Design School Wisdom: Make First, Stay Awake, and Other Essential Lessons for Work and Life
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Reviews for Design School Wisdom
3 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A nice read, especially if you are a design student/professor!
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Great book! I learned a lot about design and design school. Highly recommend it to anyone wanting to learn about either of these 2 things
Book preview
Design School Wisdom - Chronicle Books Digital
University
INTRODUCTION
Design school.
For many designers, those two words immediately conjure the experience of plunging into new territory, of grasping (not even close to mastering) the strangely unfamiliar vernacular of design, of standing with jaws on the floor before flashes of true design genius, of late nights and passionate experimentation, of epic failures and surprising successes. Design school may mean undergraduate study or graduate, low residency or full time on location. It may mean a class or two to refine an instinctive talent, or it may even mean on-the-job learning (sometimes the best kind of learning there is). Whatever the outside package, the overall experience is ultimately the same (with variations)—the experience of evolving from a nondesigner into a designer. Throughout this experience, there are the words of the design teachers and mentors that lift up, tell it straight, and otherwise guide young designers into their own. These words are the pearls of design school wisdom, words that need only be uttered once to be remembered for a lifetime.
Design School Wisdom was born out of a desire to share the wisdom of design instructors with designers everywhere—students just entering their studies or recent design school graduates starting their first jobs, designers well into their careers or seasoned pros who still can benefit from the wisdom of their peers. We asked teachers and students from across the country and beyond for their pearls of design school wisdom, and we received varied and enthusiastic replies. As this book has taken shape, we have been continually inspired both by the words themselves and by the spirit in which they are shared.
Design teachers and mentors are a dedicated group, and whether their words in the classroom are intentionally imparted or blasted in a fit of design passion and enthusiasm, their students listen, their fresh minds soaking up every word. Ask any designer to quote you something a teacher said in design school, and she will have at least one example that has lodged in her design brain forever.
In addition to inspirational adages, Design School Wisdom also shares in-depth perspectives on design education and educators. Some essays address multiple topics—from defining design education
to inspiring accounts of teachers who have played major roles in a particular designer’s development (and influenced her own path as a teacher). There are interviews between students and their instructors that reveal both different approaches to teaching and the unique relationships that form between student and teacher within the world of design education and practice. There is no right or wrong way to approach this book. Read it cover to cover, or dive in at random. Experience it as you would walking through a traditional design school—attend a popular lecture, join an animated discussion, eavesdrop on the teachers’ words punctuating the intense focus of the design school environment. Have fun. Listen in. Share what you hear. Add your own words of wisdom to the mix. Above all, be inspired.
Design education doesn’t ever end, even after many, many years of professional practice. The best part of that education, though, happens when your mind is open and eager to learn, when everything is new, and when you see only the potential of great things to come.
ALWAYS BE LEARNING.
—CHARLES NIX
Parsons The New School for Design
"THE SOLUTION
TO EVERY
PROBLEM LIES
WITHIN THE
PROBLEM ITSELF."
—JAYME ODGERS
California Institute of the Arts
Most of the work you do will be for the average person. Don’t separate yourself from society so much that you forget what it’s like to live life.
—JASON DUBIN
Art Center College of Design
Don’t make it look like you got Photoshop for Christmas.
—KERMIT BAILEY
North Carolina State University
College of Design
CONTRAST IS YOUR FRIEND.
—BOB AUFULDISH
California College of the Arts
Admiration: John Gambell :: by Rachel Berger
My subject today is admiration. Whom or what do I admire, and how has that influenced my work and process?
I think admiration is one of the all-time great feelings. Less toxic than envy, less somber than respect, less extreme than worship, admiration is reserved, yet wonderful. It is sweet without being saccharine. It is thoughtful without being intellectual. It’s a deceptively sophisticated feeling—almost Victorian, with its buttoned-up surface disguising a deep well of feeling. It feels like a term favored by Jane Austen or George Eliot to describe a quivering young love affair.
What or whom do I admire? That’s easy. I admire all sorts of things. Tartine’s morning buns. Ke$ha’s style. Michelle Obama’s arms. Friday Night Lights. The San Francisco Giants and their terrible hair. Eames rocking chairs. Backup dancers, brain surgeons, and pioneers. But most of all, I admire this man: John Gambell.
John Gambell is the university printer at Yale, which is sort of like being the university’s design director. He also teaches typography every fall in Yale’s MFA graphic design program. His was the most important class I took in graduate school.
THE DAGGER
First Impressions
My first impression of John was that he was a complete square, thoroughly conservative, and likely to disapprove of most things.
With his tweed ties and blazers, blue oxford shirts, and pressed pants, he perfectly embodied my idea of a Yale man, and he looked nothing like someone I’d come to art school to learn from. The first couple weeks of class, my classmates and I would pin up various exercises, and John would make small, horrified gasping sounds, collect himself, and then start the crit. We cringed and cursed ourselves and our stupidity. We cursed him, too, for being so calm, and speaking so carefully, and having such a firm idea of what was right and what was not right, and for withholding that from us.
Soon we realized that John was not to be so easily written off. Because of how straitlaced, almost prim, he seemed, we were eager to discover his dark side. Rumors abounded about John’s life outside of school. We heard he had a penchant for motorcycles and leather jackets, stand-up canoeing and Israeli martial arts. That he had worked as a fish processor before becoming a graphic designer, that he was building a miniature house in Vermont, that he was an accomplished painter. We learned that some former students called him the gambler
and his son the gambino.
Our mild-mannered professor was starting to seem like Clark Kent, a superhero wrapped in herringbone.
Child Labor
As we got to know John, it was clear that despite his wild side, we weren’t wrong to think him fastidious, judgmental, and rigorous. Two mornings a week, we watched him calmly break off hunks of breakfast breads and drink coffee while telling us how type and letters worked. We learned that he prefers Univers to Helvetica, open leading to tight, the appropriate and exact use of terms like modern
and contemporary.
John was big on the penultimate draft. We would make twenty versions of a book, bring it into the review thinking we were finally done, and John would say, No, no, this is just the penultimate draft.
We heard that he taught his children to perfect bind their book reports, that when he was a student in a workshop with Bradbury Thompson and they had to cut up old ship engravings to use to make compositions, John couldn’t do it because he thought the engravings were too beautiful. We took his recommendations to buy a pica ruler and a copy of Bringhurst’s Elements of Typographic Style, to use Stempel Garamond or ITC Century for children’s books, and to dust the fore-edges