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"What IS graphic design?"
"
Graphic design is the most ubiquitous of all the arts. It responds
to needs at once personal and public, embraces concerns both economic
and ergonomic, and is informed by many disciplines including art
and architecture, philosophy and ethics, literature and language,
science and politics and performance.
Graphic design is everywhere,
touching everything we do, everything we see, everything we buy:
we see it on billboards and in Bibles,
on taxi receipts and on web sites, on birth certificates and on
gift certificates, on the folded circulars inside jars of aspirin
and
on the thick pages of children's chubby board books.
Graphic design
is the boldly directional arrows on street signs and the blurred,
frenetic typography on the title sequence to E.R.
It
is the bright green logo for the New York Jets and the monochromatic
front page of the Wall Street Journal. It is hang-tags in clothing
stores, postage stamps and food packaging, fascist propaganda
posters and brainless junk mail.
Graphic design is complex combinations of
words and pictures, numbers and charts, photographs and illustrations
that, in order to succeed,
demand the clear thinking of a particularly thoughtful individual
who can orchestrate these elements so they all add up to something
distinctive, or useful, or playful, or surprising, or subversive,
or somehow memorable.
Graphic design is a popular art and a practical
art, an applied art and an ancient art. Simply put, it is the art
of visualizing
ideas." - Jessica Helfand |
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