AGR I’ve always been very engaged in the history of Graphic Design, but I became more occupied by it a few years after I finished school. The first few years I was more concerned about getting my company to work, eventually I became engrossed in history. I often thought about the fact that when I went to school we never learned anything about the history of Norwegian graphic design, they were always talking about Bauhaus or isms, styles that had existed internationally, and nothing about what had happened in Norway during that time. I started to dig into it, that was how I began to be interested, and the rest just added to it.
SR There is one thing I thought about, which I think is very interesting, if you read about design criticism, or graphic design criticism especially, there is always the point that we, as a discipline, do not have any history. Because we have not taken good enough care of the graphic design history. Particularly in Norway.
AGR Yes, Internationally I think they’ve been more attentive to graphic design history. In Holland, for example, graphic designers are probably very aware of their history. I would not think this is a problem there?
SR Maybe not with equal basis as here? I do not know much of Norwegian graphic design history, so it is difficult for me to compare.
TTN There is very little that is documented in writing in Norway. I spoke with a former teacher of mine last week. She said that this year a colleague of hers died, and it dawned on her that “whow, he’s never written down anything, so he just brought everything he knew to the grave with him.” I think maybe it’s a bit like the situation in Norway.
AGR It’s probably because it is, in a way, a fairly invisible profession. And it is also a field where all the designers are in a hectic work schedules, constantly with new deadlines, so they do not have the time to write anything. Or, very little. That creates a situation where, especially perhaps because it is a field where there traditionally has not been a habit to evaluate what you are doing, or beyond purely practical things.
SR If you look at architecture or art, the evaluation is a part of the process. When a project is complete, you expect a debate or criticism. While in graphic design, you are finished when a project is delivered.
AGR Maybe it is about the fact that architecture is more visible to the people and it affects people to a greater extent. It is a subject that has, in one way or another, a higher status, which makes it more likely that educated architects suddenly become competent to write about architecture in the media instead of working as an architect. While as for graphic designers it’s not so, this applies to other design professions as well. It may not be so likely that one becomes a writer. Perhaps it does not occupy people to the same degree.
SR So for designers it is is a bigger leap to become writers?
AGR Yes, but it could be that this is, in one way or another, changing. Because today there are so many graphic designers in training. Because of that, there are more people who are occupied by it, and it is perhaps more likely that some will start writing. Maybe if there is a long economical crack, and the graphic designers do not get work at all, some might be forced to take another approach. Those situations might actually be positive somehow.
SR That we almost need a crisis for us to write?
AGR Yes, but also because so many are educated as graphic designers today. It is not so unlikely that suddenly someone finds out that they are not so interested in working with design, but prefer to write about it. It’s really strange that no one is doing that already.
SR I came in contact with one,
Kristina Ketola Bore
AGR She is not educated as a designer?
SR No, but she has an MA in design criticism, writing about graphic design criticism in Norway. She was the only one here in Norway that I found. To me it seems like there is a wave of graphic design critique, that it has become something one should talk more about..
AGR Wave here? There was no wave.
(everyone laughs)
SR Maybe not in Norway, but perhaps it has been on a more general basis? It faded away for a period, but it seems that there has been a new upsurge recently, that there is more interest for criticism, or at least about graphic design writing. Whether this is writing for those outside the design field I am not so sure.
AGR It is strange that graphic design as a subject is in close contact with letters and language when, really, nothing is written about it. It’s a bit absurd.
SR There was one who said that graphic designers like to brag about the fact that they hate to read.
TTN I think that is a trend that is beginning to turn. If you look at Unit Editions, Occasional Papers and such examples, different people who specialize in writing, and not just the books from Gestalten, where they showcase logos of horses on one section and birds on another section.
SR It was Occasional Papers, or Sara De Bondts book that made me want to work with design criticism. Rick Poynor believed that graphic design criticism should be shaped by the model of serious film criticism, and how they write reviews. Not written by academics, but journalists, who put the criticism in the context of society and which are interesting both for those who are academically interested, but also for others. He claims that this is the best model if we want to write graphic design criticism for daily press, where everyone should be able to take interest. Do you think this could be something for Norwegian media, if you get a well written, or well formulated text about graphic design?
AGR I do not know, I hope so.
TTN Yes, but periodically there are written texts about product design in the media. Something I’ve noticed, at least in one case, where it was pointed out that the journalist who had written the article had no knowledge of the profession. He was a former sports journalist who had been allowed to write about anything design related. It was something Andreas Engesvik had pointed out. It may not have anything to do with the question, but.
SR But it is interesting. I have searched online on the biggest newspapers in Norway to see what I would find if I look up graphic design. Of the hundreds of articles I have, there is only one or two that are actually about graphic design. That changed a bit when the redesign of the banknotes came out. Suddenly there were some more articles related to the actual topic.
AGR Nevertheless, in almost all those cases (ed. written articles on the re-design of the banknotes), there has been no critical debate around the design. There could easily have been, but there is no one who has evaluated, none that I have seen. Perhaps the one in Morgenbladet, but I have not read that one.
TTN The bank notes have been presented as “happy news” at the end of the news broadcast. This is the kind of approach Norwegian media took too it.
SR Very happy with the international attention?
AGR Yes, or it was as a colleague of mine said. We discussed exactly that, how the bank notes had been covered, and he believed that it was always presented as a fun thing that came in between all other topics: “Well, here we have the new bank notes.” This is no basis for a discussion, it becomes just like this: “Yes but we do not like it”, “it’s ugly” or “it’s nice”. There is no one who has tried to convey what Snøhetta planned with the pixel design, why have they chose a winner and then chose to take two other design proposals and just slap them together. There has not been any such articles, as far as I’ve seen. It may be that the one in Morgenbladet was interesting, have you read it?
TTN No.
AGR He writes extensively on architectural criticism, so it might be alright. I do not know.
SR Last Friday?
AGR In Morgenbladet. What I saw of it, and I talked to Thomas about, was that much of the article was focusing on why we have a re-design for the bank notes, it will only be disappear anyway ... But that is not necessarily the case. So it is not certain that these ones will be the final bank notes. He had obviously not looked completely into it. But he tends to write quite reasonably.
SR What was quite exciting with the bank notes, as I noted, was that it was only after the international press wrote about the competition that it started appearing in Norwegian media. The first articles I found were in Aftenposten and formulated more as a comment that one of their designers had contributed to the winning design.
AGR It was at least in NRK. The cover of it in the international media was also influenced by the same approach: “Look at this fantastic Scandinavian design” And it’s not really an interesting topic.
SR I found one that thought another design that deserved to win. They believed the one with the children drawings should win.
AGR I made that proposal, so I’m glad to hear.
SR Really, haha, that is good.
TTN Was that on buzzit?
SR No, it was on a Dutch blog.
AGR The Dutch, they have understood it.
SR The reason why I followed the project was that I noted that my fellow students in Netherlands talked about the bank notes, and it was through them I got to see the whole selection of design proposals. In the Norwegian newspapers I only got to see the chosen designs.
AGR It’s exciting. At the same time I do not understand that if a Dutch blog writes about the Norwegian bank notes and believes that another bank note would win then I wonder what their judgment is based on. It was a pretty complex job, and there are probably many things about the Norwegian culture they do not know, and what the task was.
TTN I do not think the bank has communicated, in English, the idea behind the various proposals.
AGR They have not done that in Norwegian either. Except that one.
TTN The little thing that was on the blog.
SR I went to the exhibition yesterday and got an aha experience when I read the criteria; what should be included and what it should convey. It gave me more insight than the newspapers.
AGR Back to the to the Norwegian media coverage, it is a bit like “new banknotes!” and conveyed without telling what designers have thought about this, how it should work. There is no analysis from those who write it. That is what creates idiotic discussions in social media.
TTN But what we talked about in relation to when a new logo is launched. Such as the Avinor or the Olympic Games logo. They got a lot of silly and negative criticism. But I find it odd that large firms are launching something that is published in the media, and they know that is going to be in the media, that are big events, that they do not have more of an offensive on the coverage to initiate a more critical analysis so that the project can be explained. Instead of it just being like “here is the new Avinor logo” and then the commentary field under the online articles are filled with slaughter of the design. Because there is no one with the background to think anything about the design except for some guy standing and holding one paper, with a logo on that is something of an advertising image.
AGR It is even difficult to get professionals to give opinions on something. For example, the Olympic games profile of Oslo, to which I was very critical, and I thought that this is as bad as it gets. So I wrote it online.
TTN Equally bad as everyone else?
AGR No, I tried to comment on the issues, explaining why I thought it was poorly designed. But that was the first round of the application. When they got to the second round it seemed as if they had corrected everything I commented on and it could be that, for me, that was not a part of the project. It could be that there were many rules they should follow, that some of the rules were things I pointed out without knowing it. For example the way that the text should be left-aligned, and that they actually really thought “ok, this does not look so good in the first round of the design, but in the second round it should work that way,” And I think it’s often important to think I like that. It may also happen that they read what I wrote ... “there is something in what he writes” hehe. At least I was taken aback afterwards because I felt that “wow”, and thought that maybe actually I was a little harsh, and perhaps I was wrong, maybe they had thought that some of it would work better in round two. It is difficult to criticize in a way, when one does not know all the content of the projects. The same goes for the banknotes, for us who have worked on the project. It can be hard for people outside to see that there are very many things that are considered, this is what I wanted to say in relation to criticism. We sit here and say “yes, but there is no design criticism” and it is the profession itself that is to blame for it. One does not simply say that we are always misunderstood and complain that the coverage of design is poor, because there is no one who writes anything themselves. When we had a professional journal (ed. Snitt) previously there were none of it.
SR Are you referring to Snitt?
AGR Yes, if you have read through Snitt, we’ve actually red through many of the Snitt editions in the past few weeks. Reading through all the numbers, or at least much of it.
TTN A lot of it.
AGR It’s shockingly bad. One wonders somehow whether there has been any editor at all.
TTN Or, the last number had an editor who maybe should not have been working in this field.
AGR Yes. When the academic community themselves deliver these kinds of texts, then one can not complain when the media write about it a dumbed down manner.
SR It is a very good point. Often when I read through texts to prepare for my thesis, I found comments that discusses that. We complain about the lack of criticism, but there is no one writing criticism either. Academic graphic design criticism has repeatedly been declared both starting and ending. Where did those who wrote the articles on how we should spend more time on graphic design criticism go? Why are they not writing the criticism themselves?
AGR It is very easy to be talking about having too little design criticism, but there are no other texts around the subject either. And that is as important, I think. It is equally important that you try to write about the subject at all. If there had been a magazine that wrote sensible about font design, then that would have been sensible.
TTN I think that there are two things that are important with a magazine/ journal. One is that you have a kind of discourse, the second is that it will become a document for the future. In the way that we have been reading though fifteen year old journals, such as Snitt.
AGR Ghastly poor.
TTN Although it is not so good, it still captures aspects of its time which are not saved anywhere else. What captures the details of the period we work in? It is not stored anywhere. In about 15 years, this period is just a blank, not present, holes in the story.
AGR I think Snitt eventually got so much negative feedback on the journal that they chose to lay it down, and decided to use the money on a gallery instead. Grafill seems to be improving, when I was a student I thought that it was an organization I did not want to have anything to do with. And today it’s not like that at all. I think that with the new leader they have had a very positive development, although there are things one can be critical to. They have a not-so-thought-through relationship, I think, to mediation and what to spend money on. It seems they went from having a periodical without an editor, or with a completely hopeless editor, to having a gallery without a curator, to having a website without an editor. The focus seems to be that there should be exhibitions, but there is no one who has the overall responsibility. I think it is related to the fact that it is aiming to be a membership organization, amazingly democratic, and everyone is admitted. Where traditionally what has been printed by them has been a bit like “all illustrators submit a drawing with the theme of football, so we press up postcards.” They have no goal then, with what they do. Then the postcards are sent to all publishers, and this would lead to those illustrators somehow getting a job. And that I think it was something that, it is perhaps something they stopped doing, but I think it was very natural, that was how the members would have it. And the organization functioned because it was an important to channel for reaching out to potential jobs, but today the postcards would have no effect. Because we have social media and internet. It is positive I think, because the organization must think differently.
SR Redefine what they should work on.
AGR Yes, but they still have that problem. But it is an organization that has been so dysfunctional that it is a hard change to make.
SR What do you think about the design competitions that are in Norway?
AGR We discussed it yesterday!
SR Merket for God Design
AGR We actually spent the whole day discussing that. I think that it is a bit so so. We participate in competitions, but we participate in the Årets Vakkreste Bøker and Visuelt. The reason is that these are the only competitions that I see as relevant to submit to, because I see no point to submit to Merket for God Design. It is very expensive. I remember when I was a newly educated student I spoke with a designer who had just won the award, but he did not know how happy he really was to win it. First he had to pay to enroll, and it cost probably three times as much as it does in Årets Vakkreste Bøker.
TTN 3000 respectively.
AGR When he had won, he had to participate at the event, bring the customer and pay for dinner for the client and himself or something like that. And then when he won he also had to pay for publishing the catalogue. Finally he was left with a bill of something like 12,000 NOK. But it is also very difficult with the profession in these matters, because there is such an extremely big difference in the economic situation of different places. So, like a cartoonist who might live on nothing, or a designer who operates in a slightly different way than the big companies, and have less money, versus a large firm with 60 employees engaged in the branding of Avinor. For them there is only one fish in the ocean, it is nothing for them compared to the value they can get from winning. I think that if Avinor then wins Merket for God Design they will be super happy because it means that “this is good” for they won the Merket for God Design. Submitting to competitions is based on tactical reasons. It contributes to good relationships with the customer, it is a bargaining chip. In relation to Årets Vakkreste Bøker and Visuelt. I think it is absolutely fair to submit work to Årets Vakkreste Bøker because it is an arrangement that is much more sympathetic than Visuelt. It is completely different. Here, all the designers who sit to work with books rest of the year come to participate, the prices for the best books are delivered, and the book industry follows it quite well. If you win a lot there it is good bargaining chip. Perhaps it even enables you to get a new project, or you get more from the publishers. It is positive in relation to that. Visuelt on the other hand is a bit of everything.
TTN Everything should get prizes in Visuelt
AGR But that it is actually misguided. There are actually fewer prizes now than what there have been before, the same goes for Årets Vakkreste Bøker. Okay, they have not gone down by much, but they may have cut down by 10-20 percent on the number of prizes.
TTN There are 40 awards in gold I think.
AGR Visuelt? Yes it may well be.
TTN There are a lot of categories.
AGR One might cut down a little bit, but it is a subject that is extremely wide. From cartoons to profiles such as Avinor, so it does not work to narrow it all down. The subject is supposed to cover both interactive design, animation, comics, illustration and graphic design. It’s a very large spans.
TTN How is it in the Netherlands? I know that Switzerland has a contest in which designers that I acknowledge are participating.
SR We have the Graphic Design Festival in Breda, where there are many of both teachers and students participating. In the Netherlands it seems like there is often something happening in relation to graphic design. I wanted to ask you about the history part of your work. You’ve had some exhibition of collected works?
AGR Yes. I’ve had several. The last one was an exhibition that we had on Grafill. That’s what’s good for instance, about Grafill now. It is possible to say that I have a project and apply for some money, for it also is a place one can exhibit. I think this is better than the magazine was. So, there was an exhibition about Melin and Osterlin. These are two designers that I accidentally picked up a book of when I was a student and have since been very concerned about what they have been doing. It has been very important for what I was doing myself. So I have just collected all I could find from them, so suddenly I sat with 100 things or something like that. There is a exhibition scholarship at Grafill, so I applied for it. That resulted in the catalog and perhaps a bigger book, and an exhibition in Sweden. I started a small publishing house. Then I came across an old photo book, so I got some support from here and there, and republished it. This was purely a reprint of an old book. I’m not just interested in graphic design history then, I’m interested in form history, history of photography, art history in general.
SR A small publishing house, how long have you been at it?
AGR Since 2008 or something like that.
TTN It has recently been laid down.
SR What does one need to be able to start, if not criticism, then a more active discussion. Which platform could conceivably work?
AGR It is actually the second thing which is slightly positive with Årets Vakreste Bøker og Visuelt. There are so few venues for designers to gather. That way I think Visuelt og Årets Vakreste Bøker are good, in that we meet there, and something happens. It might have traditionally been a bit too much focus on that “now we give prizes to those beautiful books”, then you are sort of finished. One could always imagine Årets Vakreste Bøker to be more a case of sharing out the prizes, and in the week after invite ten designers to come to talk about their projects. Because this would create a form of communication around the event. The same with Visuelt, they should try to make it more public-oriented, and not only a kind of internal seminars for designers. But I do not quite know how to achieve it. Oslo Comics Expo is one example, it is perhaps a little different with cartoons, but there it is the mass of enthusiasts who are interested in it. Perhaps Visuelt has been a bit too focused on the Hot Shot from abroad telling a successful story about how he works and it ends with that.
TTN It’s funny how, I think, that Årets Vakreste Bøker gets much more media coverage than Visuelt.
AGR I think that there are literary critics who write about Årets Vakreste Bøker. There are many book interested people who write about it. That is also a bit funny. In an old Visuelt, while I was a student, there was a book that came out, and someone in the field criticized it. It caused disruption within the design community because everybody knows each other, it is a small work field. It is perhaps not so small anymore.
TTN It is still quite small.
AGR It is still quite small, but back then it was like everyone knew everyone. We had worked with each other. And it was as if all of the teachers I had at art school were from the same generation, had all worked together at different times. The only positive was that they had different interests, different approaches on the subject. It was quite problematic that there was such a club. What happened was that there was one who wrote a critique of the book. And the criticism was really quite straightforward. He said that the exhibition was good, but the book was very poorly designed, which was problematic.
TTN He commented harshly on how the book was given shape.
AGR Yes that was what he primarily talked about. I think it is a bit the same as with Årets Vakreste Bøker. It is primarily written about because there are people who are interested in books and literature who write about it. Or that it is literature reviewers. I remember there was one year where there was a book by Knausgård or someone that won, and there was much talk about it. Media wrote things like “Knausgård won another award!”, and not about the designers of the book.
SR Årets Vakreste Bøker is one of the few prizes in Norway that goes to the designers of a book. There are something like 50 awards in Norway for books, but only one for the design of it.
TTN Yes, there is only one focused on the design of books.
SR When you mentioned that Årets Vakreste Bøker should incorporate more lectures or conversations, should it be more like festivals? I was just at BRNO, the graphic design Biennale in Czech Republic. They have an exhibition that stands over a longer period, with both student contributions and regular contributions, workshops, as well as a weekend of symposium and discussions.
TTN You were there one year, were you not?
AGR No. I was invited one year, but I was not there.
TTN There are not so many lecturers there? There are only four or five?
SR It was a bit more than that, we were there for three days. I was with NODE this summer. There were around 12 lectures during two days, also with openings in the evenings with the exhibitions.
AGR It is really a good role model for Grafill. Not all who work in the organization that have antennas for what happens. I’m sitting in a board for Grafill and each year, once a year, we meet at a dinner. There was once a discussion on whether Visuelt should go directly on TV, and I just thought that I do not think it is the way to go.
AGR I think that it might not be the right move for Grafill, but the organization is democratic. They ought certainly to have been in BRNO, seen how the Biennial is, I assume it is alright. Or the festival in Chaumont.
SR You think of poster festival in Chaumont.
AGR Is it still a poster festival.
SR The name still
AGR I think it’s very much like graphic design because that poster is not any longer so defined.. I think that Grafill should have been at the festivals and seen how things are done elsewhere.
TTN I think they go around occasionally.
AGR Martin was at least on D&AD and saw how it was. D&AD or Swiss Design are both awards that we think are very good, but there are certainly problematic things there as well. It is not certain that it is transferable to Norwegian conditions either, as Årets Vakreste Bøker. The book industry in Norway is running better than it does in other countries, and it is such a small market. Therefore, one must have subsidy schemes. In comparison, at the same award in Switzerland there are no categories. In Switzerland the winners are photo books, art books, silkscreen printed fanzines, a very different type than the winner in the Årets Vakreste Bøker in Norway. If the Norwegian competition was based on the same criteria as the Swiss one it would no longer be as interesting for the book industry.
TTN They do not care about silkscreen printed fanzines.
AGR And they might say that some in the book industry think it is very nice, but that’s not reality, it’s not like we can make money on it. Then one might just make the competition irrelevant to the book industry, and it is not what you want to achieve. One sincerely wants to perhaps honor participants, make book design applicable, and one wants the book industry to care about the price.
SR In Norway, it is perhaps more important to create confidence or attention, than it is to focus on niche markets. I think maybe Norway has changed much over the last four years, since I moved, with regard publishing, print and perhaps especially Grafill.
AGR But because of it think that it is good if Grafill is trying to change the two prizes, and they must try to change what they’re doing. But, it’s a little difficult to find a democratic way.
TTN Grafill may not be the correct outlet for everything. It would have been very strange on their website, for example, if it had published a very sharp criticism of some work a member of Grafill had done. So they have been in a somewhat difficult situation I think.
SR It is in their ethical guidelines that one should not criticize fellow members, in a negative sense, with the exception of constructive criticism. It has more ethical guidelines.
AGR It’s problematic.
TTN I think that the hardest part in Norway is that everyone knows each other. I think it is so that people don‘t want to step on each other’s toes. That those times where there has been any form of discussion, It has faded out pretty quickly. It’s hard to discuss with colleagues in such a small work field, there is little room to not be friends. Or what do you think?
AGR I do not have so many friends, but it is true.
SR If you compare it with England or the Netherlands, those countries provide more room for discussion because there are so many who are trained and work in the field that it is difficult to get that problem?
TTN It is a bit difficult to answer, really. But I think that many are afraid of being perceived as difficult to deal with, meaning that they might not get a job at a later date. I do not know.
AGR I think so.
SR In relation to Norway? Yes, I have previously thought that from the outside, Norwegian graphic design seems like a bunch of friends where it can be difficult to get in or get a job. It proved to be a wrong assumption. From a distance it seems at first that it is a small group, with the same names coming up, same designers, same clients. Is it because it is small environment?
TTN Those I hang with out with when I’m not at work are often designers, but it’s people who work in advertising agencies, others in large branding agencies, others work in small agencies like we do. If I then go out against anyone involved in a practice that is not right for me then, it becomes a little strange maybe.
SR I think it depends on how one understands the criticism, I think it can be different. This is why I want to talk to as many people as possible for this thesis. What should criticism be? I discovered when I started writing that criticism could certainly be as one reads it. But it might also be positive.
TTN Yes it could be positive criticism as well.
SR It can be about talking something up, direct attention. It follows then that one might think that there is something else that should not have this attention, but that makes it a criticism.
AGR Kritikk as a word, in Norwegian, has only negative connotations, while in English then it’s not the same. In English it may be a word that can be both positive and negative.
TTN I think it would have been very interesting if I had a criticism of anything I had done in the negative sense, just because, I do not know. It’s never happened to me. I do not think I know anyone that has experienced that.
AGR No I do not think so. I’ve rarely seen any writing on graphic design.
TTN One sees it more abroad. Experimental Jetset have got their first years slaughtered by Rick Poynor for example. That would not have happened in Norway.
SR It might come to Norway as well. We must find ways to express ourselves, and platforms in which to do so. It need not be the slaughter every time we say something. Do you think there is any room for graphic design festivals in Scandinavia?
TTN They call Visuelt a festival.
AGR Yes, they do. I said it to Martin last year. Can not you try to make Visuelt more audience friendly. Create a festival. If there is an organization that actually has the capacity to do so, it is Grafill. Not DogA or such. The organization is completely misguided. You could be able to get to it. Then he said that it was taking water over his head and he said “I don’t think so”. Then suddenly comes Visuelt festival… I understood nothing of it.
TTN I think Visuelt works. I did not pay a penny for Visuelt this year, so it could be that was the reason it felt better. But it had different lectures, close to Mathallen, workshops etc.
AGR I also thought that it worked surprisingly well, I was very skeptical beforehand.
TTN They had conversations, but there were a few things I did catch. I have not been to graphic design festivals abroad, so I do not know.
AGR Neither do I. So I do not know, but that’s where I think that Grafill may not always perceive things properly. They talk about getting a collaboration across Scandinavia, which I really think is very positive. It’s such a small area, that if you had a journal could equally well have been Swedish, Norwegian and Danish really. If you have a festival, it too could be that Norway is responsible one year, then Copenhagen and Stockholm etc. That could be a way to solve it. But it seems that in the organizations they visited, it is not always easy to know how they work. It could be that the organization in Sweden is as badly organized as DogA.
TTN The difference is that one does not know the industry in the different areas.
AGR I hope Visuelt will develop more in the direction we saw this year, only better. And they ought to go and see some of the other festivals that you talked about.
TTN What kind of festival was it you mentioned.
SR BRNO in Czech, but it is not coming until the year after next. Chaumont, and also the Design Week in Eindhoven and the Graphic Design Festival in Breda. Then there are also versions of a festival, more like gatherings, for example bring your own beamer events.
TTN It is in Oslo now, Bring your own beamer, at Mesh
AGR What is it?
TTN You can bring projects and beam it.
AGR It is the kind of things that has emerged now. During Visuelt there was suddenly also Webdagene, for web design and interactive design. Then there was the innovation week or something like that.
TTN I did not fully understand what it was.
AGR I read a bit about it in the newspaper. I also thought it was a bit strange that they have managed to add Visuelt at the same time as two other festivals. It’s not so tactical in a way. Grafill is a small organization and it is limited, so Visuelt was completely packed. In that regard it was no problem. They should maybe try to get the festival to be more visible in the cityscape. Or that people see it in greater degree.
TTN What I think is good with Visuelt it that they host it over two days and there is a big program. People take time off from work to go there, or their work will buy them tickets. You suddenly meet people who work in Bergen, Trondheim or Tromsø who come to Oslo, and one can meet colleagues one would not meet otherwise. I do not know so much about the program, or the festival in general. Now I’ll be a little careful here, but Grafill have quite a few things that happen. There are events based on volunteers, lectures and stuff, and that there are exhibitions. I think that it has become a gathering place that is quite important. And that much of the program that does not happen during Visuelt is quite interesting in a relation to the subject.
AGR In relation to Visuelt. The change that happened this year is positive I think. It should be that the festival managed to coordinate with other places. Perhaps they could collaborate with the art industry museum to have a retrospective about a graphic designer at the same time, or an exhibition of graphic design. Maybe they could have done it so that DogA had an exhibition at the same time.
TTN That was related.
AGR That was related to the subject. And the shows could have been on longer, so that the festival got a longer lifespan. Ok, it was intensively for two days. Same with Grafill, they had an exhibition there during Visuelt, and they probably will have every year now.
TTN I do not think they had one last year.
AGR No they actually closed last year.
TTN People coming all the way from Tromsø.
AGR They must have the gallery open I think. They ought to delegate things out to a greater extent. I’m thinking that if Grafill had called DogA and said, ‘can you put up a exhibition at this time’, said that they got an exhibit application last year which they think could have been at DogA during the festival. Asked them to contact him or her. I just think that they could always arrange so that there were some exhibitions and other events.
SR Oslo has many galleries, more than I am aware of. There must be someone that Grafill can work with, not just the largest ones.
AGR But I think many of the galleries are not interested in graphic design. They are just interested in art or photography.
TTN Graphic design is a bit like low culture.
AGR That’s it. And that is part of the reason why the media coverage is so poor. I think in Norway there is much more hierarchy than what is the case in other countries. Literature, visual arts and opera here are much more important, and graphic design is the absolute lowest.
TTN It is pretty much in-between.
AGR It is not true if you are a member of Norwegian artists. An older Norwegian designer said that it’s a bit of an honorable thing when you are a member of Norwegian artists. So he pays with delight the thousand NOK a year to be a member there. While this is not the reason people are members of Grafill. At least not yet. It probably never will be because it must be open and inclusive.
TTN I don’t know Grafill so well, but the organization probably does a lot of work that is not as visible.
AGR Grafill is very important. They do a good job in many areas.
TTN Managing scholarships and such.
AGR There was a shift in Norway, within the design environment, first in the 50s and then it was a big crash in the 70s where design, or it was not called design yet, the crafts movement forked at this point. You got crafts on the one hand and you got those who worked with industrial design on the other side. Where those who worked with crafts stood in their workshops, made ceramic cups and sold directly to a consumer, they were making art. The group went their way, and they got scholarships and governmental arrangements and became part of the art world. Those who were in the industrial design, they worked with mass produced furniture and needed no scholarships. It was said in a seminar a few weeks ago that there are scholarships within a subject/field, it allows one to operate in a slightly different way. One can get some other types of projects, one can do more research. Also located in scholarships, is recognition. When crafts has a scholarship, or art has a scholarship, it gives a sort of recognition and self-esteem to a subject. This is often important too. There I think that Grafill should work a little, get into government grant schemes.
TTN I think it is very divided within the graphic design industry. Some believe that this is a commercial vocation, we shall have no government support and pay artists. People should manage on their own. But then there are others who want to engage in a way, pay artists then have the desire to spend their time on things other than fierce commercial marketing. I think it is very divided today.
AGR It’s a very extreme tension.
SR Is there any distinction also within the schools?
AGR I do not know. I know Kunsthøyskolen best. It has been so badly run, and they have been so selective that there are only 15 students entering each year, and you must go through two rounds of auditions. It is an exhibition. It should be possible to pick up people who might be on to something, or seems a little talented. This I think results in a different type of person attending the school. At the same time the environment has been so bad that I think those who have gone there might not necessarily become adept because of school. But again they have perhaps gotten in contact with the other disciplines at school, which makes it very different than schools such as Westerdals. While Westerdals, for me, seems to have worked much better. A kind recruitment farm for agencies. The other schools I do not know, simply.
TTN I think it is clearer abroad. I do not know if it’s because schools are attempting to be more clear and to tell what they are doing. When I applied for schools here, I went to Westerdals. I did not know the difference between Westerdals and the Art Academy. It was a little accidental on my part, I knew someone who had gone to Westerdals. So when I applied there, I did not know what the difference was. I think that when you choose to go on Gerrit Rietveld then you have in a way made a more deliberate choice, they convey that they are taking a very alternative approach.
SR Perhaps because the Netherlands is a small country, with so many schools, the schools make sure to express their intention better?
AGR Perhaps it also creates a kind of competitive relationship between the schools that is healthy, they are working to get better. We visited lots of studios. The only thing that was good with KHiO, was that there was a professor who had contact with very many studios, and because of that we visited many. At one place, when we were in the Netherlands, I remember that they said that it varied very much between which schools were good at what time. Suddenly, for a period of two, three or four years there was a school that was doing well, suddenly there was another who took over and became the most interesting. It could be because it is such a small country.
SR I also think it is very healthy that final exhibitions of the schools are set to the same period. There is much fuss and high expectations around it.
TTN It is almost the same here, with Westerdals and KHiO being so close. I realised afterwards that Westerdals is like a recruitment school
AGR It may seem like that because Westerdals has art direction and has in a way been an advertising school, perhaps because of it. That if you go on graphic design there you suddenly know someone who attended the author department and get a job in one agency, while at art school you do not have it at all.
TTN But there can you the suddenly become acquainted with someone who became a curator
AGR Yes that is true, and that is probably what makes them different.