REMEMBER THEM, 2006 (TOP RIGHT): HAMMER WAS ONE
OF A NUMBER OF DUTCH ARTISTS AND DESIGNERS WHO
WERE MOVED TO DONATE THEIR EFFORTS TO AN ANNIVERSARY
POSTER EXHIBITION COMMEMORATING IMMIGRANTS
WHO DIED IN A FIRE AT A CLOSED DETENTION FACILITY
AT AMSTERDAM’S SCHIPHOL AIRPORT. BUT THE CONTEST
WAS AIMED AT EMERGING CREATIVE TALENT, SO HAMMER
AGREED NOT TO BE CREDITED FOR HIS DESIGN WORK AND
WITHDREW FROM THE FORMAL COMPETITION. INSTEAD, HE
SUGGESTED THE POSTERS BE TURNED INTO A POSTCARD
SERIES THAT COULD BE SOLD TO RAISE MONEY FOR THE
FAMILIES OF THE FIRE VICTIMS.
2001: A PUBLIC SPACE ODYSSEY (FAR RIGHT), CLIENT: AMSTERDAMS
FONDS VOOR DE KUNST
LES INDES GALANTES, 2004 (LOWER LEFT AND CENTER):
TWO POSTERS ANNOUNCING THE OPERA-BALLET
LES INDES GALANTES. THE TWO PARTS CAN BE USED SEPARATELY
OR IN COMBINATION.
IK GA TERUG EN KOM NOOIT MEER WEG (“I WILL GO BACK
AND NEVER BE LEAVING”), 2002: PROPOSAL FOR FILM
POSTER, CLIENT: ESTHER EVA DAMEN
THREE GOOD REASONS
Hammer believes there are three reasons to take on a project:
“First, if you are interested in it, and you see a necessity in doing it;
second, if you like or are in love with the person you are working
with; and third, because you are making money.” This simple construct
governs his approach to the business of design. He believes
at least two of his criteria should be present in order to start a job,
but he acknowledges that there are times when even this basic
principle is almost impossible to put into practice.
Hammer uses a system of give-and-take, balancing monetary
compensation and personal passion. “If you do an unpaid project
one week, then you need to take on a paid project the next, and
even if you aren’t interested in the content, you can make good
design. The interest in design [itself] can make it a worthwhile
thing to do.”
For someone who acquires material possessions only sparingly,
Hammer has an incredible knack for enlisting others to
contribute to causes that matter to him. Both Apple and Adobe
donated products to the last major education program he was
part of. And, in an unusual turning of the tables for designer and
producer, printers readily work free of charge, and paper companies
are eager to donate materials to projects Hammer believes
are important.
THE CONCEITS OF “DESIGN”
Many of the projects he takes on seem to have activist motivations
or political content. Yet Hammer denies he ever conceived of himself
as a politically driven designer. Finally agreeing that it is possible
to see his work in such a light, given the various causes that
he has been associated with, Hammer maintains that the work he
does is based purely on interests at the time. When asked whether
it matters that not all designers have the same level of competence
or passion for their work, he replies that since only about three
percent of materials produced are created by a designer, there is
more than enough work for everyone, regardless of skill and talent.
2001: A PUBLIC SPACE ODYSSEY (TOP LEFT): CLIENT: AMSTERDAMS FONDS VOOR DE KUNST
MAGAZINE COVER FOR PARS, PILOT ISSUE, 2004 (TOP CENTER)
AAA OOH É, SECOND EDITION, 1998 (TOP RIGHT): THIS SELFPUBLISHED
AWARD-WINNING BOOKLET USES ONLY ONE
WORD TO VISUALIZE THE SOUNDSCAPE OF AN APPLAUDING
AUDIENCE. FIRST EXHIBITED AT MAISON DU LIVRE ET DU
SON, LYON, FRANCE. HAMMER DID IT BY FORCING HIMSELF
TO WORK ON 10 PAGES A DAY FOR THREE MONTHS. ONCE HE
HAD COMPLETED 300 SEPARATELY DESIGNED SPREADS, HE
LAID THE PAGES OUT ON THE FLOOR AND CHOSE ONE PAGE
AT A TIME.
3-PIXEL TYPEFACE: THE 3-PIXEL FONT WAS USED TO CREATE
A SERIES OF SITE-SPECIFIC LOGOS. THE LETTERHEAD DIFFERS
FROM THE ON-SCREEN VERSION OF THE IDENTITY, AND BOTH
ARE COMPLETELY DIFFERENT FROM HOW THE CLIENT’S NAME
APPEARS ON THE LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE OFFICE. THE
POSTER WAS LATER EXHIBITED ON PLAYPLAYPLAYPLAY.COM
AND AT THE TYPO GALLERY, AMSTERDAM. DESIGNER: MELLE
HAMMER; WRITER: MELLE HAMMER. TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH
IN COLLABORATION WITH K. MICHEL AND HANS KLOOS. CLIENTS:
BUREAU ALLE HOSPER, RICK VALICENTI/SATORU NIHEI, EWALD
SPIEKER/TYPO GALLERY AMSTERDAM.
He defends the work of less-talented designers, saying, “We
want them all!” And he expands on that statement, adding, “There
is no place for elitism in design. Designers should not consider
themselves to be better than the client, the audience or the consumer.”
He suggests that vision too purely concerned with the conceits
of “Design” will often result in work that is not applicable for
its intended use. “One should be judged on whether a design fits
into the environment in which it is to exist!”
SATISFACTION AND SUCCESS
A frequent lecturer at U.S. design schools and former instructor
at one of the Netherlands’ most-respected design schools, the Jan
van Eijck Academy, Hammer’s effect on students is hypnotic. He
begins by telling students to forget about being famous or making
money. Instead he encourages each individual to look for a way
to be happy with what he or she is doing. “I will seduce you and
teach you a way to grow, [to learn] who you are, what your talents
are and where you belong.”
Hammer directs young people to “be happy with your spot in
this world and challenge yourself. One thing is not less valid than
another.” A surprising commonality among Hammer’s former
students is that they are all professionally (and often monetarily)
successful ... a fact that Hammer, a man who rarely admits triumph,
is very proud of.
CASE IN POINT #2
Hammer has had a decade-long and sometimes rocky relationship
with the Dutch publisher Uitgeverij (Contact). First challenged
to promote a new series of work by young writers, Hammer conceived
of a purely typographic solution. He stripped the covers of
distracting bar codes and paragraph descriptions and packaged
the series in plastic so the books could only be purchased as a set.
The price point was high and the covers, partially hidden in their
packaging, were enticing. The first and second printings each sold
out in one day and the books became collectible, as much for their
innovative design as for their content.
(FAR LEFT) HAMMER’S 2004 “DRESS TO CELEBRATE A GARDEN” PAIRS A TRADITIONAL BUTTON-DOWN
SHIRT WITH A TUNIC-LIKE SKIRT OF THE SAME MATERIAL. TO ACHIEVE THE COLORFUL RIOT
OF PATTERNED SPOTS, DUTCH FEDERAL STANDARD CAMOUFLAGE COLORS WERE “TRANSLATED”
INTO THE FOUR-COLOR PROCESS COLORS (CMYK) AND THE SCREEN WAS ENLARGED.
THE RESULTING PATTERN WAS PRINTED ON CLOTH AND USED FOR GIANT BILLBOARDS AND
FLAGS AS WELL AS THE SUIT. SHOCKING CONSERVATIVE AMERICAN AUDIENCES—INCLUDING
DESIGN STUDENTS—HAMMER OFTEN WEARS THE GARB WHEN HE SPEAKS PUBLICLY. INITIALLY
SUSPICIOUS OF ANY “MAN DRESSED IN A SKIRT,” STUDENTS ARE NONETHELESS CAPTIVATED
BY HAMMER’S IDEAS ON DESIGN AND OBVIOUS DEDICATION TO HIS WORK.
CD SLEEVE AND INVITATION CARD (TOP RIGHT): A BIRTHDAY PRESENT FOR A “FIFTYAND-
A-HALF ANNIVERSARY”
OSO HALFWAY HOME (BOTTOM RIGHT): HAMMER COLLABORATED WITH JEWELRY DESIGNER
ERNA ANEMA AND DRESSMAKER/TAILOR AHMED OSO TO CREATE A SMALL LINE
OF COUTURE CLOTHING MADE FROM LEFTOVER MOVING BLANKETS HAMMER HAD LYING
AROUND AFTER A JEWELRY DISPLAY SYSTEM HE HAD DESIGNED WITH THE BLANKETS WAS
REJECTED FOR BEING TOO EXPERIMENTAL. THE PERSONAL AND THE PROFESSIONAL ARE
OFTEN BLURRED IN HAMMER’S WORK, AND SEVERAL MONTHS LATER, HE WAS INSPIRED TO
TURN THEM INTO SOMETHING USEFUL. (PHOTOS BY ERNA ANEMA)
DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION OF A CHAIR (TOP CENTER) 1999: FOR THE EXHIBITION “GREEN:
... A WALK THROUGH SEVEN GARDENS.” FOR EACH GARDEN, AN ARTIST AND A DESIGNER
WERE INVITED TO INSTALL A WORK. SAYS HAMMER, “I DECIDED TO LEAVE THE GARDEN FOR
WHAT IT WAS AND INSTEAD FILL THE STREETS CONNECTING THE GARDENS WITH AS MANY
CHAIRS AS POSSIBLE. I MANAGED TO PRODUCE 100 CHAIRS. BY OFFERING A CHAIR TO EACH
VISITOR, I PROPOSED THEY SIT, RELAX AND WATCH THE GARDEN UNTOUCHED, BECAUSE I
HAVE NOTHING TO ADD TO A GARDEN.” BELOW IS A STENCIL TYPEFACE DESIGN FOR THE
CHAIRS SAYING “RESERVED.”
LOGO, 2006 (CENTER BOTTOM): FOR PAPIERPRAAT (IN ENGLISH, “PAPERTALKS”), CLIENT:
PAPIERPRAAT.NL
Unfortunately, when people took the time to read the works in
the collection, their response was less than favorable. It turned out
that the design was too sophisticated for the writing, and critics
complained that the glitzy packaging and elegant typography promised
more than the first-time authors could deliver. The publisher
worried no one would read the authors’ second books after the negative
publicity generated by the first ones, and Hammer was fired for
creating a campaign that was too successful for his client!
Five years later, when Contact decided to introduce a line of
poetry, the series editor felt that Hammer’s design would complement
the years of work that these writers put into each book.
Both the poets and their designer subsequently received critical
acclaim, including an award for De Best Verzorgde Boeken (the Best
of Book Design), which, for the first time, recognized work that
was both well presented and well written.
The trend is increasingly established. More recently, some
Dutch poets have left their publishers, preferring to be represented
by Contact. Rival publishing houses have taken to employing
designers who, like Hammer, employ their skills to give visual
voice to a writer’s work. Riding on his recent success, Hammer is
facilitating talks between Dutch poets, printers and paper companies—suggesting that poetry would make excellent content for
promotional pieces and that the industry should begin an informal
patronage of these writers. Final decisions have not been made,
but his history suggests that if the first try isn’t successful, Hammer
will simply approach the problem from a new angle … and
once again find inspiration in adversity.
THE NEXT AESTHETICS
Hammer denies that his goals and aspirations are very different
from other people’s. He loves good food and wine. He admires well-designed
objects and has detailed plans for how he would renovate
his kitchen to create the perfect cooking environment. And yet his
home/studio includes few nonessentials. While he may covet beautiful
things as much as the next person, none of these earthly desires
have a strong enough pull to make him abandon his ideals. Instead,
he continues to work on causes that he finds “easy to join,” and suggests
that ethics will be the next aesthetics.
who you are, what your talents are and where you belong.”