Mutabor

Speaker: Heinrich Paravicini

Co-founder

Location: Hamburg, Germany


Website: www.mutabor.de

Case: A retail design project for the 21st. Century

  1. Mutabor design, Hamburg – about brand image and brand experience design. A quick introduction of our company.
  2. New strategies for Adidas retail – bringing innovation to the consumer. The brief from Adidas and the partners involved in the project.
  3. The mi innovation center – in 3 stages top market launch
    – from concept drafts to prototypes and the final shop
    – the specific features and design solutions, films and interfaces.
    – Prospects for the future, what will happen next
  4. Summary – short movie

Client: Adidas


Background

Mutabor was founded on 1998 in Hamburg by Heinrich Paravicini and Johannes Plass. Today they have 30 employees and have won numerous awards.

Enric Jardí

Speaker: Enric Jardí

Location: Barcelona, Spain

Website: www.enricjardi.com

Case: Re-designing The Chicago Reader and The Boston Phoenix.

The lecture will be about two projects done in the studio of this Barcelona based graphic design company.

Enric Jardí will talk about the redesign of two weeklies, The Chicago Reader and The Boston Phoenix., during 2004-2005. Both cases were done from Barcelona and they only visited their clients for the final part of the projects. Mr. Jardí will talk about their experiences from working with American clients who had to trust European designers.

The cases have not been selected because they are beautiful or “cute” design projects. They will be presented because they are real works where they had to deal with ugly advertising, real production problems etc.

Clients: Chicago Reader, Inc. and Phoenix Media/Communications Group

Background

Enric Jardí was born in Barcelona in 1964. He studied graphic design at the Elisava and since 1988 has taught in that school. Since 1983 he has worked in different studios, and in 1992 started the Propaganda studio. Then in 1998 he started up on his own.

In 1991 he founded the typographic group Type-Ø-Tones, with other designers, which develops fonts distributed by FontShop (Berlin). He is the director of the Typography Postgraduate Diploma at the Eina school of art and design, in collaboration with the Autonomous University of Barcelona, and he also teaches on the Master’s course for “Direcció d’Art en Publicitat” at the Ramon Llull University.

In collaboration with Marcus Villaça, he has developed editorial projects such as the redesigning of the Chicago Reader and the Boston Phoenix. Since September 2005 he has been the president of the Art Directors & Graphic designers Association ADG-FAD.

E-Types

Speaker: Rasmus Drucker Ibfelt, co-founder & partner

Location: Copenhagen, Denmark

Website: www.e-types.com

Case: Speak up! – moving the fashion of culture and proving the culture of fashion.

e-Types has been working for Mads Norgaard Copenhagen, an international fashion brand, creating a new brand strategy and visual identity. The main task was moving the Mads Nørgaard beyond fashion and towards culture – creating a strong and unique brand steeped in Nørgaards cultural heritage. In a similar vein, The Royal Theatre chose e-types to help them create a new corporate identity, creating a brand which could attract a new and younger audience while keeping its core audience and heritage intact.

The two cases are presented to show how e-Types, by using elements from the world of culture, are trying to create more meaningful brands. Firstly, a fashion brand which positions itself differently from its main competitors through a genuine link to its customers cultural context. Secondly, a cultural approach that has helped to create relevant and modern universe for the Royal Theatre, updating its relevancy to attract a new target group while linking between the past and the present.

Client: The Royal Danish Theatre and Mads Norgaard Copenhagen


Background

e-Types is a strategic design agency. Their core competency is to unearth the main values and the key idea in a brand or company and to express it visually.

e-Types has worked with graphic design, brand strategy and image campaigns for Georg Jensen, Jordan Dental, The Danish Police, Carlsberg Jacobsen, Aquascutum London, The Confederation of Danish Industries, Mads Norgaard Copenhagen, The Royal Danish Theatre, The Danish Film Institute and Hotel Fox amongst many others

e-Types was founded in 1997 and currently employs 25 people. They have three main competencies: Brand Strategy, Graphic Design and Image Campaigns for fashion and luxury brands.

Their approach to design is characterized by a solid belief in integrating the graphic/visual into a strategic perspective – crafting the design into a framework that is capable of conveying the brand’s essence along with a style and atmosphere that supports and promotes the brand’s identity and positioning. By employing professionals from a variety of disciplines, their graphic designers, architects, fashion designers and strategists are able to approach a project from different angles, drawing upon the teams combined experience and competency. In the end, it’s not difficult to make something that looks good – the challenge is to find that one strong idea that can carry a visual identity forward.

Interbrand

Speaker: Jonathan Hubbard

Location: London, UK

Website: www.interbrand.co.uk

Case: How visual identity and tone of voice have repositioned a serious High Street name.

Clients: Barclays Bank


Background

Interbrand is an international brand consultancy with over thirty years experience and offices in 27 countries. They focus on creating and managing brand value for their clients.

Futro

Speaker: Slavimir Stojanovic

Location: Ljubljana, Slovenia

Website: www.futro.si

Case: M’ARS Magazine

The project included typography especially developed for this magazine. This magazine was awarded Grand Prix at Slovenian Biennial of Visual Communications.

The editor was Spela Mlakar who also edited the book “The Designers Republic from 2D to 3D”.

Client:  M’ars magazine of Modern Art Gallery in Ljubljana, Slovenia.

Background

Futro is a creative service unit founded in 2003 by Award winning designer Slamir Stojanovic, as a place where art and commercial work feed one another with endless inspiration.

Winners party

Right after the ED-Awards ceremony, it is party time! Time to relax, to interact with creative people from all over Europe, time to dance and have a good time. The party will take place at Dado, a cozy place with a positive air to it, just two blocks away from de Doelen. And to get the party started… your first glass of sparkling wine is on us.

Location

Dado

Kruiskade 55, Rotterdam

www.dado-rotterdam.nl

Date & time

Sunday May 30th: 22:30 – 04:00

Tickets

Free entrance to all ED-Conference and ED-Awards ceremony participants (guests need to pay 10 euro entrance fee)

2009 Adrian Frutiger

Adrian Frutiger’s acceptance speech for the ED-Awards ceremony in Zürich 2009: Link to YouTube.

Adrian Frutiger (born May 24, 1928) is one of the prominent typeface designers of the twentieth century, who continues influencing the direction of digital typography in the twenty-first century; he is best known for creating the typefaces Univers and Frutiger.

At the age of sixteen, he was apprenticed four years, as a compositor, to the printer Otto Schaerffli in Interlaken; between 1949 and 1951 he studied under Walter Käch and Alfred Willimann in the Kunstgewerbeschule (school of applied arts) in Zürich, where students studied monumental inscriptions from Roman forum rubbings. At the Kunstgewerbeschule, Frutiger primarily concentrated on calligraphy — a craft favouring the nib and the brush, instead of drafting tools.

His first commercial typeface was Président — a set of titling capital letters with small, bracketed serifs, released in 1954. Later that year the Deberny & Peignot type foundry wanted to add a linear sans serif antiqua in serveral weights to the range of the Lumitype-fonts. Adrian Frutiger suggested refraining from adapting an existing alphabet and instead to develop a new font that would, above all, be suitable for the typesetting of longer texts. Using his old sketches from the School for the Applied Arts, he created Univers font, which was published in 1957.

In the 1970s, the French airport authority’s commissioning a “way-finding signage” alphabet for the new Charles de Gaulle International Airport in the Roissy suburb of Paris. Frutiger considered adapting Univers, but decided it was dated as too-Sixties. The resultant typeface, originally titled Roissy, the typeface was renamed Frutiger when released it for public use in 1976.

In the late 1990s, Frutiger began collaborating on refining and expanding the Univers, Frutiger, and Avenir, in addressing hinting for screen display. Univers was reissued with sixty-three variants; Frutiger was reissued as Frutiger Next with true italic and additional weights. Adrian Frutiger’s career and typeface development spans the hot metal, phototypesetting, and digital typesetting eras. Currently, he lives near Bern.

Wikipedia

2008 Javier Mariscal

He started studying design at the Elisava School in Barcelona which he soon left so that he could learn directly in his environment and follow his own creative impulses. His first steps were in the world of underground comic, a task that he soon combined with illustration, sculpture, graphic design and interior design.

In 1979, he designed the Bar Cel Ona logo, a work that would make him popular. The following year, he opened the first bar in Valencia designed by Mariscal, together with Fernando Salas, the Duplex, for which he designed one of his most famous pieces, the Duplex stool, an authentic icon of the 1980s. In 1987, he gave an exhibition at the Georges Pompidou Centre in Paris and participated in the Documenta de Kassel.

In 1989 he establishes the Estudio Mariscal. During the same year, Cobi was chosen as the mascot for the Barcelona 1992 Olympic Games. The mascot was the centre of great controversy because of its vanguard image, although time has shown its creator to have been right and now Cobi is recognised as the most profitable mascot in the history of the modern games.

His most notable works include the visual identities for the Swedish socialist party, Socialdemokraterna; the Spanish radio station Onda Cero; Barcelona Zoo; the University of Valencia; the Lighthouse Centre for Architecture and Design in Glasgow, the GranShip Cultural Centre in Japan and the London postproduction company, Framestore.

In 1999 he receives the National Prize of Design that the Spanish Departament of Industry and the foundation BCD grants in recognition of the whole professional career.

2007 Erik Spiekermann

The European Design Hall of Fame winner 2007

Prof. Dr. h.c. Erik Spiekermann (*1947) studied History of Art and English in Berlin. He is information architect, type designer (ff Meta, itc Officina, ff Info, ff Unit, LoType, Berliner Grotesk et al) and author of books and articles on type and typography.

He was founder (1979) of MetaDesign, Germany’s largest design firm with offices in Berlin, London and San Francisco. Projects included corporate design programmes for Audi, Skoda, Volkswagen, Lexus, Heidelberg Printing, Berlin Transit, Duesseldorf Airport and many others. In 1988 he started FontShop, a company for production and distribution of electronic fonts.

He holds an honorary professorship at the Academy of Arts in Bremen, is board member of ATypI and the German Design Council and Past President of the istd International Society of Typographic Designers as well as the iiid International Institute of Information Design. In 2003 he was awarded the Gerrit Noordzij Prize for Typography from the Royal Academy in The Hague, Netherlands. In 2006 received an honorary doctorship from Pasadena Art Center.

In 2001 he redesigned The Economist magazine in London. His book for Adobe Press,“Stop Stealing Sheep” has recently appeared in a second edition and both a German and a Russian version. His corporate font family for Nokia was released in 2002. The exclusive family of typefaces for Deutsche Bahn (the German railway system), designed with Christan Schwartz, was awarded the Federal German Design Prize 2007.

He left MetaDesign in 2001 and now runs SpiekermannPartners with offices in Berlin, London and San Francisco. Clients include Bosch, Deutsche Bahn, Pioneer Investment, Messe Frankfurt, Nokia, Birkhäuser Verlag Basel and many others.

Interview by Frederico Duarte

  • Q: You have just received the 2007 European Designer Hall of Fame Award. This is not your first award, but the fact you have been nominated by your peers from all over the continent must have a special meaning. What does it mean, to you, to have received this accolade?
  • A: Getting the vote from the readers of professional design magazines means a lot. It shows me that design is, indeed, an international language. And it proves that there is a design community which knows who has been doing what for quite a few years.
  • Q: Stefan Sagmeister once said a famous graphic designer is like a famous electrician. Merit and fame are still only recognised inside their milieu. Rarely the general public, or even mainstream media, pay real attention to the discipline and to its practitioners. Your open criticism of the UEFA 2006 World Cup put you briefly in the German “public eye”, but despite your considerable work in your country and beyond, you are still to become “a household name”. Do you think there is a place for public and media recognition for graphic design? Will we witness the rise of the “star graphic designer”, as we have seen the “star architect”?
  • A: Public recognition is important because it makes every designer more of an equal partner for the client. As long as we are considered a lower form of production service, clients will not involve us properly and will not pay us the money our work deserves.
  • Q: In your almost 30-year old career, you have developed a myriad of typefaces, systems and interfaces, which have been applied to magazines and books and TV channels, trains and cars and planes, motorways and airports and cities. All this has truly shaped our living environment and visual landscape, not only in Germany and Europe, but indeed around the world. Do you ever stop and think on the impact of your work in everything that surrounds millions of people?
  • A: I do. Every time i use the U-Bahn here in Berlin (the Metro), I love the fact that we helped make this a prettier environment than before, plus one that actually helps to get people from A to B effortlessly. And I love the fact that nobody knows who did this. Public design should be invisible. And when people read messages from Deutsche Bahn (German Railways) set in my typefaces, that gives me a kick as well. And again, they don’t need to know that someone actually did that, they just need to enjoy reading. Except potential clients: they need to be told that this was done by designers, not machines.
  • Q: Having said that, and also knowing your role in consulting to cities and government institutions and governments themselves, it can be said you are often a “designer of the establishment”. How often is your work a victim of politics, or how much does bureaucracy and politics get in the way of your work?
  • A: All the time. Politics are just as important with commercial clients, if not more so. We have to play the politics and stay out of them at the same time. I think i have got pretty good at that and I hope that I still do not betray my principles. I still remember being thrown out of offices because I told clients the truth about their companies, and I still have arguments with them. As long as I have enemies as well as friends, I am not totally corrupt.
  • Q: In 1979 you started Meta, and when that got too big you started the United Designers Network in 2000, which in 2007 became SpiekermannPartners. “Thinking small” to you still means running three offices in three different time zones. Will small ever give way to smaller?
  • A: Small is relative. Nobody ever has more than 7 designers work on one project at the same time, but clients still take work to the big studios because it is safe. It is like using Helvetica: it is never very good, but never really bad. We are not big, but we get big projects because my reputation comes from the big projects I have been responsible for. I could happily just design book covers, but nobody will give me those.
  • Q: Your work is often associated with German Graphic, and Typographic, Design. Do you acknowledge this “Germaneness”? Do you cultivate it? Do you fight it? Does it matter?
  • A: I cannot help being German. But i also lived in London for 9 years, was married to an Englishwoman for 25 years, have an English son and now i’m married to an American lady and spend a lot of time in the US. I consider myself an international German. I like all the good German things about myself. I am reliable although chaotic; punctual, but sometimes a year late, fussy about detail but generous with other peoples’ mistakes.
  • Q: A lot of what you do is about improving existing systems or elements, and make them work better for their users, by removing clutter, rethinking processes, optimising outcomes and providing solutions. Is simplifying our lives making our lives too simple? Is there still room for complexity?
  • A: Complex problems have simple, easy to understand, wrong answers. You cannot make complex things simple, but you can make them approachable by designing the interface and the process so that people will actually be encouraged to solve complex problems. Clutter is one of the biggest problems of our lives — too much of everything.
  • Q: Do you still wear that bow tie sometimes?
  • A: No, but I look at it now and again.

Silvia Sfligiotti

Silvia Sfligiotti is a designer, educator and critic, and a founding partner at Alizarina studio.

She has curated and edited graphic design exhibitions and books, including “Italic 2.0” (2008)
and “Open Projects: Non-standard identities” (2010). She teaches at Scuola Politecnica di Design SPD
in Milan and ISIA in Urbino, and lectures frequently at international conferences,
and in Italian universities and design schools.

Since 2012 she’s the editor of “Progetto Grafico”, alongside Riccardo Falcinelli.

Bettina Schulz

Bettina Schulz (born 1974 in Munich) has been editor-in-chief of the international journal novum – World of Graphic Design since 2001. She joined the editorial staff of the magazine in 1994.

Mrs Schulz also works as a freelance writer and editor for national and international magazines and for a range of clients in different sectors. Bettina Schulz already serves on a number of design juries (e.g. red dot communication design award, MfG competition of the Bundesverband Druck, Monaco de Luxe Packaging Award, Canon Pro Fashion Award, Adobe Photoshop Award and the twice-yearly diploma awards presentation at the U5 Academy) and is co-founder of the “Creative Paper Conference” in Munich.

Eduardo Bravo

Although he holds a law degree, Eduardo’s professional career has been developed for more than 20 years in the journalism field, mostly in areas related to creativity, advertising, illustration and graphic design. His articles can be read in Visual, El País, Icon, Vanity Fair, GQ, Líbero.

He has also published two books –«Villa Wanda» and «Ummo. Lo increíble es la verdad»–, writes short comics for TMEO and collaborates as proofreader and print manager with Autsaider Cómics, publisher company that has released in Spain the works of Kaz, Benjamin Marra, Furillo, Yusaku Hanakuma, Ryan Heshka, Herr Seele & Kamagurka among others.

Jacek Mrowczyk

Co-founder and editor.

Jacek Mrowczyk, born in Krakow in 1972. Graphic designer, graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow in 1998 (Poland). Awarded several prizes and special mentions (inter alia at the 18th International Biennial of Graphic Design in Brno, Czech Republic in 1998 and at the 16th Biennial of the Polish Poster in Katowice, Poland in 1999).

Co-founder and editor of a Polish design quarterly 2+3D. He received his Doctor of Art from the Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow in 2005. Jury member of national and international graphic design competitions.

Author of several articles about design and a Polish Dictionary of Typographic Terms. Member of the Polish Graphic Design Association (STGU) and Association Typographique Internationale (ATypI).

A Fulbright scholar at the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum in New York, USA (2001/2002) and a Kosciuszko Foundation scholar at the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence, USA (2006/2007). Assistant professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Katowice (Poland) and visiting professor at RISD (USA).

Martin Lengauer

Born in 1969. He studied philosophy, philology, political and communication science. Free-lance journalist and founder and CEO of “die jungs kommunikation”, a Vienna-based PR-agency. “die jungs” offer full service in public relations, text-production, media-conception and event-management for private, public, cultural, scientific and non-profit enterprises.

Among them many design-related companies as well as the “designforum Vienna” and “designaustria”, the umbrella organisation of Austrian designers. Holds a teaching position in public relations at the University of Vienna.

Filip Blažek

Founder/editor

He works as a full-time graphic designer since 1993. In 2000, he graduated from the Faculty of Arts at the Charles University in Prague. Apart from being a designer, he is a co-author of Praktická typografie (Typography in practice), ComputerPress, 2000, 2004. He regularly contributes to professional periodicals in the field of graphic design. He is a founder and a member of the editorial office of TYPO magazine, which focuses on typography, graphic design and visual communication. He is an owner of the Typo.cz server, dedicated to Czech and international graphic design. Since 1999, he lectures on type and corporate identity. He is the Czech deputy of the international organisation ATypI.

Thierry Hausermann

Now based in Morges/Lausanne, Switzerland, Thierry Hausermann followed a one year program at ESAA (école supérieure d’arts appliqués) in Vevey, Switzerland, and then studied graphic design at ERACOM (école romande d’arts et communication) in Lausanne, Switzerland, where he graduated in 1986. He also pursued a course of studies at the Academy of Arts of San Francisco.

Besides being a graphic designer, he is also an editor, a writer and a project manager.
He founded IDPURE magazine in 2004 and his motivation since then is to discover new talents and explore the possibilities of presenting them in IDPURE.

Michel Chanaud

Editor & Art Director

 In 1989, Michel Chanaud launched the French magazine Étapes and Pyramyd Editions. Educated in visual creation in the Ensad, his early career consists of work in interior architecture, scenography and design. He continued his career as a graphic designer and a freelance journalist, with an interest in packaging and advertising especially, and he also started his own creative studio.

He recently established a graphic design training center and has also extended the range of Pyramyd’s publications, with the first magazine on animation design, the DVD magazine DESIGNFLUX. Moreover, he is the editor of many books on design, such as the collection D&D – design&designer and Émergence, a volume on young creatives.

ED-Awards 2010 submission period

Submissions for the ED-Awards 2010 may be entered from January 7th until the 15th of February. This is the date by which the online submission process and payment must be completed. Physical samples of the entries should arrive at our office no later than February 19th.

ED-Awards and Festival 2009 in Zurich

ED-Conference 2008 in Stockholm