Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Retronation


A Joe PItt title card for Nick

Vintage Ray Payton illustrations


I don't know about you, but I can't can't count how many projects get dismissed by 'clients' because they slam-down-the-stamp of RETRO on them. What the hell? First of all, it's not all that simple, and second of all, it's not really retro, it's today.AND, yeah, there is a huge difference between retro and 'informed by movements of the past. Besides, there is no movement today, other than the extreme luxury for talented people to choose from the palette of history, much like new chef's today can mine the past and merge influences- influences that may, or may not 'work' but which also may fuse brilliantly. Dismissing something as merely retro frustrates the crap out of me.

I frequently, if not constantly, find myself fighting the future...the future of the past. I mean, a future which unescapably MUST include the past. As an artist, designer/whatever I am, the past, is what feeds style today, and any of you who create for a living, undoubtedly know this-it all comes down to three things: the influence you you choose to inform you, the reason WHY you select what informs you ( intellect) and the recipe you create ( 1 part mid-century modern, 3 parts textures you create, 1/2 part Mary Blair, a drop of Gergely, 5 parts random 80's influence, and perhaps some circus poster influence in a wood-block way). This defines talent today, in some of the planets most gifted artists and animators.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Evolution Revolution




Soft Wall, freestanding wall
Tyvek and industrial felt
Stephanie Forsythe and Todd MacAllen. Molo Designs, Canada.


RISD's new exhibit, Evolution Revolution: The Arts and Crafts in Contemporary Fashion and Textiles

A new exhibit at the Rhode Island School of Design Art Museum entitled "Evolution/Revolution: The Arts and Crafts in Contemporary Fashion and Textiles", ( February 22 - June 15, 2008) promises to be interesting, and it in on my "to do" list for the weekend. Curator Joanne Ingersoll, quoted in a recent interview in American Craft Magazine's web site, say's "...around 1995...I started observing a lot of designers who were being impacted by the digital revolution, but rather than dismissing it, they saw it as liberating—they were showing me things that were a merging of high technology and the hand."

It makes me think even deeper about graphic design product design, any design being created today, and how technology affects it's development in both negative and positive ways. These are all issues that I address in my new book, BEYOND TREND ( available 7/11/08), but I never really thought about the impact on craft...nor even a connection with craft, so this exhibition fascinates me.

The CRAFT article, by Marc Kristal, states a new vision for craft in our culture, something which we might lable as a post Arts & Crafts movement..... Krisal say's "the similarities between then and now inspired Ingersoll to mount “Evolution/Revolution,” which showcases over 20 international designers, artists and architects, all active in fashion and textile design, who represent what, in the curator’s view, amounts to a latter-day Arts and Crafts movement: makers responding to the world-altering cataracts of the digital age by using technology to innovate creatively, take greater ownership of the production process, and incorporate ideas about sustainability, community and human rights into industry.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Creating and Consuming in Japan


We all know that Japan is a blend of contrasts, new and old, but how do we market new brands in a market this unique?
Shibuya at 6:00 rush hour

I have a love / hate relationship with Japan. On one hand I love the strange newness, in unfamiliarity, the Japaneseness - if you will, of Japan. And on the other hand, I hate that I sometimes can't figure out the obvious, the literal. I hate that other Westerners sometimes don't see the strong connections that the Japanese have with their past., the respect, the gentle, informed influence that has roots stronger than any American could every imagine, if they could imagine such roots. We al shoudl admire this nation of polite, driven, innovative people, all who have a history that happens to run deeper than the 250 years we in the states can recal upon. Culutrally speaking, the Japanese are very human and fascinating, and for anyone interested in design, the country offers something that one can not find anywhere else on this planet - a commercial buisness system that rivals the west, with one BZIG difference - it's all designed without using English. To make matters more fascinating, the visual influence itself is informed by a completely different set of factors, some which find thier threads from the Shinto beliefs from the 1400's or from other cuoutral factors tha range from spirits and Shogun Edo period enthisiasts to natures patterns and cycles. Together, it all explains why a childs toy may more likely be a Milk rabbit, and not a Barbie Doll, or why a single cherry blossom can emotionaly move any female, from a 4 years old with Hello Kitty backpack, to a 90 year old grandmother taking a bus trip to Hokkaido to tour the blossoms......Japan requires work, to understand, and anyone who belives that they can simple sell a product there without researching the spectrum of influences and factors which are unique to Japan, is taking an enournous risk.


I believe that nothing happens by accident in Japan. That in fact, what we find as strange, or silly trends, actually are all every explainable, even though the answers may seem incomprehensible to most Western trained business professionals.

As a visual designer, I like to arrange trips to Japan during the countries most emotional moments, those of celebration, or at those seasonal pivotal moments that are so very important to the Japanese psyche. I just returned from a business trup there which happened to occur in late February, near Girls Day, velentines day and White Day for men, and at the blooming time of Prunus mume, the sacred Ume Plum, which smenas that certain ancient Shinto shrines that happen to dedicate thier shintoism to the Ume, open up their gates and let the Japanese celebrate this first sign of spring. It's amazing yet confusing to some of my peers who I brought along for the experience of this Shinto moment of respect, to see elderly moved to tears, an odd mx of old men, young husbands and modern housewifes all crowding around the lowly but respectable Ume apricot blossom, a seemingly underdesigned pink or white flower which appears before any other organic growth, even before the leaves, on the gnarled woody branches of apparently ancient Ume trees, which are kept in certain collections at certain shrines throughout Tokyo and Japan.

A guide moves crowds or orchid enthiusiates buying orchid themed product hrough the Tokyo Dome

My colleage Jess was confused and humored even, by the Tokyoites crowding around a certain branch on this cold Sunday morning with their cell phone cameras lifted in the cold air, through the smoke of the many street vendors seeling Ume blossom carved baked, then grilled potatoes, turnips and Ocotopus, all so foreign to us, but obviously an annual celebration which many have experienced their entire lives, as we in the west attent church or temple festivals and rituals. THis, my third Ume viewing, and I already felt at home, with the familar treats and scents. Ume wine, Ume candy, Ume carved dolls, Ume clothing, Ume bonsai, Ume cell phone decorative plates, Ume Hello Kitty limited edition playsets, Ume cookies, boxed ume lunches, Ume themed everything. I knew, that if I designed an Ume foam banana cover, to carry ones banan to work, that it would have sold oh so well! ( a current trend which respects ,and protets the Banana chosen to travel to school or office).

A school boy writes a wish regarding their future success on exams, on a cedar plank, a strangely traditionla task at the annual Ume Plum viewing as Shinto shrines through out Japan. Ume Plums, or Japanese Apricot floweirng,is the first official sign of spring in Japan, but not nearly as important as the upcoming Skaura festival - the Cherry Blossom festival.

So many photos were taken at the Ume festival, that there must be albums of images, and megabytes of screensavors all across the country, Even the book stores had magazines, dedicated to what flower viewing was featured at the moment,. although most were focusing on the upcoming Cherry Blossom/girls day festivals.


Anothing about Japan, it makes me feel young. At 49 years old, I can feel 5, instantly. In the hotels, the polite staff act like parents, lots of polite parents....makeing me feel as if I could do no wrong, kindly correcting me if I step on the wrong elevator, or tip someone who I should not, ( no tipping in Japan), . I feel as if I could not make a mistake. And I have that nice comforting feeling of "doing hte right thing; when I line-up behing everyone else, the elders, the business men in navy suits in the subway, as the line up in tidy neat rows behind the green painted lines on the subway platforms. No one out of place, and if there is an american or Austrailian not standing in line, it's OK too. THis isn't a feeling of conformity, just a sense of respect, staying with boundarys, a feeling that is so foreign and refreshing for those of us used to the american rush, anger, rudeness, roughness, crudeness 0 in Japan, I feel as if I am so safe, that if I tripped or fell, or had a heart attack in the subway, that everyone would rush to my side, and besides landing on a clean floor, I surely would find myself rushed to a hospital, not left alone after thier train comes.

I also feel like a child, a sense the designers generally love, when shopping. In a Toys R Us, we shopped and I found myself focusing on what I most likely would have focused on as a five year old. The character, the color, the toy. Not the graphics, not the structure, not the brand. All of my focus went to the toy. I didn;t care what the birst said, or the end cap, I could not read it. I had to be sold purely on the image and the object. The same went for food. It all needed to communicate with me on a more visceral and primal level. Something, perhaps, many of us designers forget, the purely visual experience sometimes isn't about the complex communication of words, logos and text, but of that instant read. That primative reason why humans are wired to be attracted to sparkle or shimmer ( it might mean 'water' to our primative mind) but in Japan, it rarely means tacky, and we in the west may dismiss such effects. A bobbling head on a toy, may mean not fun, but a horrifing resembalance to a shinto spirit from the forest, a Cherry Blossom bedecked anything most certainly badges a product as not only girl friendly, but celebrates femaleness in both rebirth and spring. Image the relationships between nature, culutre and trends when one takes the time to examine and study all of the factors and infliuenced that occur in Japan. Image what brands can learn if they take the time to study the importance of Blue Hydrangeas? Asagao, the Morning Glory, which when blooms in the summer, is not merely a trailerpark chainlink fence vine here in America, but is traded on baseball cards in tokyo school yards among boys, used to decorate ceremonial swords, kimonos for men, sold in august at in tiny pots at most every florist stand at the busy train stations in Tokyo, displayed on prints that date back to the year 400, all grown and displayed at specific Shinto shrines throughout the country, dedicated to the Asagao, collected by enthusiates, seared into gift boxes of cookies in August, on lunch boxed, on banners throughout the city.

Hello Kitty Sakura Blossom themed product was everywhere, in anticipation of both Girls day, and the viewing of the Sakura (cherry) blossoms, so important to the Japanese.

Even at the ORchid GRand Prix, at the Tokyo Dome, ochid themed cookies in gift boxed were sold next to Shishido's display of fragrance based on specific species of orchids endemic only the japan, Shishido fragrances not available outside of japan since teh believe that the western world 'would not understand or appreciate' the nuance.
Starbucks has it figured out, clearly, with a stunning line of products designed properly and sensitively themed around the Sakura Blossom and girls day season. In Japan, marketing can involve cultural influence successfully, especially if it wants to connect with the consumer at a deeper level.
And the same connection repeats itself with other important plants from the Edo era, last week, the Tokyo Dome was not filled with BaseBall players, but Orchid enthusiasts, at the Tokyo Grand Prix International Orchid exhibition, the worlds' largest. And inside, half the stadium was full of the typical, but perfect traditionsl orchid species, the other half was full of orchids that my friend said looked dead, but we're infact, highly important and respected species of Japanese orchids, only grown in Japan,, because the MEAN something to the Japanese. The species of Dendrobium moniliforme, and Neofinetia falcata, found on the out laying islands of Japan, we're common Edo period plants, only grown by the wealthy, the Shogun warriers, collected and worn by the Sumo and Shogun on thier belts, signifiying thier strength and power, risking thier lives swimming the fierce channels to these islands to get these tiny plants, which they would wear and grow with pride. These are not old lady hobiests. The Neofinetia falcata orchid has deep, emotional meaning to the Japanese.

Although I could go on and say the same about at least two dozen plants, like Chrysanthemum, Hepatica, etc, most ecery week or two has a celebration or shrine dedicated to a specific plant, that has tremendous meaning to the Japanese. Shinto is not a religion, but more of a belief of spirits of nature, a very Japaneseness surrounds the beliefsm and for any westerner looking for marketing any brand in Japan, I urge you to understand and respect this phenomenon, and then work with it, intergrate it, repectfully enhance it. But never dismiss these passions as foibles or odd displays of some unknown crazyness. And this respect for nature, and the world's connections go far beyond plants, it occurs with the arts, with music, craft, woodworking, leisure time, fashion, cultural traditions, and, it all strnagely or most wonderfully connects in a sort of web too, influencing each other. Marketing in japan must be honest, it must respect, and it must be mean something. Igonorance stands out to the Japanese as clearly as ininformed brands do in the West. We must enter this market carefully, but confidently, with the fundamental understnading that things that seem random, are not, and that just as random may sell an idea in American, simply because it is new or different, doesn't mean that random will sell in Japan. Here, design must be conscious, and designers must work consciously, not randomly, Influence must be consious, informed. You must know what you are using as influence, especially in a culture that is older than 300 years, for here, culutre does indeed have deep, and knarled roots, and it's like of helpful if you are marketing a face cream that you called Nebari, since Nebari is also the Shinto inspired word, for the certain area where an anient gnarled tree or bonsai interfaces with the earth, the smooth, curvy area, muscular and strong, where the root meets the trunk. Talk about specific, but are there opportunities in this market? You bet.....but know what you are doing in this highly influeced and highly influencial part of the world.

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Koolhaas or Koolhaat?


Koolaas designed Seattle Public Library

The uber-trendy Koolhaas cap, inspired by architecture.
With Pritzker Prize winning architect Zaha Hadid designing Louis Vuitton hand bags and a clothing line, I though I had just run across another Starchitect exercising thier intellectual property with a new medium. But better yet, instead I found a pure piece of influenced craft, juxtaposing, of all things architecture and knitting.





Meet the Koolhaas hat, insired by a knitter by Rem Koolhaas's new Seattle Public Library, this hat appeared in over 3000 images on Flickr when I was searching for a photo of Koolhaas's more significant structures. The architectural movement known as Morphogenisis, can mean abstract or geometric forms following the natural surface, letting nature, if you will, design the building. Who said, after all, that all buildings must have straight sides and a flat cieling? Think of how mother nature designs structure, cells in plants, repeating webbing. And now, her most perfect creation? The Homo sapien cap. The phenomenon of pure phenomenon.

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Butch Beef and Baking Barbie


If Barbie Baked

My daily grind suddenly seems normal. As a Creative Director for Hasbro, my world has always been divided by gender. Boys toys and Girls toys. Face it...we always knew that boys like to get dirty (Tonka) and girls like pink (My Little Pony).

I guess the rest of the world is begining to celebrate our gender differences. Look at what's at the super market right now.



At christmas I bought pink Breast Cancer Aware everything in my support for the cause......but now my whole cupboard is pink.

Pink Mayo
Pink Cereal
PInk Tomato soup
PInk Karo syrup
Pink Baking Soda.

My kitchen looks more like Barbies Dream House than the typical bachelors pad.


G.I. Joe Stew.....where is my safety orange can opener?

But thankfully, Dinty Moore has come to the rescue.
Beef Stew in a Chamo package has arrived, as well as Spam. ( ham in a can). Thanks to a limited time promotion, our friends at Hormel feel confident enough to come out of their marketing closet with thier surprisingly beautiful partnetship with Realtree® chamo brand pattern, (dead leaves in a photo-realistic fabric pattern normally seen on hunter's fleece at a Super Wal-Mart). Woo hoo! Whos da man now?


Spam for the Man...what the.....

Saturday, December 29, 2007

Our Two Americas -The PInk States and the Chamo States


I couldn't help picking up a NEWSWEEK magazine, out of pure boredom perhaps, but since my 94 year old father gets at least 4 subscriptions ( hey, he can't say no!) I discoverd the fine writing within (as if I should ever comment of ones writing! um....spell check Matt?). I then discoverd journalist Evan Thomas' piece entitled THE CLOSING OF AMERICAS MIND; a work that examines partisian warrierism in America, and our sad polarized culture which clearly can be separated into two types of people - the whole red state -blue state thing.

"America is populated by ignorant,racist, fascist knuckle-dragging NASCAR-obsessed cousin-marrying road kill-eating tobacco-juice-dribbling gun-fondling religios fanatic rednecks" and then the "Godless unpatriotic pierced-nose Volvo-driving France-loving leftwing Communist latte-sucking tofu-chomping holistic-wacko neurotic vegan weenie perverts".


When I read this joke, quipped from collumnist Dave Berry, I can clearly see how design consumption clearly divides along the same path. Sadly, I can understand this division - religion may seem evil to many blue staters - even me, but deep inside, I want to beleive that there is some sort of religion - I don't believe that religion is fundamentally bad, just fundamental religionists are because of thier brainwashed closed mindness - generally speaking of course. I must believe that deep inside all humans is that very fundamental need to believe that they are doing GOOD. And religions of all types are still fundamentally based on doing GOOD, and what is RIGHT. As a gay male American, raised as a Catholic, attending Catholic college and even church- alter boy and Sunday mass, volunteering etc until I came "out of the closet" at 21 years old and painfully discovered how naive I was about trusting mass religion, and discovering that indeed I was not "loved' or even "good", I too lost faith in what I believed was "right".

Now, as a creative.....imagine our creative partisan culture.....it too divides in much the same way....right, wrong, White Bread Amrican/Eurotrash, Educated/Ignorant, but in the end, it's really all about fear. FEAR of 'different', FEAR of Originality, FEAR of not belonging. In a world fighting over beliefs more than borders, the idea of BELONGING, is suddenly becoming much more important than where one originally comes from. In the end, we are all wanting to belong to some sort of TRIBE. God forbid we stand alone, vulnerable, independant, for then, would we really "belong" to anything?

Monday, December 3, 2007

Ornament it.


2006 Target Back To School. Designed by OFFICE.

Dutch designer Tord Boontje Holiday theme for Target 2006.

I am frequently asked to either create, direct, or define the vector ornament style that has grown into the visual style of the moment. Thanks to early adopters like Target, the style which is composed of primarily vector silhouettes continues to evolve as more and more adopters and adapters craft the look that continues to feel fresh.


Coke bottles for European nightclub promotion.

Fancy, fanciful ornament is now expressed everywhere, in many styles. Sure, I wonder too, what designers might use next, but most likely, this movement of ornament will continue to evolve, as creative people use motion and different technology to continue this trend of visual design which hold the distinction of appealing to most everyone.


I personally beleive that the looks public exposure began in the mid 1990's with contemporary artist RYAN MCGUINESS whose installations of vector forms and sillo's inspired a generation of young artists who saw the style as a retaliation against a digital 1990's world of Photoshop photorealism, filters and solarflares. Oh yeah, it happens to be beautiful too.



"McGinness’s consumer-culture-inspired motifs have made their way from the corporate office to skateboards and coffee mugs to the image-heavy mandalalike painting and prints…. Moving from context to context, he has kept the concepts of marketing and branding as a launch pad for endless permutations of a consistent vision—simulacrums of the consumer environment." Excerpt from gallery guide.