Arts+Design

Michael Bierut: New work for American Institute of Architects

Eunice_t-story 2014. 6. 27. 20:31



와...
대학원 시절 이 분을 가까이서 딱 한 번 본 적이 있다. '디자이너는 이렇게 생겨야 한다' 라는 기준 같은 게 있진 않겠으나
솔직히 이 분 외모는 디자이너 아닐 거 같이 생겼다 ㅋㅋㅋ 근데 디자인 작품들을 보니 왜 유명하신지 알겠다.
어떻게 같은 펜타그램인데도 쿠퍼휴잇 프로젝트와 이리도 차이가 날 수가...
이 분의 디자인 솔루션은 항상 입이 벌어지게 한다. 이 분 스타일이 내 취향이라서 그런 건가??? ㅋㅋㅋㅋ
혼자 작업하신 건 물론 아니고 본인 팀원들과 함께 만든 것이긴 하지만 그래도 하여간 대단!


A video manifesto for the repositioning of AIA reveals the “We” within the “I” of the organization’s acronym.
When the American Institute of Architects membership arrives at the 2014 AIA National Convention in Chicago this weekend, they’ll be greeted by a distinctive new look for the organization. Designed by Pentagram’s Michael Bierut and his team, the program features a new proprietary typeface, AIArchitype, and is part of a comprehensive repositioning of the organization.

The American Institute of Architects is this country’s largest professional association of design professionals. Nearing its 160th year and facing challenges familiar to many professional organizations (the global economic downturn, the revolutionary effect of technology, an ever-more-diverse potential membership base), the AIA undertook a sweeping repositioning process, intended to reinforce the relevance of the AIA for members and the general public alike. Pentagram was selected as design consultants to support the communications process.
The AIA monogram set in the new custom font AIArchitype.
Bierut and his team worked closely with the AIA’s Chief Executive Officer Robert Ivy and the organization’s national leadership on the project, as well as with consultants LaPlaca Cohen. Following a comprehensive research process that polled both internal and external audiences, benchmarked competitors, and examined the challenges facing the organization, Pentagram began to create graphic elements that could be used to mark the “new AIA.” A custom designed font unifies all the repositioning communications, both online and in print.

The custom font, AIArchitype, was designed by Bierut and Pentagram designer Hamish Smyth, and drawn by type designer Jeremy Mickel. Crafted from a hybrid of two classic sans serif fonts, Akzidenz Grotesk and Trade Gothic, it is intended to combine neutrality and distinctiveness. The choice of sans serif allows for the broadest range of interpretations and inclusivity, appropriate for an organization that is meant to represent a large community of design professionals in the 21st century. At the same time, the typeface has a distinctive capital I, which sits in the middle of the AIA monogram, and suggests a Doric column. The narrow serifs on the I carry through to many other horizontal typographic elements, such as the bar on the letters E and F. The program retains the AIA’s established color palette of black and red.

More i-portant than fonts and colors is a new approach to communicating the organization’s goals and value. The communication plan reflects the AIA’s multiple audiences. For members, a video manifesto makes the case for membership by acknowledging architecture’s ultimate goal—to build a better world—and reminding its members that this is necessarily a collective activity. At its conclusion, the new font is applied to an animated treatment of the logo of the AIA wordmark that reveals the “We” within the “I” of the organization’s acronym.

Advertising has been created to remind the general public that it’s people, not buildings, that are the focus of an architect’s work. And Pentagram’s graphics for the 2014 convention echo the event’s theme, “Design with Purpose,” and reinforce the allure of the location with sly references to Chicago’s master planner Daniel Burnham, who famously said, “Make no little plans. They lack the magic to stir men’s souls.”
Like the members they represent, the AIA’s plans are big. They are just beginning, and we are proud to be playing a part in their realization.
AIArchitype Bold. The font is crafted from two classic sans serif fonts, Akzidenz Grotesk and Trade Gothic.
AIArchitype Light.
The font combines neutrality and distinctiveness to allow for a broad range of interpretations.
The narrow serifs on the I carry through to many other horizontal typographic elements.
Print advertisement for the repositioning, which places the focus on people rather than architectural works.
The new typeface is featured in promotional graphics for the 2014 AIA National Convention.
A spread from a recent issue of Architect, the AIA magazine, features a convention advertisement, left, and an article announcing the new typeface, right. The quote in the ad is from Daniel Burnham, Chicago's master planner.
Promotional poster in Chicago.
Convention website.
Signage designs for the Convention.
Convention lanyard.
The tagline on the convention tote plays off a quote by Burnham.
Project Team: Michael Bierut, partner-in-charge and designer; Hamish Smyth, designer; Aron Fay, animator; Teddy Blanks, animation composer; LaPlaca Cohen, research and strategic consultants.

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글자의 가로선 두께 조절, 세리프와 센세리프의 조화. Playing with words. 물론 이런 건 새로운 아이디어는 아니다.
하지만 '무엇'을 하느냐가 아닌 '어떻게' 하느냐가 중요하단 걸 다시금 깨닫게 해주는 디자인 결과물이다. 
WE(우리)로 풀어가는 디자인 컨셉도 너무 맘에 든다. Brilliant!