There is something fundamentally wrong with the way typography
is taught. Graphic design curricula seem to dismiss the value
of typography within design education, and instructors virtually
abandon pupils as they attempt to navigate through the process.
Students are taught—incorrectly—that typography is a sideline
skill, rather than part of the core of the graphic design profession.
Typographic knowledge and wisdom should be attained
through a comprehensive approach to visual and verbal communication.
In most educational institutions, however, students try
to find the easy way out, usually by asking which book on typography
they should read so type will instantly make sense. While
educators cannot make learning typography any quicker or easier,
they can help students learn the craft in a way that will encourage
investigation within a greater realm of communication.
Debbie Cheung at the “wood type wall” at the University
of Reading Department of Typography.
In 1971 James Craig dedicated the first edition of his book
Designing With Type to “every student who had to take typography
and hated it.” This candid statement was toned down in the fourth
edition to “every student who had to take typography and learned
to love it.” The current, fifth edition is simply “dedicated to a new
generation of graphic designers.” It is disappointing to see how
Craig’s powerful statement has eroded when, nearly 40 years and
numerous technological advances later, his original assertion still
holds. Students continue to dislike their typography classes. The
problem is that this is more a failing of the teaching and curricula
than of the students.
In the majority of graphic design educational programs, typography
is still taught as a linear process with a primarily aesthetic
goal, and not as a communication method that utilizes a gathering
of related subjects and methodologies. Since typography could
be viewed as a thick slice of a layered cake that includes sociology,
linguistics, psychology, aesthetics and much more, no single
approach can be relevant.
A POSITIVE REACTION
While I had long harbored a desire to change how typography
is taught, I wanted even more to change how typography
is learned—and so began Type Camp. Type Camp aims to educate
with the understanding that there is no single approach that
applies to everything. To accomplish this, Type Camp needs to be
flexible and relaxing and, at the same time, invigorating and interesting.
And it really has to feel like camp.
Theresa Wong examines the Kelmscott Chaucer at the St. Bride Library in London.
Type Camp brings students and instructors back to a childhood
summer camp environment where they are encouraged
to explore physically and mentally while escaping the workaday
world … but it’s also about just having fun. Type Camp has
to be the antithesis of the environment that design schools have
become. It must provide an atmosphere that seeks experimentation—not the typical school-based goal of perfection that leaves
no room for investigation and exploration. The first Type Camp,
held in the summer of 2007 on Galiano Island, off the coast of
Vancouver, B.C., met all of these goals.
FREEDOM OF (TYPOGRAPHIC) CHOICE
Type Camp can be whatever the camper needs it to be. It can be
rigid, filled with close guidance and detailed critique provided by
instructors, or it can be days of experimentation with just helpful hints and suggestions. Type Camp’s overreaching goal is to be
an enriching experience full of new ideas and subject matter. It
can even be quite silly, with late-night games of typographic charades
to act out tricky terms such as “boustrophedon,” “em dash”
and “glyph.”
Of course, Type Camp is also a connector, with campers making
friends and professional associations that last far beyond the
days spent on the island. One of the constants of Type Camp
Galiano is that it is beautiful, filled with walks along the island’s
mountain ridges and scenic beaches. At its core, however, Type
Camp is more than just an enjoyable annual event; it is a reaction.
Type Campers gather in the lodge for morning discussions on newspaper design.
TYPE CAMP TRAVELS TO LONDON
Last year the Galiano camp was supplemented with Type Camp
London. The latter event featured five days of modern and historical
typographic treasure hunting, concluding with the annual
Typography Conference at the famous St. Bride Library. The vast
collections at the St. Bride Library cover all aspects of printing—paper and binding, graphic design, typography, typefaces and calligraphy.
A bonus was the opportunity for the London students
to bypass the customary study of history-book reproductions by
experiencing the original artifacts at the St. Bride Library. This
allowed the campers to decide for themselves where they (and
their heroes) fall within the continuum of graphic communication.
DIVERSITY & CHANGE
Type Camp will never be the same experience twice. The projects
and events of 2007 will not be repeated in 2008. One reason why
is that instructors and campers change every year. Campers are
kept to low numbers so they can best explore their ideas with as
much—or as little—guidance as they wish. Instructors have varied
educational backgrounds and differing professional approaches,
the more divergent the better.
At the two events held last year, attendees came from Canada,
the U.S., Norway and China. They ranged from seasoned professionals
with over 20 years of experience to junior designers still
considering their future profession. Participants experimented
and explored, succeeded and failed—all while discovering (or
rediscovering) a passion for typography.
Students and instructors of Type Camp Galiano spend the afternoon at the beach at Montague Harbor on Galiano Island.
MORE CAMPS IN 2008
In 2008, there will be four separate Type Camps—and if interest
requires, additional specialized short-term and weeklong events
will be organized. An example is Type Camp Information Design,
an effort to make the rapidly emerging discipline of Information
Design more accessible to students and design instructors.
The traveling aspect of the camp will be expanded, with a Type
Camp India complementing another session of Type Camp London.
Type Camp India will be a two-week design studio where
students will be immersed in the rich typographic culture of
Southern India. This camp will explore the visual design of information
within a cultural context. It’s a powerful example of how
Type Camp can help design and typography students gain access
to vast and awe-inspiring resources in settings beyond the school
library or city gallery.
PART OF A GREATER WHOLE
Type Camp is just one response to a greater need for the reform
of typographic education. Graphic design programs must rethink
the integration of all aspects of the typographic profession into
their curricula. Until this happens, there will always be a need for
Type Camp. It is my hope, however, that Type Camp will move
beyond its founding as a reaction to lackluster typographic educational
approaches and become a catalyst for every design student
to learn not only what is, but what could be.
www.typecamp.org