What Can I Do?

To avoid being a hypocrite I can…..


If graphic design is a truly significant cultural, social, and economic force, then it has the potential to be a subject of wider academic (and public) interest, but it will need to be framed and presented in ways that relate to the concerns of viewers who are not designers — that is, to most viewers. As habitually inward-looking custodians of their own history, few graphic design educators have proven to be effective at this outward-looking, viewer-oriented style of writing and public address.9292. Poynor
‘Out of the studio: Graphic design history and visual Studies’
Design Observer [webpage]


This part of my thesis focuses on the potential changes I can attempt to create by modifying the environment in Norway, solutions and suggestions that present graphic design criticism in a broader sense, as everything encompassing criticism. Where the “viewers”, as Rick Poynor here calls them, can relate to the content. To understand what is presented and find some interest in it. “In Norway, there has been little historic research done into the field of graphic design. As a young nation, Norway – like graphic design – is freed from a long history and the possible restrictions that history can bring with it.”9393. Bore and Raein
En Form for Historie, p.5
The profession should take itself seriously, we should write academic articles, we should write our own history, we should create content for this history and try take advantage of the fact that we are ‘freed’ from the past. But to do all of this, we need to make it approachable. I bring in the Oxford dictionary again: to be ‘approachable means to be friendly and easy to talk to’. Synonyms used to describe this term are ‘friendly, welcoming, communicative, open, helpful; informal, easy-going, accessible, available’. These are wonderful terms to use to describe our profession, and I want them to be automatically associated to our field of work. How can I do this?


With these synonyms in mind, I set out to think of events, situations, articles and inspirations I could use to create an environment where graphic design criticism would be able to evolve into a subject that is of interest to viewers who are not designers. Playfulness was the first idea that came to mind.



Guerrilla Pecha Kucha


Pecha Kucha is an international concept that has been well received and developed in most countries supporting the arts. It is also a concept that has been able to become a strong foundation in Norway, taking place in most of the bigger cities. In Oslo it is hosted by DogA, The Norwegian Centre for Design and Architecture, where it is filmed, documented and archived on the websites of one of Norway’s biggest newspapers, Aftenposten. Pecha Kucha talks are collected and archived in much the same way I would imagine that graphic design articles, film snippets and other documentation could be. It is interesting for people of all backgrounds, educational, sometimes informative and other times just for fun. It is a source for knowledge for sharing and for developing the community. I looked through all the Pecha Kuchas that were available online and found only one related to graphic design, talking about how designers should organise their lives to function better as people, but also as designers. An interesting talk in itself, but the fact that this was the only one made me consider the possibility of curating a Pecha Kucha. For this, I would invite a set of speakers to talk about different aspects of graphic design, covering the range of the profession, from exhibitions, to history, teaching, workshops, writing, social responsibility and more marketing-related topics. Reaching out to those who are interested to show the variety of people involved and the variation of projects.


Benjamin Walter wrote that “the most extraordinary quality of the archive is its transmissibility, meaning its potential to become and be used for something else.”9494. Bore and Raein
En Form for Historie, p.5
A part of this project would be to document the presentations, on film, and make the talks available on the online newspapers. In this way, infiltrating the already existing archive, as well as gathering the talks and presentations to make a publication that would be distributed during a future Pecha Kucha. I would not only be hoping, but expecting for this to do as Walter Benjamin said; become something else.



One Night Only


Compared to other similar disciplines, like product design, architecture or photography, there are relatively few exhibitions about graphic design. Anna Craemer wrote on her website that “the purpose of museums and galleries is to conserve, educate or entertain.”9595. Craemer
‘How to save Kemistry Gallery?’
Philosophy of Design [webpage], (2014)
It is not only educating the general public, it is about educating graphic designers. “Posters, collected and saved have always been one of the most prominent and important media in graphic design and it’s history.”9696. Martha Scotford
‘Is there a canon for graphic design’
Graphic Design History in the Writing, p.38
It is a way of sharing present and past history. “I learned by looking at pictures” Paul Rand said, but looking at reproductions never gives the same experiences as viewing the real work.


Today, graphic design can be found in museums and galleries. “The objects do not have the same material value, are not as collectible and do not have the same display potential as three-dimensional forms of design. Of course, books, posters and album covers are collected, displayed in the home and treasured for their nostalgic qualities, but in the museums they are not big crowd-pullers compared to the other applied arts.”9797. Bridget Wilkins
‘Why is design history so obsessed by appearance?’
Graphic design history in the writing, p.70
There are a few important galleries, museums and institutions collecting and presenting graphic design. For example, we have The Museum Of The Image in Breda (NL), the Kemistry Gallery in London (UK), Walker Art Centre in Minneapolis (USA), The Poster Museum at Wilanów (PL), as well as festivals and biennials such as the Chaumont International Poster and Graphic Design Festival (FR), the International Biennial of Graphic Design Brno (CZ) and the Graphic Design Festival Scotland. They aim provide opportunities for people to learn, develop skills and grow, as well as empowering graphic and visual designers. It is about bringing graphic design into the public domain, perhaps in a different context than the way in which we normally approach the public space. These events are about creating connections, increasing communication and setting industry standards. It is about creating links between the inside and outside of graphic design as well as links within.


Craemer continued by asking: “So why are there not more graphic design exhibitions? Like every product or service, it’s success depends on ‘supply and demand’. It would be easy, to blame the ignorant public for the little demand for graphic design exhibitions – of not seeing the importance of more access to graphic design education.”9898. Creamer
‘How to save Kemistry Gallery?’
philosophy of design [webpage], (2014)
Her conclusion was that the general public is not the target group. Graphic designers are. Once again touching on the comments of Kristina Ketola Bore “It can’t just be in the one place, it needs to be triggered and fueled by something and so, when there are so little critical activities happening in the field itself, it doesn’t lend itself easily to write about.”9999. Interview with Yokoland There needs to be a system of supply and demand for museums and galleries to exhibit graphic design, and there is by no means a lack of it to exhibit. The final question, Craemer wrote, is why are so few graphic designers interested in learning more about graphic design? To keep the Kemistry Gallery alive, not only money is needed, but a bigger craving for graphic design education.100100. One Night Only, Aftenposten [webpage], (15.mai. 2014) In relation to Norway, Aslak Gurholt Rønsen proposed: “Try to get it more audience friendly. Create a festival. If there is an organization that actually has the capacity to do it, then it is Grafill.”101101. One Night Only, Aftenposten [webpage], (15.mai. 2014)


What do I suggest to do about this? How to increase interest for education, for exhibiting graphic design? The answer is make it short and sweet. I suggest that the graphic design profession in Norway should learn from the concept One Night Only Gallery (ONO), an artist run gallery space that was established in Oslo in 2008. Every Monday for six years they have opened a new exhibition. The works of art are collected in a website that functions as an archive. “We discovered how valuable the website is, with all the documentation of younger artists that normally you don’t find access to see their works.”102102. One Night Only
Aftenposten [webpage]
(15th May 2014 ).


It is possible to look at the programs, at the artists that have exhibited and their work. There is added text and press releases. The archive is supposed to be a resource for artists, press and people outside of the field and by creating a digital resource of artists, both old and new, it becomes more approachable for those outside of the art circle. It is a concept of sharing knowledge about a profession that often finds itself at a distance from the general public, much like graphic design. Important to mention is that their website comes across as more than a portfolio collection, this is because it is a project of interest in both what is going on outside of the art field as much as it is about those who work within it. The concept is easy to copy and recently they developed two new branches, one in Switzerland and one in Lithuania. Together with the other international branches, they swap exhibitions, even though they have a low budget. They said in a presentation that “it was hard to start, we had to force people to exhibit, now we have to decline.”103103. One Night Only
Aftenposten [webpage]
(15th May 2014 ).
Meaning that once the concept was developed and the groundwork was built, both artists and audience acknowledge the value of such an exhibition space and initiative.104104.One Night Only Gallery (ONO) is a artist run gallery space run by Tito Frey, Jon Benjamin Tallerås, Andreas Oxenvad and Mohammed Ali Fadlabi. ONO was established in September 2008 and since April 2013 they have based their program at Kunstnernes Hus premises. ONO might possibly be Norway’s most active gallery. Every Monday for six years they have opened a new exhibition. This is their format, their exhibitions last for one night only, and next week a new show opens. The continuous and repetitive format creates a social platform for young emerging artists to meet, eat, and discuss. They constitute a connection between emerging artists and the audience as well as exposing the work to curators, collectors and colleagues, urging original ideas and providing many young artists with their first solo show. Their main program is based on an open call for applications, where anyone can apply. This makes their gallery very democratic, and whom we choose to exhibit is based on artistic quality and potential. In addition to their main program, they also curate exhibitions. At this time they are presenting their weekly One Night Only exhibitions at Kunsternes Hus, an artist run institution with a focus on contemporary art. One Night Only for graphic design in Oslo could be hosted by Grafill (the organization for visual communication), as they already have a gallery space. Perhaps it could be developed as a branch of the original One Night Only concept?



A percentage of time


Imagine that every design studio donated a small percentage of its time and resources to “the public cause” however they perceive it – this single act would help take back some of the public domain that is so dominated by advertising in its blandest form. (…) Design can be a potent tool to channel these peripheries back to the centre of the civil discourse of democracy , the agora, the marketplace of ideas and opinions which is the public domain. That, ultimately, is what responsible designers, as cultural agents, should aim at: Keeping the eyes and minds of their fellow citizens wide open.105105. Bruinsma
‘Culture agents’, p.60


Imagine that every designer did what Max Bruinsma here suggests, contribute a percentage of time and resources to the “public cause” however they see it. What do we care about? How do we translate that? What medium would we use? Who would we talk to? What will it look like? With a percentage of time I want to create an environment where designers bring what they themselves find important to the table, in various formats, a collection of contributions. The collected results would perhaps be archived in a website, presented as a One Night Only, or shared in a different manner. One single act, that might become a part of a bigger picture.


To get the ball rolling, I would contact Westerdals, KHiO and other art schools and ask them to send it to their students, as well as graphic design studios in Norway, publishers, journalists and critics. What can they contribute? Will I receive anything? Either way, the result will be visual and able to tell me something about the intentions of the profession in Norway.



The ongoing dialogue


Often mentioned in my research is the importance of a continuous dialogue between designers; a discussion about styles, forms, content and creation. An opening to consider graphic design in the bigger context and a way of venting our minds for potential new solutions. Through this dialogue, new ways of working and new discoveries can be made. As of late, there is continuous dialogues on graphic design, both internationally and nationally, and some of it is already recorded and published for viewers to see.


I would like to suggest a continuous visual dialogue. Designers often talk together, we work together, we create our own content together. There are many examples that I think of to draw from. The Royal Chess Club at the Royal Academy of Art, the Hague is one good example of dialogues creating a better work environment and increasing the interest in public dialogue and sharing. The Art Of Conversation: London — Berlin is another example I would like to draw from. It showcased specially created, original work from a selected group of 20 young and established designers and design studios and exhibited the results in well-respected, large scale gallery spaces in both London and Berlin. On their Vimeo page they described the project as “The participants, 10 London based design studios and 10 Berlin based design studios, will play a visual game of Chinese Whispers, each will be involved in one stage of this chain. They will receive something from the previous participant in the chain and then respond to it, interpret it and forward their results to the next participant.”106106. The Art of Conversation
[webpage], (2010)


In both of these final projects, the dialogue is central, and it functions as a catalyst for both sharing work with those outside of graphic design as inviting professionals and students alike to contribute. The content is created and curated by the participants which leads to the end result varying, both visually and contextual. In projects like this, you as the viewer, get full access to the thought process, and the potential end results inspire me, and I believe it has the ability to do so for many others. Like the Royal Chess Club started out as a small concept at an art school in the Hague, it has been growing fast, and maybe it is creating a new sense of community. Drawing from this I would like to create dialogs between designers in Norway. Letting them take part, in collaborative work, in exhibiting and publishing.