Demian Conrad: Difference between revisions
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===Artistes and robots=== |
===Artistes and robots=== |
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In 2017, during the [[Expo 2017|International Exhibition in Kazakhstan]], the [[Grand Palais]] in [[Paris]], in collaboration with the Astana Contemporary Arts Center, launched an exhibition titled ''Artistes & Robots''<ref name=Robots>''Automatico’s augmented, responsive typeface for Artists & Robots'', Ruby Boddington, It’s Nice That, 26 October 2017. [https://www.itsnicethat.com/articles/automatico-artists-and-robots-digital-graphic-design-261017]</ref> |
In 2017, during the ''[[Expo 2017|International Exhibition in Kazakhstan]]'', the ''[[Grand Palais]]'' in [[Paris]], in collaboration with the ''Astana Contemporary Arts Center'', launched an exhibition titled ''Artistes & Robots''.<ref name=Robots>''Automatico’s augmented, responsive typeface for Artists & Robots'', Ruby Boddington, It’s Nice That, 26 October 2017. [https://www.itsnicethat.com/articles/automatico-artists-and-robots-digital-graphic-design-261017]</ref> This exhibition explored the relationship between artists and artificial intelligence. |
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Together with the curator Jérôme Neutres and co-curator and artist [[Miguel Chevalier]], Conrad designed the [[graphic communication]] of the exhibition, including the event identity, [[infographics]], catalog, and communication campaign<ref name=24heures/> |
Together with the curator Jérôme Neutres and co-curator and artist [[Miguel Chevalier]], Conrad designed the [[graphic communication]] of the exhibition, including the event identity, [[infographics]], catalog, and communication campaign.<ref name=24heures/> Parametric [[algorithms]] were used to design the exhibition's editorial and multimedia work<ref name=Robots/> These algorithms were inspired by [[Donald Knuth]]'s ''[[Metafont|Meta-font]]''.<ref name=DesignViral/><br> |
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The design of the exhibition includes explicit and implicit references to the human-machine relation theme<ref name=Robots/> |
The design of the exhibition includes explicit and implicit references to the human-machine relation theme.<ref name=Robots/> The installation called ''Responsive Typography''<ref name=Whitewall>''Artists and Robots at The Grand Palais'', Talia Elbaz, Whitewall, 17 May 2018. [https://whitewall.art/art/artistes-robots-grand-palais]</ref> and designed by Conrad welcomes the visitor through a dialogue with an algorithm. This human-machine dialogue takes place through the manipulation, in real-time, of the characters of the words ''Artistes & Robots''. Characters are displayed on a LED screen connected to a [[personal computer|PC]], which receives signals about the visitors' positioning from an Xbox Kinect 360.<ref name=Robots/> This work includes a custom font, derived from a parametric generation process that was developed from hand drawings. The parametric font shape is the result of a process that transforms circular shapes into squares or rhombuses. To create this font, an application was developed in collaboration with ''Prototypo''.<ref name=Robots/> |
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The catalog accompanying the exhibition features an image of a work by the artist [[Stelarc]], during one of his performances, entitled ''Third Hand & Exoskeleton Arm''<ref name=Robots/> |
The catalog accompanying the exhibition features an image of a work by the artist [[Stelarc]], during one of his performances, entitled ''Third Hand & Exoskeleton Arm''.<ref name=Robots/> |
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This exhibition was presented at the Expo in 2017 in [[Astana]] before being brought to Paris in 2019<ref name=Vogue>''Artists and Robots, the new immersive exhibition to see at the Grand Palais'', Marie Périer, VOGUE, 21 April 2018.[https://www.vogue.fr/fashion-culture/fashion-exhibitions/diaporama/artists-and-robots-the-new-immersive-exhibition-to-see-at-the-grand-palais/50405]</ref> |
This exhibition was presented at the Expo in 2017 in [[Astana]] before being brought to Paris in 2019.<ref name=Vogue>''Artists and Robots, the new immersive exhibition to see at the Grand Palais'', Marie Périer, VOGUE, 21 April 2018.[https://www.vogue.fr/fashion-culture/fashion-exhibitions/diaporama/artists-and-robots-the-new-immersive-exhibition-to-see-at-the-grand-palais/50405]</ref> |
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==Collections== |
==Collections== |
Revision as of 17:41, 26 October 2021
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- Comment: Possibly notable. However, the tone needs cleanup. Please read WP:PEACOCK. Also do you have a WP:COI? Eternal Shadow Talk 22:21, 12 October 2021 (UTC)
- Comment: The photograph turns out not to be the work of the writer of this draft. (See this explanation.) -- Hoary (talk) 22:23, 24 August 2021 (UTC)
- Comment: The photograph was clearly taken with the sitter's cooperation, and we read that the photo is the draft author's "own work". I infer a COI. -- Hoary (talk) 11:22, 24 August 2021 (UTC)
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Demian Conrad | |
---|---|
Education | Visual Communication, SUPSI, Lugano |
Occupations | |
Employer | Automatico Studio |
Known for | design, visual identities, wayfinding, editorial design, exhibition design, author |
Demian Conrad (born 1974, Locarno)[1] is a Swiss designer whose work ranges from graphic design to visual arts. Conrad is an author of books on design,[2] and also the creative director of cultural institutions and firms, such as the Center for Future Publishing and DADADUM. He is also known for having invented a new process called Water Random Offset Printer (WROP).
Biography
Conrad graduated with a degree in Visual Communication from SUPSI in Lugano[3]. During this period, he was a pupil of designer Bruno Monguzzi and artist Reto Rigassi. Later, he studied Lateral Thinking with Edward De Bono at the University of Malta.[4] In 2003, the designer moved to Lausanne and in 2007 he founded the Demian Conrad Design Studio.[4] In 2013, he founded the DADADUM furniture collection.[5] Under Conrad's creative direction, DADADUM won several awards, including the ED Awards European Design.[6] From 2014 to the present, Conrad has taught Editorial Design and has been a researcher at Haute Ecole d'Art et Design (HEAD) in Geneva,[7] where, in 2017, he co-founded the Center for Future Publishing and became its creative director.[8][7] In 2016, Conrad curated the visual identity for the campaign on the Swiss referendum in favor of basic income (Basic Income Campaign), proposed by Generation Grundeinkommen.[9][7] In 2017, the Art Director Club awarded the Silver Cube Prize to the Basic Income Campaign.[10][7] In the same year, Conrad renamed his atelier Automatico Studio[9] and became a member of the Alliance Graphique Internationale (AGI).[11]
Design
Conrad has developed several visual communication strategies throughout his career. From 2007 to 2015, he applied an experimental approach to graphic design, inspired by the masters of the Swiss School such as Max Bill as well as other creative figures such as Bruno Munari.[12] In those years, he also approached the participatory design, DIY ethics, design hacking, and algorithmic and parametric typography, experimenting with new ways of designing and producing works.[12][7] In 2017, he elaborated a new methodology aimed at reducing complexity and highlighting meaning. Inspired by minimal art and some Japanese philosophies he approaches the poetics of emptiness.[9] Conrad also transfers these concepts into the currents of thought initiated by Emil Ruder, AG Fronzoni, and Georg Staehelin, from which he draws inspiration.[9] His design is centered on the value of essentiality and his aesthetics focus on pure forms and typographic legibility, like the characters designed with the Univers font by Adrian Frutiger.[9][13]
Research
Through his research Conrad develops visual and design grammars using new media and digital methods, such as generative typographic processes and digital visualizations based on algorithms and creative coding.[14][7] In 2010, he developed a method, called Water Random Offset Printer (WROP), based on offset printing. This technique is borrowed from printers who wash up their machine after a job by squirting alcohol into the plates, to remove residual ink as the press is running.[15] WROP allows the designer to interfere with the hydro and chemical settings of the machine while it is printing, altering standardized productions through manual interventions which dilute the ink on the plates using water.[16]
Other techniques employed by Conrad in graphic design are based on his research on algorithmic and parametric typography.[17] He also uses generative algorithms and artificial intelligence for the autonomous design of editorial and multimedia works, exploiting AI algorithms to analyze and interpret, also in real-time, textual and visual data.[14][7]
Graphic artworks
Conrad's works focus on visual identity designs, wayfinding, editorial design, and exhibition design.[9] During his career, he has worked for numerous cultural and artistic institutions.
Postage stamp centenary of the Swiss Civil Code
In 2012, he was commissioned by the Swiss Confederation to design the stamp for the centenary of the Swiss Civil Code (SCC).[18] The visual syntax chosen by Conrad was intended to celebrate the Swiss code. Conrad focused on the concept of good faith, which regulates and encourages citizens to use their freedom responsibly. This central concept of the SCC is expressed in Art. 2(1)[18]. The designer represented this concept on the stamp using the three official languages of the Confederation. His aim was to visually summarize this core value of the SCC on the stamp, as if it were a cut-out from the official book.[18] For the occasion, the designer used a grey color, reminiscent of the cover color of the SCC, and the Times New Roman font, which also characterized the print editions of the codex[18]. A key feature of the stamp is the small size of its characters, which were designed to be read with a philatelic collector's lens[18]. The printing technique used is the engraving technique. The stamp, which is in the commemorative and Priority Mail A category, was issued in Switzerland for one year for a total of 1.5 million printed copies[18]. The stamp was presented in 2012 to the Swiss Parliament in Bern by Simonetta Sommaruga[18], the former President of the Swiss Confederation.
LUFF 12
In 2013, Conrad developed the communication campaign for the 12th edition of the Lausanne Underground Film & Music Festival (LUFF).[19][7]
The theme chosen for that edition of the festival was accident.[20]
Through a minimalist image, the designer linked the contemporary filmographic and musical universe to the concept of randomness.[19]
The typographic strategy chosen by Conrad was to use monumental fonts, large enough to be recognizable and readable from a distance. The poster was designed to attract the attention of passers-by through a kinetic process, through which the message is first veiled and then revealed.[19] The audience is hence stimulated through the figurative composition to explore the message.[19]
For what concerns the typesetting, the text was divided into six lines, some of which were covered with black bands created with the WROP technique.[15] The alternation of black and white bands recalls the relationship between control and randomness. Differently from previous works, the WROP printing technique was applied on pre-printed black text on white paper to partially veil it in a random way.[15] This process was also used to cross out the word underground, a historical feature of LUFF's logo.
The graphic work created for the campaign was displayed on the streets and public transports in Lausanne.[21]
Art Basel
In 2014, Conrad was commissioned to design the campaign for Art Basel contemporary art fair.[1][7] Conrad conveyed the fair's identity through a simple and immediate message.[1] He focused on the relationship between color and identity. Influenced by the stylistic heritage of the Swiss fair, he created an identity based on the balancing and contrast among colors.[1] He paired two contrasting colors for each image; for instance, metallic and material colors were paired with fluorescent and vibrant ones.[1] The screen-printing technique was used for this purpose. This technique allows to increase the density of the color making the surface more reflective and the contrasts more vivid.[1] This strategy creates a contrast with the surrounding environment, which made the work more salient and easely decipherable.[1]
Basic income
In 2016, Conrad designs the visual identity for the Swiss Basic Income Campaign proposed by Generation Grundeinkommen.[7] His approach aims at valuing beauty as a political message.[1] The designer conceives a golden circle: "It is a symbol. An elegant, positive and feminine symbol that evokes a better society where wealth is better distributed. Above all, we wanted to make something beautiful. The concept of this campaign is that beauty can change the world," says Conrad for 24heures magazine.[7] This work tries to highlight the evocative power of the sign reduced to its essence.[9]
Artistes and robots
In 2017, during the International Exhibition in Kazakhstan, the Grand Palais in Paris, in collaboration with the Astana Contemporary Arts Center, launched an exhibition titled Artistes & Robots.[22] This exhibition explored the relationship between artists and artificial intelligence.
Together with the curator Jérôme Neutres and co-curator and artist Miguel Chevalier, Conrad designed the graphic communication of the exhibition, including the event identity, infographics, catalog, and communication campaign.[7] Parametric algorithms were used to design the exhibition's editorial and multimedia work[22] These algorithms were inspired by Donald Knuth's Meta-font.[14]
The design of the exhibition includes explicit and implicit references to the human-machine relation theme.[22] The installation called Responsive Typography[23] and designed by Conrad welcomes the visitor through a dialogue with an algorithm. This human-machine dialogue takes place through the manipulation, in real-time, of the characters of the words Artistes & Robots. Characters are displayed on a LED screen connected to a PC, which receives signals about the visitors' positioning from an Xbox Kinect 360.[22] This work includes a custom font, derived from a parametric generation process that was developed from hand drawings. The parametric font shape is the result of a process that transforms circular shapes into squares or rhombuses. To create this font, an application was developed in collaboration with Prototypo.[22]
The catalog accompanying the exhibition features an image of a work by the artist Stelarc, during one of his performances, entitled Third Hand & Exoskeleton Arm.[22]
This exhibition was presented at the Expo in 2017 in Astana before being brought to Paris in 2019.[24]
Collections
Conrad's works can be found in private and important museum collections, including the Museum für Gestaltung in Zurich[25], the Musée de Design et d'Arts Appliqués Contemporains in Lausanne, the National Library in Bern, and the Cantonal Library of Canton Vaud[8].
Selected exhibitions
- 2021 Rock Me Baby, curated by Sébastien Mettraux, Centre D'Art Contemporain, Yverdon-Les-Bains (Swiss)[26];
- 2020 Code/Poésie, curated by Antonio Rodriguez, Chateaux de Morges (Swiss)[28];
- 2019 Millennials – New Millennium Design, curated by José Bártolo, Porto Design Biennial, Porto (Portugal)[29];
- 2018 Artistes et robots, curated by Laurence Bertrand-Dorléac & Jérôme Neutres, Grand Palais de Paris, Paris (France)[24];
- 2018 Art imprimé, curated by Nathalie Herschdorfer, Triennal of Contemporary Prints, Le Locle (Swiss)[30];
- 2017 Artists and Robots, curated by Jérôme Neutres & Miguel Chevallier, Astana (Kazakistan)[22];
- 2017 Who the hell is Mr Brockmann?, curated by David Kilian Beck, Ambit gallery, London (United Kingdom)[31];
- 2016 Swiss Graphic Design Exhibition, curated by Erich Brechbühl, Noël Leu & Anna-Viktoria Eschbach, Crafts Museum of China Academy of Art, Shanghai (China)[32];
- 2014 SCHWEIZ – JAPAN, curated by Stephanie Cuérel & Josh Schaub, Weltformat Graphic Design Festival, Lucerne (Swiss)[33];
- 2013 Un/Limited, curated by Thibaud Tissot, Museum of Fine Arts, Le Locle (Swiss)[34];
- 2012 100 Jahre Schweizer Grafik, curated by Karin Gimmi e Barbara Junod, Museum für Gestaltung, Zurigo (Swiss)[35]
- 2011 The hand of graphic designer, curated by Francesca Serrazanetti & Matteo Schubert, Villa Necchi, Milan (Italy)[36]
Books and articles
- Who the Hell Is Müller-Brockmann?: Conversations About the Swiss Style, Demian Conrad, Arthur Niggli, 2021, ISBN 9783721210071;
- JOHANNES & ALAN. A workshop of algorithmic typography, Demian Conrad, ISSUE, Journal of art & design HEAD – Genève, 2020, https://issue-journal.ch/flux-posts/johannes-alan/
- Famous ordinary things, Demian Conrad & Rob Van Leijsen, DABOOK, 2016.
See also
- Alliance Graphique Internationale (AGI) – International organization of graphic artists and designers
- Forum des 100
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h Demian Conrad, le design 2.0, Virginie Nussbaum, Le Temps, 26 June 2017. [1]
- ^ Vivre avec le design, Emmanuel Grandjean, Le Temps, May 27, 2016. [2]
- ^ Demian Conrad. Biography, Journal of art & design HEAD – Genève
- ^ a b DEMIAN CONRAD-Interview, Denis Moya, November 2012, Ligature
- ^ DADADUM, Swiss design brand launched by the graphic designer and entrepreneur Demian Conrad, Dennis Moya & Tiffany Baehler, Ligature, September, 2014. [3]
- ^ ED Awards European Design, Web
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Les mystérieux ronds dorés collés à Lausanne, c'était eux, 24heures, May 17, 2017. [4]
- ^ a b Demian Conrad, HEAD Genève, Web
- ^ a b c d e f g Automatico studio updates its design ethos to one that succumbs to “simplicity, reduction and calm”, Ayla Angelos, It’s Nice That, 25 January 2021. [5]
- ^ The ADC Annual Awards, Web
- ^ Demian Conrad, Alliance Graphique Internationale, Web
- ^ a b Demian Conrad. Guest Interview, Interview Design, July 12, 2020
- ^ La mise en page comme tectonique, entretien avec Demian Conrad, Valérie Bovay & Marc Frochaux, Espazium, Septembre 8, 2020. [6]
- ^ a b c Demian Conrad, designer, Gutenberg, Bubble Jet et LCD, Design Viral, 2019, Web. [7]
- ^ a b c Graphic design meets printmaking, Fraser Muggeridge, School of Design RMIT University, 2018.
- ^ Demian Conrad: Visualisation Of Rarity, TEDx Geneva, 2010
- ^ Face à l'IA, "l'artiste reste clairement le créateur",RTS, Mars 20, 2019, Web. [8]
- ^ a b c d e f g Centenary of the Swiss Civil Code, Focus on stamps. The Collector's Magazine, 2012. [9]
- ^ a b c d Graphic Design: Demian Conrad builds festival identity by interfering with printing process, Rob Alderson, It’s Nice That, 21 May 2014. [10]
- ^ LUFF 12, 2013, Web
- ^ Luff 13-Damien Conrad, Crap is Good, 13 January 2014
- ^ a b c d e f g Automatico’s augmented, responsive typeface for Artists & Robots, Ruby Boddington, It’s Nice That, 26 October 2017. [11]
- ^ Artists and Robots at The Grand Palais, Talia Elbaz, Whitewall, 17 May 2018. [12]
- ^ a b Artists and Robots, the new immersive exhibition to see at the Grand Palais, Marie Périer, VOGUE, 21 April 2018.[13]
- ^ Collection Museum of Design Zurich, Web
- ^ Rock Me Baby, Centre D'Art Contemporain
- ^ Demian Conrad, personal website
- ^ Code/Poésie, Lyrical Valley
- ^ Millennials – New Millennium Design, Porto Design Biennial.[14]
- ^ Art imprimé, Triennal of Contemporary Prints.[15]
- ^ Who the hell is Mr Brockmann?, Swiss Cultural Fund
- ^ Swiss Graphic Design Exhibition, Pro Helvetia
- ^ SCHWEIZ – JAPAN, Weltformat Graphic Design Festival. [16]
- ^ Un/Limited, Museum of Fine Arts, Le Locle
- ^ 100 Jahre Schweizer Grafik, Museum für Gestaltung
- ^ The hand of graphic designer, Abitare, 2011. [17]
External links
- Demian Conrad: Alliance Graphique Internationale
- Demian Conrad: HEAD Genève
- Demian Conrad, Design Interview 1Q
- Demian Conrad: Visualisation of Rarity, TEDx Ginevra
- Responsive typography by Demian Conrad, Grand Palais
- Diálogos 2014 Demian Conrad, EASD Valencia
Category:Living people
Category:Place of birth missing (living people)
Category:Swiss graphic designers
Category:Swiss industrial designers
Category:Swiss stamp designers
Category:Minimalism
Category:Design educators
Category:People from Locarno
Category:Visual arts
Category:1974 births
This article, Demian Conrad, has recently been created via the Articles for creation process. Please check to see if the reviewer has accidentally left this template after accepting the draft and take appropriate action as necessary.
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