REAL-LIFE MAD MEN
Nancy Sharon Collins discovered a tantalizing piece of graphic design history
in a ‘60s-era slide show. Accompanied by music and a voiceover, the images
in this vintage dog-and-pony exercise promoted work done by members
of a southern Louisiana precursor organization to the AIGA. “These
guys, some of whom are in their 80s and 90s, tell the total
Mad Men story,”
says Collins, director of special projects at AIGA New Orleans. “Two of
them used to get together for three-martini lunches.” Even more captivating
than those midday cocktails is the work these gentlemen helped create.
There’s an appealingly earnest quality to the identities, food packages,
annual reports and posters in the slide show—not to mention
the period custom typography. And Collins has spent the past
two years making sure none of these gems—or the stories and people
behind them—are lost. She’s working with AIGA New Orleans
and several other institutions on the History of Graphic Design
in South Louisiana. This ambitious three-part project includes an
in-progress documentary film, an online oral history archive and
a living database that allows anyone to add design work from the
locale and era. www.aiganeworleans.org/initiatives/history

OBSCURED VIEW
If you’ve received a bank statement in the mail lately, the envelope
was probably lined with a data protection pattern to hide the stuff
inside from would-be snoops. It’s the kind of thing most people
don’t give a second glance, but architect Jürgen Mayer H. collects
these obscure pieces of graphic design. And you can see how they
influence his work at Patterns of Speculation: J. Mayer H., an exhibit
that runs through July 7 at the San Francisco Museum of Modern
Art. The show combines video documentation of architecture
with an immersive sound and visual environment that essentially
drops you inside a data protection pattern. www.sfmoma.org

CONSUMER CONFIDENCE
It’s the ultimate (and axiomatic) reference:
the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval.
Your grandma probably finds it just as
trustworthy as you do. But this iconic
mark has actually evolved eight times
over the years, with the most recent
update completed for its 100th
anniversary this year. “I wanted
the seal to look as though it
had always been there,” says
Louise Fili, president of Louise
Fili Ltd, “classic but not retro,
and in a style that exudes reassurance
and trust.” She gave the new
seal timeless appeal by combining
its traditional star and oval with a
modern type aesthetic employing
Neutraface. Look for the new
endorsement on packages in retail
aisles near you.

LOVE ME FOR MY MIND
Ziba’s clients kept paying the
firm the same compliment:
We like how you think. So
this Portland design company
replaced its holiday
greeting with a gift of content.
Their strategy recently
took the form of two tantalizing
cardboard packages—one mailed in December,
the second in February—that were blind embossed
with the question, “How will
you be?” Ripping the packages
open revealed answers in the form of three small brochures, each
outlining a different trend for 2009. Rather than boring recipients with
MBA-speak, each accordion-fold piece feels like a miniature magazine,
drawing the reader in with simple touchstone words to describe the
trend. The first batch covers ugly, old and happy while the second tackles
me, we and human. Inside is the big-picture view, with happy defined
as moving from “feeling good in 2008” to “doing good in 2009.” An intriguing
mix of text and images fleshes out each concept, leaving the
impression that Ziba is both smart and sexy. http://trends.ziba.com

SEX, DRUGS & ROCK POSTERS
From March 21 through July 19, the Denver
Art Museum will turn itself into a graphic design
time machine, exhibiting posters that
might be more at home illuminated by black
lights and lava lamps. The Psychedelic Experience:
Rock Posters from the San Francisco Bay
Area, 1965–1971 brings together more than 250
posters from the free-love era. With wild colors,
flowing type and trippy illustrations, these
posters can take you on a hallucinatory journey
without any illegal substances. And if
you’re in a more professional mode, you can
see how the era’s designers promoted everything
from Grateful Dead concerts to poetry
readings featuring the likes of Allen Ginsberg.
www.denverartmuseum.org

MMMM, BEER
Let’s raise a glass and toast the first-ever Flash on Tap conference.
Much like a black and tan, it layers one good thing atop
another: an impressive slate of design and development speakers
over a craft beer festival. This genius idea came from a Boston
Flash users group whose members voiced frustration with the lack
of networking opportunities at other conferences. An avid brewer
among their ranks responded with the idea for a design/beer festival,
and now you’ll be able to improve your professional skills with
social lubricant in hand. Study up on your hops and ActionScript
May 28–30 in Boston. www.flashontap.com

TRAVELING LOUNGE ACT
While you can rack up credit card charges at the RocPopShop, the real point of this elaborate
mobile store is to give you a taste of the Jay-Z experience. “The concept was not
to make a full-fl edged store,” says David Ashen, principal of D-ASH, a New York-based
architecture firm. “We thought the space should look more like a lounge.” In other words,
the kind of space where the superstar rapper might actually hang out.
So the design team combined clothes from Jay-Z’s Rocawear line with luxe mohair
couches, a 46-inch flatscreen TV and stereo system, and a custom gaming zone. And they
managed to fit all these upscale trappings into an expandable trailer that makes appearances
at concerts and fashion events around the country. At one venue, Jay-Z even gave the space
the ultimate endorsement by kicking it there with his friends. www.davidashendesign.com

SITE VISIT
Surely there’s no better place to immerse yourself in an architect’s
design approach than inside one of his greatest creations.
Frank Lloyd Wright: From Within Outward lets you explore the master’s
ideas about space—he believed form and function are one—from within the spiraling shapes of the Solomon R. Guggenheim
Museum in New York. You’ll be able to view more than 200 original
drawings along with models, photographs, correspondence,
videos and digital renderings—all while surrounded by a building
that feels just as modern as when it was finished 50 years ago. The
exhibit runs May 15 through Aug. 23. www.guggenheim.org

SHIGEO FUKUDA, THE IMPOSSIBLE MAN: 1932–2009
“All in life,” Samuel Beckett once wrote, “is figure and ground.” No one in recent memory has exemplified this truth better than Shigeo Fukuda, the Japanese master of duality, who died Jan. 11 at the
age of 76. Illusionist, sculptor, graphic designer, maker of “impossible objects,” winner of multiple international
prizes for poster design, design activist and advocate, teacher, ICOGRADA board member,
Japanese national treasure ... the short list of professional accomplishments, no matter how
impressive, seems to do him a slight disservice. But even a detailed list would bring one no closer to
fully appreciating the man.
Fukuda was indisputably a character of his own design. He was
a man whose reputation as a visual artist was equaled by his reputation
as a performing artist. For three days last June, when he
served on the jury of the first Chicago International Poster Biennial,
I was able to observe something of the man who many have
referred to as a “prankster.”
Fukuda arrived in Chicago on a Thursday afternoon, at the end
of a long flight from Tokyo. He checked into his hotel and walked
the length of the Magnificent Mile, both ways. Upon returning
to his room, he attempted to take a nap but was awakened by the
phone—his translator wanted to know if he would like to come
downstairs to join his fellow jurors for a get-to-know-you cocktail.
Five minutes later he walked into the bar wearing a huge smile and
the Cubs T-shirt he had purchased during his walk. Everyone in
the room embraced him.
For the remainder of his stay he was never far from the center
of attention. We saw Fukuda exhort the jury, sing during a dinner
party and demand that we compete in a game of skill to see who
would win the gifts he brought. He cried tears of happiness in public,
put on a dress and danced with my wife, and signed hundreds
of autographs. He understood each moment, as well as the limits
and possibilities of each. He was quiet and deferential to his colleagues
during the judging process but made his opinions plain
when necessary. He could have played the enigmatic master but
chose instead to be an honest mentor to even the most seasoned
and respected designers in the room.
Fukuda was cultivated and childish, wise and wide-eyed, mysterious
and completely accessible. The beauty of who he was arose
from his ability to express all these attributes at once, in the interlocking
patterns of his personality. He seemed to defy physical
reality. So it seems appropriate that while we are saddened by his
death, we also realize that the light of his genius, left to us in his
work and teachings, is more than bright enough to counter the
darkness. Lance Rutter

LEADING BY EXAMPLE
With so many people preaching at us to be green, it’s nice to see an all-star cast of designers fan
out into the world to inspire others with actions instead of words. The Nature Conservancy is teaming
up with prominent designers to transform natural, sustainable materials into beautiful objects.
Fashion designer Isaac Mizrahi turned Alaskan salmon skin, typically a waste product, into a gorgeous
dress. And industrial designer Yves Béhar made his way to Costa Rica to work with a women’s
chocolate cooperative, where he developed packaging and a grating tool for raw cocoa. These
projects and innovations from other top talents will appear in for a Living World—a traveling
exhibit that opens at the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum in New York on May 14. The
show’s jewelry, handbags and other objects challenge us to think about where the stuff in our daily
lives really comes from ... but instead of laying down a guilt trip, it accomplishes its lofty goal with
insights into how consumption might actually support the environment. www.cooperhewitt.org

HOT STUFF
It’s hard not to love someone who named his
last book Hand Job. Now Mike Perry is turning
up the temperature with Iron Me On. These
“30 sheets of awesome fabric transfers” let you
appoint Perry official illustrator of your wardrobe.
Cut out, say, an igloo with legs and slouchy
socks for a wacky T-shirt statement. Or fashion
not-so-subliminal messages from hand drawn
letters resembling records. If you’re a
non-conformist, you might even create your own
abstract shapes from the full-page patterns.
Sounds like more fun than should be legal for
$12.95. www.chroniclebooks.com