THIS Q&A STARTED AS AN INTERVIEW ABOUT IN-HOUSE
DESIGN ISSUES. I WANTED TO HEAR ABOUT THE EXPERIENCES
AND CHOICES IN THIS PART OF THE DESIGN
WORLD, AS OPPOSED TO THE PRIVATE SECTOR. I SAT
DOWN WITH TWO OF THE MOST INTERESTING DESIGNERS
WHO NAVIGATE THE IN-HOUSE ENVIRONMENT: MICHAEL
LEJEUNE, CREATIVE DIRECTOR AT METRO (THE LOS ANGELES
COUNTY METROPOLITAN TRANSPORTATION AUTHORITY)
AND MARC BLAUSTEIN, ART DIRECTOR AT THE NEW
YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY (NYPL). AS WE TALKED, THEIR
THOUGHTS CONTINUALLY SHIFTED AWAY FROM IN-HOUSE
OPERATION ISSUES, VEERING TOWARD A RECURRING
THEME: THE CONCEPT OF DESIGNING FOR THE PUBLIC
GOOD. OF COURSE, I WASN'T EAGER TO LET THIS Q&A
BE COMMANDEERED AWAY FROM MY IDEA, BUT EVENTUALLY
I SURRENDERED. IN THE END, MICHAEL AND MARC
REMINDED ME OF THE EXCITEMENT I FELT WHEN I FIRST
STARTED IN THE PROFESSION-THE SENSE THAT I COULD
CHANGE THE WORLD. HERE IS WHAT MAKES EACH OF
THESE DESIGNERS REMARKABLE: THEY NEVER FALTER
FROM THIS VISION, AND THEIR WORK DOES, INDEED,
CHANGE THE WORLD.
SA: So Marc and Michael, why did you choose in-house nonprofit and
government? Why not start your own firm and name it something offbeat,
like "Pterodactyl"? How did you end up at NYPL and Metro?
MB: I fell into nonprofit. After working for a number of years
for corporate clients, I was offered a staff position at NYPL, and
I quickly felt at home in that environment. I tend to gravitate
toward groups whose causes I feel strongly about-groups that
try to make a positive impact on our society and work toward the
greater good.
TOP: ANNOUNCEMENT FOR "LIVE FROM THE NYPL," A 2006 NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY
EVENT. THE AIM WAS TO "IGNITE" DEBATE ON CHALLENGING AND CONTROVERSIAL TOPICS.
LOWER LEFT: DOORWAY ENTRY BANNER FOR THE EXHIBITION "RUSSIA ENGAGES THE
WORLD, 1453-1825." LOWER RIGHT: COVER FOR THE NYPL ANNUAL REPORT FOR 2005.
ML: I was working in the private sector, with KBDA [Kim Baer
Design Associates]. It's a fantastic company, great colleagues, and
we were generating top-quality work. Metro created the creative
director position as it embarked on a concerted effort to ... reorganize
the entire Communications division. It seemed like the
moment was right, and the rocket was about to launch. Happily
for me, I threw my hat into the ring, and I got the job.
I didn't realize we would be painting on a very public canvas.
That came as a surprise, both good and bad. Transportation
is the hot topic in Los Angeles now, due to Southern California's
rapid growth and the pressing need for real solutions. This is great,
because the work we do has such a direct through-line to our audience,
which is everyone in Los Angeles County-all 10 million of us.
SA: My first job was in-house at NYPL. I loved the access to incredible
materials, and I still have a soft spot in my heart for my boss, Marilan
Lund. You both design for the same client every day. How do you
approach keeping the work fresh, for the audience and yourselves?
MB: Marilan was a great boss-she helped and supported me
immensely. From her I gained a new appreciation of classical
typography that I might not have developed otherwise. As for
designing for the same client every day and keeping things fresh,
things have been changing a lot at NYPL in recent years. The
most significant changes have been in the attitude and approach
of the administration to design issues. The internal culture is
now much more forward-thinking and-dare I say-hip! It was
an inevitable change. The new audiences demand an institution
that grows visually and conceptually as the world moves forward.
Like Woody Allen's comparison of a relationship and a shark: If it
doesn't keep moving, it dies.
ML: With Metro, there were many buckets of information that
we were tackling all at once, as we waded into a complete redesign
of the brand and information graphics simultaneously. We
first put standards into place regarding type, color and page layout.
Out of this came templates. This consistent structure helped
us design without reinventing the wheel each time. We concentrate
creativity on the other half of our job list: the projects that
need fresh thinking, a unique application of Metro's voice or novel
design solutions. We work collaboratively, so everyone in the studio
nudges big projects along. We challenge ourselves to keep the
work fresh and lively, because our customers deserve that. It's practically
a requirement for impactful design in a place as hip and saturated
as Los Angeles. Because we are supporting a relationship with
a public that's still developing, "fresh" for us isn't about wholly new
design; more often, it's about new ways to engage our audience.
SA: I've heard people define design for the public good as pro-bono work.
In a broad sense, most of us are designing for the public good; I don't
know any designers trying to make the world a worse place. How would
you define designing for the public good, and how does your work fit into
that definition?
MB: For me, the recipe for this is pretty simple. Step one: Choose
an institution you believe in. Step two: Design for it.
In those rare moments when I question why I'm at NYPL, I
walk through the corridors of the main building at 42nd Street,
or go to the cathedral-like, awe-inspiring Main Reading Room.
There I see people busily researching or studying, consulting our
brochures, signage and other materials, and suddenly everything
falls away, and I say, "Ah, yes! This is why I'm here."
ML: Designing for the public good equates to our three basic
goals: First, we want to create design for Metro that makes our
core, transit-dependent customers feel good about their system.
Second, we want to convert drivers into riders, which in turn takes
cars off the road, reduces emissions and saves the planet. And
third, we want everyone else in Los Angeles County to feel that
Metro's doing a good job with public resources and spending tax
money wisely. If we're successful on all counts, the trickle-down
has a hugely positive effect: A system that core riders love and
treat well, less congestion and pollution as we convert drivers into
customers and a galvanizing of public opinion that leads to more
money for future projects.
SA: So that precludes the heinously immoral clients. You're working with
the same client each day, communicating the same primary message. Is risk
ever involved in the work? If so, can you give me an example?
MB: We have a great variety of internal clients. Some are more
conservative, others are willing to take risks. Our design group has
been able to introduce design concepts as the clients have become
more open and knowledgeable about design. I get people used to
the idea of something appropriate, new and different by filtering
it into the "drinking water" slowly so it doesn't shock them. Then,
before you know it, one day they wake up and expect it. Good and
fresh design is infectious; clients see new materials and come to us
requesting something similar.
Our design group is responsible for most of the major projects
in the library system. We've expanded our scope in recent years
to include projects such as exhibitions, corporate identity, books,
banners, the annual report, advertising, multimedia presentations
and web design. LIVE From the NYPL is a group that organizes
programs, lectures, debates and happenings. They requested that
their promotional materials contain a heavy dose of "wasabi" to
create in-your-face programming. Other groups, such as the Exhibitions
department or NYPL's Young Lions, recognize that a conventional
presentation of information is not always sufficient.
They want a more contemporary solution. After all, the library
isn't just about the Gutenberg Bible!
RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE IN-HOUSE DESIGN GROUP AT METRO (THE LOS ANGELES COUNTY
METROPOLITAN TRANSPORTATION AUTHORITY) RANGE FROM MARKETING CAMPAIGNS
TO VEHICLE GRAPHICS. FOR METRO RAIL'S "GOLD LINE" LAUNCH, THE GROUP EMPLOYED
A DRAMATIC BLACK-AND-GOLD PALETTE AND SELECTIVELY TONED PHOTOGRAPHY. INTRODUCING
NEW BUS GRAPHICS, SAYS METRO CREATIVE DIRECTOR MICHAEL LEJEUNE,
WAS "THE SINGLE MOST IMPACTFUL DESIGN UPDATE WE'VE ACHIEVED." THE SILVER,
BLUE, RED AND BRIGHT ORANGE BUSES ARE EYE-CATCHING. REFLECTIVE DECALS PROCLAIM
THE METRO BRAND AND PROVIDE IMPROVED NIGHT SAFETY.
ML: We make information design, and because information design
is about clarity, we work within a certain bandwidth as far as tone,
type and image are concerned. Within that bandwidth, we want
to be warm, friendly, funny, engaging, hip, bright and energetic.
We have to get the facts right, but we wrap all of those details in a
package that's shiny enough to catch someone's attention.
We're developing a campaign to remind drivers and cyclists to
share the road. Simple enough, but we don't want to be preachy-
or worse, boring. In our research, we kept hearing about the fear
that cyclists face when they hit the road in such a congested car
culture. So we coined phobia-based phrases. Our first creative, a
bus back wrap, pictures a wary cyclist and the phrase "Slamiphobia,"
with a reminder to "Practice good cycology." It's unexpected
and fun to read, but it makes you think.
SA: Paul Rand said, "The public is more familiar with bad design than
good design. It is conditioned to prefer bad design, because that is what
it lives with. The new becomes threatening, the old reassuring." How do
you convince the powers that be to allow your work to take risks and go
beyond the expected?
MB: Though I wholeheartedly agree with your Paul Rand quote,
the public has become more design savvy, and people are generally
more open to taking chances. Ultimately, the job of convincing
[the public] is achieved through creating good work over a period
of time, plain and simple. There is no substitute for a long-term
designer-client collaborative relationship.
The library's president had taken a personal interest in a massive
exhibition [titled] Utopia. Among the more controversial
elements were enormous transparent bookcase-walls, which incorporated
the titles and authors of utopia-related literature. I felt that
this type of information needed to confront and overwhelm the
viewer, to illustrate the tidal wave of material that had been written
on the subject. I wanted to layer these bookcases with type. Not
everyone was convinced of this idea. The president asked me for a
convincing argument. I presented my ideas, and at the end of the
discussion I said to him, "I've never steered you wrong before. This
will work. Trust me." He did. The walls were a huge success.
ML: To begin the process of change and move to a more risk-friendly
creative culture at a large company like Metro, we need
the equivalent of brave clients. These are the scrappers who will
fight for money, organizational structure or the "Great Idea." Our
chief communications officer and the head of our creative services
group fight the good fight every day. We also use information
on results. Ridership data, onboard surveys and a general public
phone survey each year give us the data we need. A year after we
rebranded, ridership levels were rising at twice the national average,
which is phenomenal. Customer complaints dropped precipitously,
and customer satisfaction rose. It made it easier to push for
staying the creative course. Our lead designer, Neil Sadler, used to
say, "Nothing ordinary." That's our goal.
SA: If you had to contrast working in the private sector to what you do
now, what would the major differences be?
MB: If I were in the private sector, I'd probably have less peace of
mind and more money. Seriously though, it's important to me to
be invested in the work I do. This isn't to say that working outside
of nonprofit is bad-that would be ludicrous. I find the relative
absence of internal politics in nonprofit to be refreshing. I guess
I'm lucky to have my cake and eat it too: I get to do good work for
an institution I've had close to my heart for years.
ML: Job security. Great benefits. Direct dialogue with the people
you're writing and designing for. One aspect I enjoy is the safety
to work long-term as a team, build a body of work and measure the
results. We've been able to fine-tune our messaging based on customer
reaction, and we're getting better at what we do. And it's a
luxury not to have to chase new business.
SA: And, of course, what are the similarities?
MB: You always have to make clients happy, right? Most of ours
are fabulous, easy to work with and appreciate what our group
offers. Secondly, you always have yourself to contend with. In
other words, it's about achieving one's personal best, regardless
of the challenges, sacrifices or compromises. In the private sector
I'd be working late nights and weekends because it was expected
or required. Here, I do it for the love of the work. I've been up
until midnight for a week straight, kerning, knowing full well that
99.99 percent of the audience will never know the difference.
ML: Clients can still be a blessing and a curse. We still must find
ways to satisfy a variety of voices while we preserve the right
design choice. The work process is the same: Define the challenge,
develop solutions, gain consensus and revise, revise, revise. At
Metro we work fast. This process can happen in a matter of hours
or days, rather than weeks or months. It's lively.
SA: Michael, you and I were just in Miami together for an AIGA
event. And Marc, you've been active with AIGA New York. If you
spend your days creating work that helps the larger society and public,
why spend the extra time and effort to be involved so heavily with the
future of the profession?
MB: Again, part of it relates to the Rand quote you mentioned
earlier. Graphic design is drastically misunderstood. More than
ever before, we need to counter the state of affairs in the DIY,
Times Roman default-setting, auto-leading, computer-driven
graphic design world. Not only are trained designers responsible
for upholding quality in their own work, they are equally charged
with the duty of educating the public. These are the main reasons
for my affiliations with AIGA and other organizations-they serve
as guardians of graphic design.
ML: I'm hoping for federal legislation to add a few hours to each
day. My kids are, too! I'm on the board of AIGA Los Angeles.
It's exciting and rewarding to build a larger and more connected
Los Angeles design community. Being a cheerleader for in-house
design and part of AIGA puts me in a position to reach out to
other in-house groups, recognize and celebrate their work.
SA: Ding ding, ding-both of you gave the right answer. But, let's say I'm
obsessed with making life better for others. I want to work on a Greenpeace
ship, but I get seasick. Should I look for a job in-house? Are there
other options open to me?
MB: Actually, sometimes I get seasick too. No job is without the
occasional need for Dramamine. Of course there are other avenues
than in-house design departments. I design for individuals and
organizations I feel strongly about and that I support. I'm also a
musician, [doing] performances in HIV/AIDS hospices, and have
worked in soup kitchens.
ML: Well, whether you look for an in-house position or continue
to run AdamsMorioka, I think the news is good for both of us.
Design will continue to move up the ladder of priorities for companies
both public and private, because more and more business
leaders understand what good design can do, especially when it
comes to the bottom line. Everyone mentions Apple and Mini as
great examples of this. But even transportation-a decidedly unsexy
sector-is getting the message. Design helped play a role in
building a ridership increase at Metro that is double the national
average. That's a powerful story.
SA: What's the part of your job you love the best?
MB: Many of the people I get to work with here-in addition to
the talented designers-are amazingly dedicated, brilliant and
refreshingly, um, quirky. Then there are the moments when I get
to view rare manuscripts and artwork up close and personal-they
make me wear a bib so I don't drool. And I feel like I'm contributing
to helping people in a small way. Am I being redundant yet?
ML: Me, too-I love collaborating with talented people. Our team
is just so rich with personality and creativity, and we have such a
good time doing what we do. I like celebrating our effectiveness
with these people. I like using my energy to help others at Metro
to see the value of what we do. Plus, I have the dream commute
now: I ride my bike to the train and walk from the train to my
office. Heaven.
SA: Did you take that off a billboard? Michael, what was the most significant change you made since you started at Metro?
ML: We made Metro cool. People stop me when they know I'm
with Metro, and they say how the buses look great, the ads are
fun and how much they like the new maps and timetables. Neil
Sadler's reworking of the paint schemes of our buses has been a
huge change. The fleet redesign put color on the street. He even
put a line on the front of the buses so they smile as they approach
you. We've created a voice for Metro that's hip and funny. We talk
to our customers and partners with personality, rather than in a
dry, institutional manner.
SA: Marc, how about you and NYPL?
MB: Some projects have affected the library on a micro level, others-such as branding initiatives-on macro levels. Rather than list
specific projects, I've come to think that my biggest achievement
so far has been the overall approach to design here. We speak of a
need to be a 21st-century institution, and our work has become more
reflective of contemporary approaches to design. We've veered away
from the traditional and expected, though still respecting solid traditions.
Recently I heard, "Wow, this is from the NYPL?" about
an invitation I did. I was thrilled to hear this; it meant that my plan
was working. I'm not the only designer here who's done something
fresh, but I think I've been able to push the door further open and
help keep the momentum going in this direction.
SA: The library is a huge institution, and you're using work from different
sources-from 19th-century manuscripts to rare maps. First, what is the
overarching message of the library, and second, how can you communicate
that with so many different types of images?
MB: In short, the library's message is: "Equal access to all information
for all people." Considering the NYPL's vast collections, it is
impossible to communicate the entirety of the library. To me, it's a
mirror of world culture-a source of wild possibility-and houses
the knowledge of humankind throughout the ages. Conveying this
is the real challenge we have here.
SA: And finally, what is the most significant thing about you that few
people know?
MB: I feel very drawn to things that are hand-made. When I
entered the design field, computers were first being introduced;
we did things by hand. I continually incorporate elements I've
made by hand into my design-there is a huge psychological step
of investing myself in a piece when I work this way. Getting away
from the computer, going back to pencil and paper, collage, paint,
etc., is crucial. This forces me to see and think differently. I take
time to investigate and negotiate a visual problem to consider solutions
I wouldn't otherwise.
ML: Significant? Yikes, that's a weighty question. My first long-term
job after UCLA was working as assistant to a personal manager.
I worked the phones, read scripts, managed photo shoots and
publicity events, made sure that an extra-tall client had the right-sized
bed at a London hotel. And although it was a fun thing to do
in my 20s-Movie stars! Film premieres! Craft services!-it wasn't
what I wanted to do. So although I had a promising opportunity to
"Go Hollywood," I chose a different path. I quit my job, bought a
Mac and opened up a teeny writing and design business. And that
has made all the difference.
www.nypl.org, www.mta.net
THE METRO DESIGN GROUP HAS LAUNCHED A NEW SAFETY-MINDED ADVERTISING CAMPAIGN
TO PROMOTE DETENTE BETWEEN CYCLISTS AND DRIVERS. BUS WRAPS ARE INTENDED
TO CAPTURE THE ATTENTION OF DRIVERS, AND THE GROUP PLANS TO PRODUCE
AN INFORMATIONAL POSTER FOR BIKE SHOPS AS WELL.
ABOUT METRO
The Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority
-Metro-serves as transportation planner and coordinator,
designer, builder and operator for the nation's second-largest
and most-populous county: 9.6 million people and a 1433-sq.-mi.
service area. Recognizing that no one form of transit can solve
urban congestion problems, Metro's multimodal approach uses
a variety of transportation alternatives to meet the needs of the
highly diverse populations in the region. It operates over 2000
peak-hour buses on an average weekday, and designed, built and
operates 73 mi. of Metro Rail service. It employs more than 9200
people, including bus and rail operators, mechanics, construction
engineers, safety inspectors, transportation planning professionals
and, as creative director Michael LeJeune admits, "a
few really terrific designers."
TOP AND LOWER RIGHT: INSTALLATIONS FROM THE NYPL EXHIBITION "UTOPIA." PICTURED
ARE PLEXIGLAS BOOKCASES THAT CREATED A SERIES OF CORRIDOR-LIKE SPACES
IN WHICH VISITORS WERE CONFRONTED BY HUNDREDS OF LITERARY WORKS ON THE GENERAL
SUBJECT OF UTOPIAS. TITLES, AUTHOR NAMES AND ORIGINAL DATES OF PUBLICATION
WERE SHOWN. LOWER LEFT: POSTER FOR THE UTOPIA EXHIBITION. A SERIES OF SIX
POSTERS WERE PRODUCED. THE TYPOGRAPHIC STRUCTURE WAS CONSTANT IN THE SERIES,
BUT THE BACKGROUND IMAGES CHANGED FROM PIECE TO PIECE, REPRESENTING
THE WIDE VARIETY OF UTOPIAN IDEAS THROUGHOUT THE AGES.
ABOUT THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY
The NYPL has 91 libraries and a wealth of online resources. It
caters to a vast audience, not only in New York but globally. In
addition to books, it offers classes, lectures, readings, performance,
video, film, free internet access, homework help, DVDs,
collections of materials from antiquity to the present, and fine
art. It offers programs for toddlers, kids, teens, adults, the elderly
and the visually impaired. Says art director Marc Blaustein, "We
have odd artifacts in our collections, such as Jack Kerouac's
crutches, a lock of Mary Shelley's hair and a lab coat worn during
an ACT UP demonstration. I believe there's even some author's
tooth neatly catalogued somewhere. The NYPL is a treasuretrove
of information, materials and services for everyone, regardless
of who they are. The best part is that almost all of this is
completely free to the public."