adrian Frutiger (b. 1928) is one of the most prominent typographers of the twentieth century and the designer of one of the most notable typeface families ever to be created—the sans serif Univers. As a young boy, he experimented with invented scripts and stylized handwriting as a negative response to the formal, cursive penmanship being enforced at the Swiss school he was attending. At the age of sixteen, he began a apprenticeship as a compositor with an Interlaken printer. During this apprenticeship, he also learned woodcutting, engraving, and calligraphy."


http://www.rockpaperink.com/content/article.php?id=59


Claude Garamond
- French - circa 1490 - 1561
- One of the leading type designers of his time, is credited with the introduction of the apostrophe, the accent and the cedilla into the French language. Many contemporary typefaces, such as Garamond, Granjon and Sabon were based upon his work and influences. 
- http://garamond.org/
- http://www.pointlessart.com/education/loyalist/typetalk/garamond/biography.html

- "Claude Garamond – born c. 1480 in Paris, France, died 1561 in Paris, France – type founder, publisher, punch cutter, type designer. 1510: trains as a punch cutter with Simon de Colines in Paris. 1520: trains with Geoffroy Tory. 1530: Garamond’s first type is used in an edition of the book "Paraphrasis in Elegantiarum Libros Laurentii Vallae" by Erasmus. It is based on Aldus Manutius’ type De Aetna, cut in 1455. 1540: King Francis I commissions Garamond to cut a Greek type. Garamond’s ensuing Grec du Roi is used by Robert Estienne in three sizes exclusively for the printing of Greek books. From 1545 onwards: Garamond also works as a publisher, first with Pierre Gaultier and later with Jean Barbe. The first book he published is "Pia et Religiosa Meditatio" by David Chambellan. The books are set using typefaces designed by Garamond. After Garamond’s death, Christoph Plantin from Antwerp, the Le Bé type foundry and the Frankfurt foundry Egenolff-Bermer acquire a large proportion of Garamond’s original punches and matrices. The typefaces Garamond produced between 1530 and 1545 are considered the typographical highlight of the 16th century. His fonts have been widely copied and are still produced and in use today."
http://www.linotype.com/414/claudegaramond.html



http://garamond.org/




Erik Spiekermann
- German - 1947 to present
- Graphic designer credited with designing many popular typefaces, such as:
Berliner Grotesk (original is from 1913, digitization is from 1979)
Lo-Type (original is from 1911/14, digitization is from 1980)
ITC Officina Sans (1990)
ITC Officina Serif (1990)
FF Meta (1991–1998)
FF Govan (2001)
FF Info (2000)
FF Unit (2003)
FF Meta Serif (with Christian Schwartz and Kris Sowersby, 2007)
- http://edenspiekermann.com/
- http://spiekermann.com/


- "Erik Spiekermann, born 1947, studied History of Art and English in Berlin. He is an information architect, type designer, and author of books and articles on type and typography. He was founder (1979) of MetaDesign, Germany's largest design firm. Projects included corporate design programmes for Audi, Skoda, Volkswagen, Lexus, Heidelberg Printing and wayfinding projects like Berlin Transit, Düsseldorf Airport and many others.
In 1988 he started FontShop, a company for production and distribution of electronic fonts. Erik is board member of ATypI and the German Design Council and Past President of the istd, International Society of Typographic Designers, as well as the iiid. In 2001 he left MetaDesign and is now managing partner and creative director of Edenspiekermann with offices in Amsterdam, Berlin, London and San Francisco.
He redesigned The Economist magazine in London for its relaunch in 2001. His book for Adobe Press, "Stop Stealing Sheep" is in its second edition as well as published in German and in Russian. His corporate font family for Nokia was released in 2002. In 2003 he received the Gerrit Noordzij Award from the Royal Academy in Den Haag. His type system DB Type for Deutsche Bahn was awarded the Federal German Design Prize in Gold for 2006. In May 2007 he was the first designer to be elected into the Hall of Fame by the European Design Awards for Communication Design.
Erik is Honorary Professor at the University of the Arts in Bremen and in 2006 received an honorary doctorship from Pasadena Art Center. He was made an Honorary Royal Designer for Industry by the RSA in Britain in 2007 and Ambassador for the European Year of Creativity and Innovation by the European Union for 2009."

http://www.identifont.com/show?12X





http://theredlist.fr/wiki-2-343-917-998-view-type-profile-spiekermann-erik-1.html#photo




Gustav Jaeger
- German - 1925 -
http://www.identifont.com/show?13W


- http://www.identifont.com/show?13W
- "Gustav Jaeger (born 1925, died in July 2010), son of a printer, studied at the Hochschule für Gestaltung in Offenbach am Main. An enthusiast for type and typography from an early age, he started his career at the Bauer typefoundry, where he developed type specimens promoting the work ofKonrad Bauer and Walter Baum. Encouraged by the former, he designed contemporary 1970s display types for H. Berthold AG. He progressed to text types, the first of which, Seneca® BQ, was released by Berthold in 1977. Many others followed, highlighting Jäger’s ability to experiment successfully with letter forms for text use, and contributing significantly to the Berthold library. Jäger’s typeface Catull™ is currently being used in the logotype for the search engine Google.
In 1980, Gustav Jäger designed Becket™ for Linotype. Becket embodies a retro-medieval aesthetic. Base letterforms that might have been at home with a writer of Irish uncials have been streamlined according to late 20th century tastes to create a timeless effect. Becket is the perfect font to set headlines and logos for clients in the music industry."
http://www.linotype.com/2687/gustavjaeger.html





Stanley Morison 
- English - 1889 - 1967
- Typographer, designer and historian of printing. He was a founding member of the Fleuron society (fleuron = typographic ornament) in 1922 and while in the role of typographical consultant to the Times newspaper, he designed the typeface and font family Times New Roman. 
- http://www.pointlessart.com/education/loyalist/typetalk/timesnewroman/main.html


- "It is almost impossible to go through daily life without seeing testimony to the work of Stanley Morison, however it is so familiar to us that it mostly goes unnoticed. The Times New Roman font is around us everywhere, from newspapers to books, advertising to company reports. It appears as the font of choice in virtually every word processing program that we open up, yet what is known of it’s designer?"
http://www.rodwell.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/morison.htm



http://theredlist.fr/wiki-2-343-917-998-view-type-profile-morison-stanley.html#photo



Friday, 18 May 2012 by Andrea Hannah Cooper
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