The extremely exciting, seductive, and dangerously probing attitude of the eighties has brought us a devouring desire to reassess the philosophy of our profession, its origins, its meaning as it stands today. We free a tremendous need for historical investigation into the roots of our profession, not only of the modern movement, but even before the industrial revolution. We need to rediscover the friendliness of design prior to the industrial revolution. We need to understand the motivations of creative minds that preceded the modern movement. We are all the offspring of the modern movement and we want to know more about our intellectual forebears. We need our roots. We need to know who the protagonists were, what prompted them to operate as they did, who their clients were, and how their rapport generated a climate of creativity which affected others.
Historical information, introspection, and interpretation are almost totally missing in our profession, and I think we feel a tremendous need to fill that gap. The development of graphic design theory in this century is a corollary of the development of the major arts. This condition has culturally humiliated our profession. The consequences are a total vacuum of theory and a surplus of transitory superficial fads. It is a time that theoretical issues be expressed and debated to provide a forum of intellectual tension out of which our visual environment should be shaped. It is time to debate, to probe the values, to examine the theories that are part of our heritage and verify their validity to express our times. It is time for word to be heard. It is time for Words of Wisdom.
The emergence of semiotics could and will have a deep impact on our profession. It will establish a discipline of awareness and expression unreached before. The theoretical implications of new technologies for the way we conceive and express the printed word and the graphic image are a tremendous field of exploration which is still to be tapped. Again, the lack of appropriate professional publications deprives all of us the stimulation that could emerge from dialogue. It should be no surprise that, along with the lack of history and theory, criticism is totally missing. The main function of criticism is not that of providing flattering or denigrating reviews but that of providing creative interpretations of the work, period or theory being analyzed. Out of those creative interpretations a new light is cast on the objects, and new nuances and reflections are brought to our notice.
With criticism, designers will be offered the possibility of multilayered reading of the work of other designers, or the opportunity of focusing on the meaning of particular expressive movements. Criticism will prevent, to a great extent, the superficial spreading of fads, or in any case will provide ground for their evaluation in the proper context. Graphic design will not be a profession until we have criticism. The need for reassessment calls for documentation. We are thirsty for documentation that could provide us with sources of information for the re-evaluation of periods, people, or events. Graphic design publications around the world provide a good source of documentation, although most of the time in a very disengaged way. We need to arouse the awareness that every gesture of the present is a document for the future, and that our present will be measured only by these gestures.
Reading Response
Criticism is an integral part of not just design, but any creative process as a whole. It lets us push our work further with the help of other minds working as a collective. When Vignelli says Criticism will prevent, to a great extent, the superficial spreading of fads
, it’s something that holds true today, did yesterday and will tomorrow. Trends and fads seem to emerge every now and then. They’re fast, wasteful and disingenuous.
Looking at our work from a critical lens lets us evaluate it across timelines making sure we pay respect to the people who came before us and the people of tomorrow. It contextualizes our work within intellectual and cultural contexts, allowing us to have an informed evaluation of it. Through criticism we can encourage dialogue, creating a platform for debates, essential for design to mature.
We need to arouse the awareness that every gesture of the present is a document for the future, and that our present will be measured only by these gestures. (Massimo Vignelli, Call for criticism, 1983, Graphis Annual 83/84, January 1, 1983)
Vignelli saying this makes so much sense not just in the context of design but even with the advent of artificial intelligence. What we do, say and teach will be passed on to future minds. Do we as people want to pass on insincere trends and misleading information or do we want to preserve our values? It’s a question we must ask ourselves.
I was first introduced to Massimo Vignelli’s book — The Vignelli Canon back in 2015, right around the time he passed away. It’s amazing to see that the values and knowledge that I had imbibed are things I still keep in mind today. Vignelli was able to make a solid design foundation for me. Makes me wonder how critical he must have been of his own work.