Graphic authorship, and the contextual specificity of letterforms

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Copyright: Martusewicz, Barbara
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Abstract
This thesis examines the re-formulation of graphic design from a service industry, towards one that encompasses expanded possibilities of agency with content and designer authorship. I present the views of design academics and writers around the designer as author debate. I explore artists books as a medium for designer authorship and I originate and design a self-reflexive project in this form. In my exploration of artists books I conclude that Johanna Drucker’s definition, which foregrounds the functionality of the book form, is pertinent to my approach as a graphic designer who constructs viewing experiences when designing publications. Artists books can otherwise be understood as sculptural or as visual art objects. I argue that Drucker’s framing of artists books as book forms which provide a sequential viewing experience is implicitly phenomenological. As content for my artists book studio project I explore the notion that the appearance of letterforms, including their design, the manner of their material production or reproduction, and the materials on which they appear, give visual clues about the time and place of their origin. To illustrate this idea I have used letterforms and images selected from a collection of my father’s print and photographic ephemera. They function as artefacts which trace a story of migration from Europe to Australia, and a career in graphic communication. Letterform details, both hand generated and typographic, are reproduced and juxtapositioned with supporting contemporaneous photographic images to create a narrative viewing experience in book form. The book is titled There is nothing a letterform doesn’t tell us about its time.
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Author(s)
Martusewicz, Barbara
Supervisor(s)
Moline, Katherine
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Publication Year
2012
Resource Type
Thesis
Degree Type
Masters Thesis
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