{"id":534,"date":"2024-04-09T15:00:00","date_gmt":"2024-04-09T15:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/atomic-hair.net\/?p=534"},"modified":"2024-05-09T15:24:36","modified_gmt":"2024-05-09T15:24:36","slug":"designers-who-have-changed-how-i-think-about-design","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/atomic-hair.net\/index.php\/2024\/04\/09\/designers-who-have-changed-how-i-think-about-design\/","title":{"rendered":"Designers Who Have Changed How I Think About Design"},"content":{"rendered":"
A month ago, March 8th was International Women\u2018s Day<\/a>. I read about its history again, its beginnings, and its growth into a global commemoration. I have distinctive memories of the late 1960s and early 1970s, of TV ads, shows, and movies in which women portrayed womanhood as it played out in society, especially regarding professions: nurses, teachers, secretaries, and assistants.<\/p>\n In my last post, I talked about typography as poetry,<\/a> describing my brief exposure to commercial art through my neighbor. At the time, I mentioned my interest to some of my older friends. They discouraged me from pursuing commercial art because \u201cit was a male-dominated field.\u201d Today, like other professions, graphic design\u2014formerly known as commercial art\u2014is mainly composed of women. Data USA<\/a> shows that 53.7% of American graphic designers are women.<\/p>\n On that note, I am sharing a small selection of the female designers I have admired. When I started in design, I did not know much. Thus, I studied others\u2019 graphic design work and sometimes other design areas like architecture.<\/p>\n One of the first female designers who caught my attention was Rosemarie Tissi<\/a>. I specifically remember her work for \u201eOffset\u201c for the printing company A. Sch\u00f6b, in 1982 (back of a folder\u2014second image down)<\/a>.<\/p>\n I looked at the typography of this image for hours. I was fascinated with how Tissi used these big, chunky letters to create the offset printer and her use of color and negative space. In a word, I was mesmerized by how the O captures the eye and moves it from the F to the E by gradually changing the color tone and playing with size. She uses the strong horizontal the T provides to arrange the letters, making the eye move from O to T seamlessly. One still reads the word offset; nothing more is needed to understand it. Tissi takes advantage of the natural eye movement from left to right to connect the word and image in our mind organically. I was and still am fascinated.<\/p>\n The second female designer whose work stopped me when I saw it was April Greiman\u2019s<\/a>. I had the opportunity to see her talk in Carbondale, IL, in 2005. I have never forgotten that talk. There was a desire to search in Greiman\u2019s narrative as she told the story of her career, which resonated with me profoundly. I wished I had talked to her afterward. Her work would leave me speechless. The elements dance in the space in almost every design she creates. I had not seen work like that when I started to study design. I remember learning the grid and alignments, but Greiman\u2019s work turned on a lightbulb. The page becomes a stage for the performers in her work. Her ideas about how design works on a printed page influenced me the most in my perception of space, page, and type.<\/p>\n Jennifer Sterling<\/a> has influenced the way I see and perceive typography. The typography in her work is like something that floats on the page, like a lightweight feather that moves and turns. Her work is experimental and pushes the limits of the page and even motion. We expect to see the letters moving in a certain way, but in her work, the typography can and will take unexpected turns. Sometimes, Sterling incorporates shapes and elements to enhance ideas and the typographic movement.<\/p>\n Architect Zaya Hadid\u2019s<\/a> work makes me look twice. She passed in 2016, and it is a loss. You should visit Hadid\u2019s website to explore her designs. This quote from her site summarizes how I feel about her work and why I admire it:<\/p>\n \u2026the beauty and virtuosity within her work is married to meaning. Her architecture is inventive, original and civic, offering generous public spaces that are clearly organized and intuitive to navigate<\/em><\/p>\n Zaha Hadid<\/cite><\/p><\/blockquote>\n Below is one of Hadid\u2019s designs: the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum<\/a> at Michigan State University. The building seems to want to levitate or fly away. It is simply impressive.<\/p>\n\n