|
UnBeige logo by Angela Voulangas and Doug Clouse, as part of our regular design our logo feature
|
||||||||
|
Thursday, Dec 11
Seven Questions for Edward Leida
1. You're trained as both an industrial graphic and graphic designer. How does this unique background affect your perspective/design work? My first jobs out of school were for design firms that worked on
There will be chats with my editor-in-chief, visits with my art 3. How do you divide and conquer the task of designing W? 4. Best/most memorable design-related encounter? When I was in college, I saw a profile of Bonnell that was published in an issue of Graphis that blew me away. This guy had studied industrial design as well as graphic design, he had worked at Container Corporation, IBM, and now had his own New York design firm. I had already been exposed to the world of interior design as well as furniture design through a college girlfriend, and as it turned out, some of the best and innovative graphics were being created for the manufacturers of contract furnishings—many of which were based in New York City. Knoll's graphics were being done by Massimo Vignelli and Sunar's graphics were being done by Bonnell, and both had offices in Manhattan. Although I really liked the traditional work that was coming out of Vignelli's studio, the work Bonnell was doing combined both the traditional and modernist worlds. He always had a slight edge to his designs—a nuance that said "risk" but always beautifully. There's a story about Bill working at IBM in its graphics department, where the task of designing a brochure fell to him. Now this was the time when Paul Rand ruled over everything designed at IBM; he was a consultant for them and he still had some say over the collateral. So Bonnell is working there, designs this brochure on which he places a plus sign and incorporates a drop shadow from the plus sign, which gave it some interesting dimension. The design gets approved and it goes to print. Thousands were printed. Rand sees them for the first time and orders them to be destroyed. Bill is scolded by Rand and told to start from scratch. When I heard that story, I thought to myself, one day I want to meet this guy, and I did. I sent Bill a custom-made calling card crafted just for him. This was something that I actually did for every design god I wished to meet way back then—there weren't many, I was very picky. The list included Vignelli, Willi Kunz, Stephen Doyle (who was working at M&Co at the time), and of course, Bonnell. Soon after, Bill wrote me a letter on an engraved piece of letterhead that I proceeded to hold onto for the next 16 years, inviting me to visit and show my work. He offered me a job that day. Unfortunately, I had already made a commitment to another firm and turned the offer down—my loyalty got in the way. Not the best choice. Years later, I contacted Bill just to chat again and let him know what I was up to. You know, I think I'm going to try to contact him again today. 5. Proudest design moment? I've been blessed to have created a lifestyle for myself that embodies design a great deal: I've been fortunate enough to have built a home that I helped to design, and on the opposite end of the spectrum, I have learned to cook meals that I love to create. For me, design has been and always will be a multi-sensory experience. I love the process and it's just plain fun. 6. This holiday season, I'm giving... I'm also giving/designing a corporate identity for a great organization called the Ubuntu Education Fund based in South Africa. I'm really excited about this project, and I'm really happy to have volunteered to create this for them. 7. This holiday season, I'm hoping to get... Email This Post |
Where Designers Read Design
|
|||||||
|
Legal Notices, Licensing, Reprints, Permissions, Privacy Policy.
|