Enter the Vortex

BA (Hons) Digital Graphic Design at St Helens College, Merseyside

User login

Search

Recent Features

BRITS GO CULT TOY CRAZY!

Momijii.jpg

  ‘British people are officially in love with cult toys – the must-have modern collectable’ Selfridges 

BRITS GO CULT TOY CRAZY!

Recent Interviews

PYKY

PYKY

Stevo is a Dublin born Animator & Illustrator. He moved to London in the mid 90’s to pursue a career in traditional animation. It was here; through work at a new media company he was introduced to Flash animation. Having learnt about new media, web design and authoring, Stevo was employed by boo.com. Since then he has worked for a vast array of companies both in full time and freelance positions. He is currently working freelance from his studio in East London.

PYKY

Subscribe

Stay up to date with Vortex

Click to see the latest

Swiss Type

Swiss5.jpg

Swiss Type Brief

Research and familiarise yourself with the Swiss International Style. Select a current piece of packaging to redesign and produce a design that pays homage to the period spanning the Bauhaus to the Swiss Typographic Movement. Adhere to the principles and primary characteristics that reflect the style. This should include grid systems, structured layout and photo/pictorial montage.   

Background

‘After World War II, the Swiss International Style (also known as International Typographic Style) revolutionized graphic design when the students of Switzerland's answer to the Bauhaus began to experiment with typography and photomontage. However, the standards of the style were set long before the war. In 1918, Ernst Keller, of the Zurich School of Arts and Crafts, created a model that would become the core of the Swiss School's experiments. Characterized by a rigid grid system, structured layout, and unjustified type, Keller's approach determined the essential tenets of contemporary typography.

swiss_type_500 

Based in the 1940s design meccas of Zurich and Basel, the Swiss School played with Keller's foundations by placing a strong emphasis on objective photography and the use of sans-serif type. The designs' precision and order seemed to discourage individuality. However, pioneers of the style -- including Max Huber and Armin Hoffman -- lent notable enthusiasm and exuberance to their work. Adrain Frutiger and Max Miedinger achieved typographic success when Frutiger introduced Univers (1954) and Miedinger invented Helvetica (1957). But it was the 1960s that saw the Swiss Style's most radical overhaul, when Wolfgang Weingart interrupted all austerity with a creative dissection of typography's tenets.

Emerging from the sensibilities of New Typography, Bauhaus, and De Stijl, the Swiss Style realized such success in large part because of the Swiss government. Public agencies and Swiss industries patronized new design developments as vehicles for favorable publicity. Eventually, this national support pushed the international acceptance of Switzerland's revolution in graphic design.’

Info taken from www.artandculture.com

Further Reading

The New Typography: A Handbook for Modern designers
Jan Tschichold

Swiss Graphic Design
Richard Hollis

Pioneers of Swiss Graphic Design
Josef Muller-Brockmann

swiss_type_squares_500_02

Swiss Type

Copyright Enter the Vortex 2008. All rights reserved.