Rizky Ramadhan | 105070627
Contents
Notes 3
Design For Need & Sustainable Design
Conventions of Social Representation
Meaning! Semiotics in Visual Communication
Functionalism in Typography for Printed Matter or Digital Format
Culture, Space & Place
New Media and its Impact on Design
Media, Truth & Perceptions: Propaganda and Persuasion
Bibliography
Picture Credits
Notes
1. Arts and Crafts • William Morris was born in Waltamstow, Essex, in March 24th, 1836. He was an artist, designer, painter, typographer, craftsman, poet, writer and champion of socialist ideas. He is against the technology. He likes to handcrafts by using natural materials. In his point of view, it was important, as nature was the perfect example of God’s Creation. Green designs will always known as good design. A designer should consider the material that doesn’t damage the environment. His design usually used natural/organic elements. He is also known as a designer of wallpaper and patterned fabrics.
• In terms of producing artworks, he really needed to understand about what his design will be used for. Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood 1848 is the painting that used natural elements and flowery background. Red House, 1859, is one of the famous house back then which he built. The wall of the house was made of red brick. Morris and his company, 1861-1939, is the company that produced furniture’s and they were exist in Japan, United States and England. Kelmscott, 1896, He found the Kelmscott Press, He designed and cut the typefaces, ornamental borders and title pages, which were based on the style of medieval manuscripts. The book were printed on handmade paper, copied from 15th century at Italian Samples and bound in vellum.
• In Us, Frank Lloyd Wright and Arts & Crafts
Bibliography: 1. Arts and Crafts • William Morris was born in Waltamstow, Essex, in March 24th, 1836 • Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe, 1929 – The Barcelona Pavilion. Haus and Horn Kitchen (1923), the ideas are simple and elegant. • Charles Saders Pierce, 1893-1914 – an American Philosophy. He saw that logical operations could be carried out by electrical swtiching aircuits, the same idea was used decades later to produce digital computer. • Roland Barthes (1915-1980). He was a French literary theorist and semiotician. • Hi Line Garden, on the roof, New York, 2010. (at the roof top, there is grass on it). • Alexander Pope (1688-1744) – “simplicity of the nature”