PRINT 2011 REGIONAL DESIGN Annual 52 (200+ pgs!)See original listing |
||
|
Item condition:
Brand New
|
||
|
Ended:
Dec 06, 2011
14:40:24 PST
|
||
|
|
||
|
Shipping:
$4.90
Expedited Shipping
|
See details
|
||
|
Item location:
Charleston, South Carolina, United States
|
||
|
Seller:
|
||
| Condition: |
Brand New: A new, unread, unused book in perfect condition with no missing or damaged pages. See the seller’s
... Read moreabout the condition
|
|
$34.95 Cover price (SAVE BIG even after shipping) Print's Regional Design is the most comprehensive survey of
graphic design in the United States, containing more than 150 pages of
award-winning work, and the only design annual organized by geography.huge new issue!~ Welcome to the 31st Regional Design Annual, our yearly attempt to lasso the strange beast that is American design. Ever since our first Annual, in 1981, we've found it useful to divide the country into six regions—which, naturally, has created all sorts of taxonomic problems. Is there really a stylistic difference between the work being done in Arlington, Virginia (which is in the South), and its neighbor Washington, D.C. (in the East)? Add to that the flattening effect of the web, and you begin to question if regions still matter. That's precisely what we heard from many of this year's winners when we asked them about regional variations: There aren't any, they said, because the internet killed them. Judges: Far West Brigitta Bungard is a graphic designer, art director, and educator based in New York City. She was born in Germany with an immense curiosity for the rest of the world. Her love of art and design wasfueled by her first, accidental career as a fashion model, which allowed her to live and work in Milan, Paris, London, and New York, where she finally settled to study graphic design at the School of Visual Arts. Since then, Bungard has worked with the New York branding agency Brandimage (formerly Desgrippes Gobé) as well as freelance clients, leading the design of corporate identities and packaging for fashion and lifestyle brands such as Banana Republic, Gap, Jaguar, Coca-Cola, Payless, and Chico's. In 2008, she joined the design team at the Museum of Modern Art to launch a comprehensive redesign of its brand across exhibition design, print materials, and advertising. Her work has been featured in numerous award shows and design publications. She is a part-time teacher at the School of Visual Arts. Southwest Born and raised in suburban Los Angeles, Joshua Darden published his first typeface at the age of 15. He spent the next decade assisting in the development and production of typefaces for a broad range of commercial and cultural institutions. Since establishing his Brooklyn-basedstudio in 2004, he has collaborated with clients in dozens of markets to invent rich, communicative typography. Darden has developed custom typefaces for Latin-based, Cyrillic, and Greek alphabets. His clients include AT&T, Boost Mobile, and Carrefour. In addition to guiding the creative work of the studio, Darden is an avid amateur photographer, bicycle commuter, and tireless collector, accumulating and cataloging books, small objects, and awesomely bad pop music. Midwest Michael Freimuth is an art director, designer, and illustrator based in New York City. A graduate of the Rhode Island School of Design, he has worked with top design and technology firms such as VSA Partners and Tender Creative and is the creative director at-large for the Chicago-based Proximity magazine and its sister publication, Matériel. He currently works as a designer at Stefan Sagmeister's studio in Manhattan. Freimuth's work has been recognized by AIGA, Art Directors Club, the Society of Publication Designers, and an array of online and offline publications. In 2008, he was chosen as one of Print's New Visual Artists, and he was selected by ADC as a 2010 Young Gun. He is an active member of the international design community, regularly serving as a speaker and juror atindustry forums. South Kim Bost works at The New York Times as an interactive designer after several years as an art director for the op-ed page. When away from the Gray Lady, she works at her studio in the Pencil Factory. She has an M.F.A. in graphic design from Maryland Institute College of Art, where she also taught a class on zines. Her work and art direction have been recognized by American Illustration, AIGA, Print, the Society of News Design, and the Society of Publication Designers. Bost prefers nonfiction. She is rumored to be related to Thomas Jefferson. East John Kudos is a designer, strategist, educator, and change catalyst. He provides creative and technology solutions and oversees the production of print, interactive, and environmental-based projects. Kudos loves collaborating with clients and colleagues to exercise best practices in design, branding, and usability in the increasingly social media. Prior to Studio Kudos, he was a senior designer at Pentagram, working closely with the partner Abbott Miller in New York City, where he led various art, cultural, and institutional projects during his seven-year tenure. He holds a B.F.A. in graphic design with a digital-media concentration from the Maryland Institute College of Art, in Baltimore. Kiki Katahira is a designer, hamster-mom, and lover of all things simple and fresh. She was a designer at 2x4, where she managed projects for art, architecture, fashion, and cultural clients worldwide. Prior to 2x4, she worked with Stefan Sagmeister and Harry N. Abrams. She holds an M.F.A. in design from the School of Visual Arts and a B.F.A. in visual-communicationsdesign from Osaka University of Art, in Japan. New York City Pum Lefebure oversees all creative coming through Design Army's doors and establishes the vision behind the firm's high-profile design work. In 2008, she was named by Graphic Design USA as one of the top-50 People to Watch and nominated as a Rising Star in the Washington Business Journal's Women Who Mean Business Awards. Lefebure graduated summa cum laude with a B.F.A. in graphic design from Radford University. The cofounding partner and president of Design Army, Jake Lefebure is the firm's principal project leader. He oversees new business and creative development for all of the studio's accounts. He has guided award-winning designs for a variety of clients—from local retail boutiques to international live productions. Lefebure graduated with a B.A. in graphic design from Penn State University and is the recipient of the 2009 College of Arts and Architecture Alumni Achievement Award. Both Pum and Jake have managed large and small accounts for local, national, and international clients, and their work has appeared in every notable industry publication, including Applied Arts, Communication Arts, Graphis, HOW, Print, Step, Coupe, and Novum. Additionally, the firm's work has been recognized numerous times by AIGA's 365, American Advertising Federation, D&AD, Art Directors Club, the One Show, the Society of Publication Designers, and the Type Directors Club, to name a few. |
| Cancel |