Monthly Archive for July, 2008

Yale BP08: Common Ground Poster

A while back, the Obama campaign hired Scott Hansen AKA “ISO50” to follow up Shephard Fairey’s PROGRESS print. The result was my gateway to the rest of Scott Hansen’s work: amazingly tactile, geometric, retro work combining natural media, Swiss layout sensibilities, late 90s futurism (a la Designer’s Republic), and the pop vernacular of 60s-70s music posters.

Two weeks ago I got a chance to try my hand at totally ripping off Mr Hansen. I was asked to do a poster advertising Common Ground’s involvement with the Building Project, to be posted on our building site for the next two years. (The 2008, ‘09, and ‘10 BPs are going to be next to each other.)

YSOA BP/Common Ground Poster, Vector Version

Whenever I design anything my first reaction is to go for the heroic, which is why—until recently—a lot of my buildings were either very long or very tall. In addition to ISO50, I looked at Works Progress Administration and Soviet Constructivist graphic design—they all have in common lots of bold, carefully calculated geometric shapes, solidly anchored typography, dramatic angles, and strong colors.

As far as graphic design goes I’ve always considered my lack of illustration ability to be a weakness—luckily, over the years my crutches have gotten better. I modeled the raw geometry in Rhino, adjusted the virtual camera to 25mm, and exported a 2D Illustrator file, where I adjusted colors, gradients, and typography.

YSOA BP/Common Ground Poster, Sexed-Up Version

Next I brought my Illustrator work into Photoshop, where I started applying textures to the objects and to the foreground/background. I made a circular array of squares and applied that to the background to get some more dimension out of it.

I brought my poster to site the next day, where it was promptly rejected for being, basically, too cool, and also for its overly BP House-centric focus—turns out they wanted a more “community”-ish design, meaning less imposing and more contextual. Read the brief carefully, kids.

YSOA BP/Common Ground Poster, Fall Collection Version

I went back to the drawing board with a couple of new challenges: the aforementioned context, adding a map, and—worse of all—use the Common Ground logo as the main title. (As you can see from their webpage, the Common Ground logo is fresh out of Word.)

I made this one after getting only three hours of sleep—my client, uh, conveyed the urgency of the situation—and after a while I got sort of delirious. When evaluating my own designs I always leave the final word to gut reaction, and my gut was telling me this one was very very bad. I shopped it around my friends and got a couple of responses: “fall collection,” “New Years’ bash,” “leaves?” etc. Some of them mentioned that there were serious hierarchy/perspective problems, which got my subconscious thinking while my conscious passed out.

YSOA BP/Common Ground Poster, Final

The next morning I work up at 4 AM and couldn’t stop thinking about the damn poster. I got out of bed and hiked over to studio at 5 in the morning and started ripping out layers, gutting the crap, completely determined to save my design. I put everything on a white background and saved the basic geometry, and incinerated everything else. I added a dash of McSweeney’s and a whole lot of The Very Hungry Caterpillar (not on purpose)—thus was born the final print.

Obama’s Overseas Odyssey is Owesome

\"Obama for Chancellor\"

Watching Obama’s trip through the Middle East and Europe has been immensely satisfying, in a very I-told-you-so sort of way. Is there another person who could have possibly done a better job representing America? The response has been absolutely amazing. Leaders of the world, citizens of the world love him, they believe him, they trust him, exactly what America needs to matter again in the minds of people abroad.

Mr. Obama met for about an hour with Chancellor Angela Merkel at the Federal Chancellery

“‘So far what he is talking about is what Afghans want to hear: reduce troops in Iraq, focus on Afghanistan and focus on Pakistan,’ said Ashmat Ghani, an influential tribal leader whose home province of Logar, just south of the capital, is suffering from growing instability by insurgent groups.” (NYT: “Obama’s Visit Renews Focus on Afghanistan“)

“Obama received a warm reception from President Shimon Peres of Israel, who said his fondest wish was for a ‘great president of the United States. That is the greatest promise for us and the rest of the world.’” (IHT: “Obama meets with Israeli and Palestinian leaders“)

“After dinner at His Majesty’s palace tonight, known here as Beit Al Urdan, Senator Barack Obama was headed to catch a plane to Israel. So King Abdullah [of Jordon] got behind the wheel of his dark-gray Mercedes Benz, Mr. Obama hopped in the passenger’s seat and they headed through the streets to Jordan/Queen Alia International Airport.” (NYT The Caucus: “Obama’s High-Powered Ride to the Airport“)

“A German diplomat… said the discussions with Merkel went very successfully, saying: ‘They quickly found themselves on the same page. It was not superficial at all.’” (IHT: “Obama gets pop star reception in Berlin“)

Meanwhile, what’s McCain been doing? Photo-ops with the first Bush. Putting Iraq on the Pakistani border. (Hint, Iran is between Iraq and Pakistan.) Running increasingly pathetic attack ads blaming Obama for rising gas prices, attempting to connect him with Fidel Castro (to compliment his Obama-Ahmadinejad ad?), and accusing the media of a Obama love-affair. The day of Obama’s history-making speech in Berlin, attended by over 200,000 Germans and Americans, what was McCain doing? Lunching on bratwurst at Schmidt’s Sausage Haus und Restaurant in Columbus, Ohio.

How, um, inspiring.

To me, McCain’s strangest tack is accusing the media of “swooning” over Obama. It’s not the media that has “Obamamania,” it’s the people, both here and abroad. The media’s a business that caters to its readers, listeners, and viewers—if people actually gave more of a shit about him, if McCain represented the future of America instead of America’s disastrous recent past, then I’m sure the media would be tripping over themselves trying to get on the Straight Talk Express as opposed to O-Force One.

DOOCY: Why are you not on Barack Obama’s airplane heading to the Middle East right now?
WALLACE [FOX News Anchor]: Well, I called the Obama campaign several weeks ago and said that I’d like to go and my invitation has apparently been lost in the mail.
(FOX & Friends, as quoted by The Colbert Report and reported by Crooks and Liars: “The Colbert Report: Barack Obama Snubs Fox News“)

I’m fine with those who thoughtfully disagree with Obama’s actual policies—that’s the dialogue of a healthy democracy, exactly why this country is great. What pisses me off is the endless, idiotic ad hominem attacks on Obama and his wife by aspects of the Right. For fuck’s sake, as a mere candidate this guy is winning hearts and minds over the entire planet, he’s the very antidote to eight years of arrogant American dumbassery, and they would cut him at the knees? Disagree, sure, but recognize that Obama is demonstrating exactly how far a person can go to serve his country.

Obama in Berlin

(All images from The New York Times: “Obama in Germany“)