From Voice ~ Topics: print design, professional development
Designers Don’t Read...Enough
The truth is graphic designers do read, but when it comes to graphic design books, journals or trade publications there aren’t many hands that I know reaching for them.
What exactly is a graphic design book anyway? One genre is about displaying stuff that graphic designers have made, from packaging to logos to annual reports to web sites. These books are great at showcasing the fruits of our efforts—the artifacts as we now call them. Yet a common flaw with picture books is that by placing emphasis solely on the outcome we are ignoring the process and conceptualization of ideas that create these nifty-looking works. That’s only one genre; another genre is monographs, which showcase one designer or design firm’s breadth of work. Monographs aim to provide insight—about process, ideas, and concepts—into the monographee’s work to present the fuller picture that the “stuff books” don’t provide. The last genre is books that strive to educate designers about their profession; that place graphic design in the context of history, culture, politics and commerce. Books that have fewer pictures and more text—sometimes, even, no pictures at all.
Interestingly, while there is disdain for all three types—the more vigorous reserved towards those labeled pretty-picture or eye-candy books. While they are guilty pleasures the complaint is they do not provide enough insight and are quite superficial. Ironically it is with these books that we as a profession measure and define what is good and bad. We hold many of them in high regard and consider it an achievement to be included. But behind the glossy pictorials and horn-tooting benefits, there is disregarded potential.
Rudy VanderLans, founder of Emigre, said in an interview with Speak Up, “Perusing the visuals is a kind of ‘reading’ also. It requires a certain visual literacy to appreciate looking at reproductions of graphic design.” As professionals endowed with creating visuals, our aversion to assimilating, understanding and willingness to learn from visuals seems surprising at best, hypocritical at worst. It’s difficult to believe that in those 300-page books, brimming with works of graphic design there is nothing to learn, to absorb...to read. Therefore, it is imperative that we change our deprecating attitudes towards pretty pictures so we can learn from them. Otherwise we are denying the very essence of what we do. That would be stupid.
I know that lengthy text books—like the series Looking Closer or Citizen Designer, the various incarnations of Emigre, Ellen Lupton and Abbott Miller’s Design Writing Research and others—are easily snubbed, dismissed as academic tracts and, therefore, deemed irrelevant to our daily practice. I’ve heard people ask: “Will these books help us lay out better spreads in annual reports?” Unlikely. “Will they get us better clients?” Doubtful. “Will our Quark skills strengthen?” Think again. What good are they then? How do knowledge, information, context and understanding sound as rewards? Not bad. These books are usually required material for students, providing a valued sense of purpose for their existence. But as far as professionals are concerned—working under the pressure of clients, vendors and kerning—these books are of little value. Some designers maintain they would rather read books about business, architecture, art, farming or what-have-you, than graphic design books. It is true that we should read everything for knowledge regardless of the subject, yet that is a romantic view that neglects the importance of understanding our own profession.
It would be irresponsible to assert that graphic designers shun all graphic design books. They do not. But they are ambivalent. The most successful books in our profession are those that find the right balance between the words and pictures and the visual and literary. Books that provide relevant (even pretty!) images with thoughtful commentary and whose ambition is to educate, persuade, inform and captivate. Books like Rick Poynor’s No More Rules, Steven Heller’s Merz to Emigre and Beyond, Miller and Lupton’s Design Writing Research as well as monographs like Paula Scher’s Make it Bigger, Milton Glaser’s Art Is Work, and Cahan & Associates I am almost always Hungry. These books are exemplary of what our profession has to offer in terms literature, a literature that relies on words and visuals equally to educate its practitioners and, even toot its own horn.
Sadly, it is self-obfuscation—not lack of quality or quantity—that hinder our interest in our own literature. If we care so deeply about the advancement of our profession we can’t continue ignoring our vast library; it exists to inform us about history, to convey principles, to analyze our output, and to nurture us as practitioners. We need to take advantage of it, we can’t read just enough of it. We need to read more of it.
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I graduated from the graduate design department of the Rochester Institute of Technology. Here, I was flooded with and included in fiery debates on design. Giving me puzzles to solve concerning our profession and how I wanted to represent myself in it. I have more than enjoyed reading about design since, but have to agree that I don't find the same to be true amongst other design professionals I run into or work with.
In a way it angers me, in another way it alienates me from "my kind", making me feel as if my need to problem solve and generate ideas and opinions isn't a common plight among designers.
On the good days I want to believe that we all take some time to read good design reading.That we all ponder how our work, wether making underappreciated coupons or creating award winning designs for other designers, is progressing.
T -
We live in an era of graphic publishing efflorescence; design and design publications are rolling off the presses of several dedicated trade houses, and are eagerly snatched up at AIGA gatherings. Has this made designers more literate, individually or professionally? Doubt it.
One of the things fueling this great outpouring is design's tireless search for an identity. You can hear it discussed ad nauseum at any AIGA event: how can design get more respect? What are the outlines of the profession? Can we devise a philosophy of the discipline? Yadda-wa yadda-ha hadda-wo. The self-referential list goes on.
Design writing and scholarship has only recently begun to even keep pace with contemporary practice, and this is good. But, and this is a great irony coming from a design educator who emphasizes professional self-awareness to his students, there is no substitute for a well-rounded, liberally educated man or woman. This is not addressed by graphic design monographs.
Armin, you know my attitudes from my loose-cannon postings at Speak Up. To your list of largely recent design tomes I would add artist's books like those found at Printed Matter, and museum catalogues, like the "Shock of the Old" catalogue prepared for the Christopher Dresser exhibit at the Cooper-Hewitt, or the wonderful catalogue of Mark Lombardi's "Global Network" drawings published last year. Visual artists are generally less constrained than designers in their choice of material.
Be conversant with the great ideas of your time: sustainability, diversity, civil society, climate change, etc. And, as Ezra Pound advocated so long ago, "read or read at a great many books." Ideas are the substrate of all communication. Some come with pictures attached. Most do not. -
As a website designer, computer animator, sculptor and also as a painter I think that books just teach you how to use the tools and some what design, a website designing book isn’t going to show you how to make your artwork better, that’s all on you. If you want to make things look better take some art classes or something. I read lots of books that you would think have nothing to do with website designing, for example a book about the human body, you would think “how is this going to help me with my website designing skills?” well the truth is that it does, what if someone asked me to design a gothic website with a drawing of the human body cracking into to. How is the human body book going to help me out? It helps me out by knowing, that if the human body cracks in to 2 what’s going to be inside it. So I think that website design books don’t have to tell you how to do everything, that’s up to you and your artistic skills. Website designing isn’t just for anyone; it’s for an artist, with a creative mind.
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German, I do agree with what you are saying. And that is what I meant when I said "It is true that we should read everything for knowledge regardless of the subject". I find it obligatory and inevitable to read books about other subjects as that is what enriches us and broadens our knowledge. But there is a lot to learn from graphic design books, and a lot of it will make you a better designer if you know how to "read" it.
In your specific case, web site books are much more rudimentary than traditional graphic design books. They are heavy on the "how-to" and it has only been five years since people started writing extensively about web sites so most web site books fall short of fulfilling creative and intellectual needs. I don't mean to offend any web site books, but I have yet to read one that inspires, challenges or moves me.
And, lastly, I don't think you will find anything in the graphic design aisles of a book store showing what happens when a body cracks in two? so, yup, one needs to resort to other resources in that case. -
So many books, so little time. How do you apportion your time to read all the books that one should read in a lifetime.
I realize for every War & Peace I can read three graphic design books, maybe more. Well, at least three of the text heavy books and five or six of the extended caption books.
The question is, what do I get more out of? -
Cooks don't Read... Enough.
Mechanics don't Read... Enough.
Doctors don't Read... Enough.
Authors don't Read.. Enough.
We should all read everything, all the time, and learn everything. We should also have unlimited time, unlimited resources, unlimited coffee, and the authors' phone numbers and email addresses for the inevitable nebulous issues now and then.
Second point: there is something that exists in literary terms - "An economy of words". Needless to say, many authors blather on to read themselves write. In many cases I find that an article which doesn't even seem to make an honest attempt to remain interesting would serve the design community far better as a short list of discussion topics that you can take along with you.
Personally, I've never heard the cliché that designers don't read. Even if I had, I wouldn't consider it insulting. -
We designers are involved in a visual professional practice, even as students we depended on what we saw to create any solution, at those times our opinions (the most) were buried up. In a changing profession as this we are forced by both customers and society to reflect for what we do and (wanted or not) its effects on who's catching. People read, what they need. As a ten years professional I have needed to read these last three years more than in my entire life (the most lengthy text books); hysterical under pressure clients come anytime looking somebody to help'em, they're looking for an expert and there's where a cold-mind calm down and make up an accurate analysis to solve this. An understanding of social, economical, political, global behaviors is necessary for giving solutions. What book should I look for doing this well?
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Great comments all around, I found David's comments to be especially poignant.
Although the notion of designers not reading enough might sound obvious, I think Armin has an extremely valid point here, especially in light of the younger generation of designers flooding the industry. I am nearly 25 and I've been working professionally for a little over 3 years. I'm guessing that most of the people my age don't read enough on design theory, I'm certainly guilty. Perhaps designers that first enter the industry feel they need to earn their stripes and are most concerned with showing what they can do. Maybe it's more natural to explore the theory when one has learned that it's not about the newest feature in Photoshop or the next trend, the fundamentals arguably never change. I've also observed that many seasoned practitioners are less concerned with developing their skills and truly becoming better designers, but rather content to be mediocre—a shift in priorities, they've lost the idealism that many enter the industry with.
Slightly off topic, I've personally found the web to be entirely too distracting. It's either incredibly depressing or motivating to spend hours wading through the vast number of websites and work that is available for viewing on the internet today, that is where I find alot of my time spent and subsequently, wasted. If somebody wants to be distracted, it's pretty easy to do so these days.
Well, I applaud sites such as this, Speak up, Design Observer, etc, that offer focused discussion of issues that matter to us. I need to pick up the Looking Closer books as well as some of the others mentioned. Reading excercises the brain, the brain is the most important asset to a designer—why not kill two birds with one stone and READ about DESIGN?
Sounds like a plan. -
On one hand, I posit that designers do read. In fact, they read too much design. Or maybe I should say they “look” at too much design. The picture books and annuals sit on most designers’ shelves. I deem these places Shelves of Inspiration. Pulling, searching, thumbing, and appropriating—most designers look at what’s been done, and mimic it for their own use. It’s no different than the illustrator’s pull file: a mish mash of clippings, sketches, and photos that the artist will transform, mix, or hybridize into something unique.
On another hand, I’d say that design writing is in its early stages. Not much exists. And most of what does is either poorly written or simply overlooked. One place to introduce the books, essays, and magazines is in the classroom. Another place is here on the Internet. At Speak Up and Design Observer, attempts have been made to showcase books and direct audiences to look into worthwhile titles. But in the classroom, design reading doesn’t happen much. Most undergraduate programs revolve around craft skills, form generation, and maybe design history. Pushing items from Looking Closer, Eye, or Emigre in front of the students doesn’t happen from my experience. On the graduate level, critical reading and investigating of texts has become part of the core studies.
In the end, idealology plays a role. How many designers carry the vigor and valor they possessed as students into their professional practice? When is their time for noble ambitions? How can one make time for reading with so much happening in their professional and personal lives?
Here’s how. Do a little each day. Give up the little darlings in your life. Instead of watching television, find a good book—or ask somebody to recommend one. Try taking the bus to work, where you can read on your 40-50 minute trip—and read again on the way home. If you have a lunch break, read a couple of pages after you’ve eaten your meal.
Perhaps we need a campaign—Reading Feeds Design. Hmmmm?maybe the AIGA can come up with something. Armin, can you pull some strings? We’d still have to emphasize why reading feeds design, or how. -
The internet is distracting. Its just too easy to fall into a good (and bad) read by clicking on the favorites button. But the internet, like books on your PAD or Cell, is probably the method that the next generation will receive their texts.
I used to collect architecture books when I was thinking of becoming an architect. They were full of plans and photos and riddled with texts that were pretentious and impenetrable. But some were not. Those written by smart architecture critics and historians offered clear and even enjoyable insights.
Similarly graphic design has its share of the unnecessary books, and a lot of fashionable books as objects that are fun to have but impossible to read. Maybe its these books that give the lit its bad name. But maybe we designers are just not used to read "enough."
I find a lot of the "text-heavy" books worth having, if only to browse and skim. But I have yet to really learn how to learn from these books. Through school I was never really taught (or encouraged) to discuss the books Armin mentions, but rather told "Here is your recommended reading list, now go read."
There was never much analysis or reflection. I guess that's way people started book clubs. Maybe AIGA or another group should launch these for designers, so we can acquire the discipline needed to appreciate what we read. -
> The question is, what do I get more out of?
And that is no easy question to answer. Design books should not replace all other books. That would be a bad proposition. Acknowledging that days only have 24 hours a choice must be made between reading options, I'd suggest a balance of 70% regular reading, 30% design reading. (This numbers are based on absolutely no academic, scientific or designarific research).
> We should also have unlimited time, unlimited resources, unlimited coffee, and the authors' phone numbers and email addresses for the inevitable nebulous issues now and then.
Yes, that would indeed be great. Sarcasm aside, the "time" issue is a big concern, but I feel like it only serves as one more excuse to not pick up a design book. Not trying to accuse you personally, Andrew. I was recently talking with a firm's principal about the latest Emigre issues and he said that he has no time to keep up with the design "stuff" because of running the business, I could sense a sincere concern on his comment, that he was missing out on interesting writing. So many things to do, so little time.
> What book should I look for doing this well?
I don't know but if you find it let me know. As many have said here, we need to read many sources to be informed about "social, economical, political, global behaviors", etc. and it is most likely that we won't find much of that in design books. However, some design books place our practice smack in the middle of those issues – even if it's not spelled out – and it is then that we can learn how our profession interacts with the world at large and how that informs what we do day to day. It's not all there on the surface of a design book, some scratching is usually in order.
> Re: The internet
My, is it distracting... but in all its distraction there is a lot to learn about culture, from pop to digital to everything else. Specially with the proliferation of good blogs, one can read a lot of smallish blurbs and learn a lot. Whether it's Speak Up, Design Observer, VOICE, Defamer or Wonkette.
> Armin, can you pull some strings?
You bet! [Pulling...]
> Through school I was never really taught (or encouraged) to discuss the books Armin mentions, but rather told "Here is your recommended reading list, now go read."
Boyo, you at least had a recommended reading list! When I was in college – granted, this was in Mexico City – I had absolutely no required reading that listed graphic design books, perhaps something by Al Ries. It was only after I left college and started working that I fell in love with design books and I have been catching up for the past five years. There are important books that I have never read, and perhaps because of time constraints I never will. Others, I read halfway because I want to start the next one or because I actually want to read a novel or the latest MacWorld. I am by no means the most design literate person but I see the importance of being design literate to become a better designer. Understanding what has been done, and why, in our profession is essential to build a thoughtful design practice.
We all complain that there are all these hack designers who because they know how to use a computer call themselves designers and we all look for things that separate us from them... schooling, experience, taste, fees, etc.... being design literate is a clear-cut example of one of them. -
Is anyone going to protest if i start a....
Top 5 Essential Books for Graphic Designers :
...list here..? -
Please start the list.
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I dunno about 'Top 5'.. as that would be certainly arguable, here are a few good ones in my opinion.
The History of Graphic Design - Philip Meggs
The Elements of Typographic Style - Robert Bringhurst
A Designer's Art - Paul Rand
No More Rules - Rick Poynor
Design Writing Research - Ellen Lupton -
It's refreshing to witness the design community improving itself from within. Let the text on this page be added to the list of essential reads.
As far as hardcopy goes, here are my additions:
1) Hillman Curtis, MTIV : Process, Inspiration, and Practice for the New Media Designer
2) Paula Scher, Make It Bigger
Cheers,
-Adam -
Armin tells us to read both within the profession and outside of it. I believe that reading can help us to
"learn how our profession interacts with the world at large and how that informs what we do day to day".
The reason that this is so important for graphic designers is because of the impact of the work designers do have on society as a whole*. If we do not understand our world and how our society works, how are we to understand how our design works?
If we do not understand capitalism, then how, as designers can we come to terms with our role in advertising? The American economy works on a principle of ever expanding growth. Growth depends on sales and increased production. (In sociology, this is called the treadmill of production…). We are also told that there are “Limits to Growth”, that we are running out of energy and ruining our environment through excessive carbon emissions.
How does the graphic designer reconcile his role in this process? Are graphic designers aware of this role? Is it wrong to make money? Is there any other way to survive in this capitalist society? Do we stop selling and have the economy grind to a halt????
There are so many aspects of the social order that designers interface with, one ought to at least be aware of the role they play so that they can make some kinds of decisions about what they do and how they do it.
Of course we need to read. We need to know what we are really doing, and take responsibility for it.
Thanks-
Shirley -
I disagree with the sentiment that Designers don't read... I think they don't RE-Read.
The required reading in college was great... but I only think so now that I have a reference to apply it to in my real working world. I think a lot of designers figure that because they've read the text at one point, then it has become inherently part of their process. But those books, when revisited during a particularly challenging project, can shed new light and insight on your own approach as a designer. I would say most of us probably have wonderful literature at the ready, but it's most likely a little dusty ;)
Some of my favs:
Design and Form by Johannes Itten
The Elements of Color (also by Johannes Itten)
Thinking With Type by Ellen Lupton
I love reading books like this but always get chastised for being a "nerd" or working too much. Perhaps it's our fear of falling out of favor or activity that keeps us from pursuing growth in our field (?) -
and when you're done reading and you just need a little 80s hair band rocking out... this is the only thing the client is going to say about your work anyway...
http://www.creativetechs.com/iq/make_the_logo_bigger_the_song.html
;) -
When a designer sets their mind to solve a design problem, they draw from their experience, knowledge, culture, research, and a myriad of other influences to answer their question. Reading about graphic design seems targeted at making sense of some of these influences, and providing a context that defines the questions and answers of design. Designers have the job of distilling or interpreting all these diverse influences to communicate a message visually to an audience. How do we make sense of it, where do those answers come from? By reading about graphic design we can see how others categorize or interpret what influences worked on designers, either past or present. The role of a designer is in some respects to be an expert of humanity, life, and culture. As others have noted, a well-rounded education is essential for design. How could you successfully communicate to your audience without understanding of subtleties of culture expressed through visual cues to communicate information succinctly? Reading, be it words or images, expands our knowledge of culture and human nature and that is imperative to creating design that communicates. But how does reading about design itself differ from reading on other subjects? My thought is that it gives a summary or a context to what influences design or what makes design successful, and lets us view design in a framework larger than the work itself even if that framework is just a body of work viewed as a whole. In reference to purely visual collections, I think possibly the analogy of a movie soundtrack correlates. Songs collected from a variety of artists and, in some cases, different eras come together to communicate, altering the effect of any of the collected songs heard alone. In this way, collected work becomes something designers can “read” and interpret context from.
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I also agree with Armin that designers don’t read enough about graphic design. I’d go as far to say that designers don’t read nearly at all (on topics of their profession). I know a handful of people who work as designers and don’t have any formal education in the field. They learn to use Photoshop or Illustrator and they automatically consider themselves designers. I’m by no means saying that someone should have formal education in the field to become a designer. However, why wouldn’t you take advantage of learning what you would’ve been taught in school? If you have a passion for something wouldn’t you want to learn all about it? Wouldn’t you, at the very least, want to learn the history of your profession, hear of the pioneers who’ve paved the way before you?
Design is forever evolving, the mediums are expanding, technology is playing an enormous role in the way we reach our audiences, but none of this is new. Times have always been changing and new technologies have been continually evolving. We’re engulfed in design. Everywhere we turn there are examples of both good and bad design. However, how will one be able to critique, if they can’t explain what they are responding to?
People could easily write their own books. They should challenge themselves to document their design process on a project and capture it visually and in words. It would be rather surprising if they didn’t learn something by re-reading what they had documented. In the same notion, we can learn much by looking back and reading of the designers who came before us, to hear of their ways and experiences, and how they overcame some of the same obstacles, which impede us still today. -
I agree with Mr. Vit’s observation that can we can’t ignore our vast design library, we need to read it. It sounds so simple, the payoff so obvious, read more.
Maybe as a directive in early design education, reading should be incorporated differently into the curriculum, used for more than academic bulimia, but as what will be expected as part of the design profession. What if we looked at each of the categories of design books as a portion of our continuing design education instead of wanting each to be an end in itself? Maybe it is better that we are forced to actually read different types of design books to forge and evolve opinion and style. Why should books containing professional articles be referred to as “pretty pictures books” and labeled as flawed because they only show the outcome. Fine art books are continually referenced and rarely contain the inspirational sketches used for the finished image or the portions the artist painted out. Monographs should be valued in their documentation of the stream of evolvement by a designer or studio. At this point I will go out on the limb and say, it sure would be great to read a Looking Closer book without having every other graphic design book I own on the table and my cursor flashing in the Google window so I can scramble to find visuals that are mentioned in the articles and essays.
Reading, whether literal or visual, adds to a designer’s ability to grasp and conceptualize from an informed place. We shouldn’t have to ask if reading will “help us layout a better spread…” or “get us better clients”. We should already know it would in some way influence our ability to communicate. We pull from a well that is filled with the exposures that we choose. These choices define who we are as designers.

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