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CONTENTS
Roni Horn	 1
Kosuke Takahashi 	 5
Bianca Ng 	 9
Summer Studio 	 13
Jenny Holzer 	 17
Peter Downsbrough	 23
Copyright © 2018
All rights reserved. No part of this publication
may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system,
or transmitted in any form or by any means,
whether electronic or mechanical, including
photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without
the prior permission in writing of the publisher.
Design
Ali Mahoney
Editor
Ali Mahoney
Photography credits
Roni Horn, Kosuke Takahashi, Bianca Ng, Summer Studio,
Jenny Holzer, Peter Downsbrough
Printed and bound
by Ali Mahoney
Typefaces: EloquentJFPro and Proxima Nova
Paper: Epson Ultra Premium Presentation Paper Matte
RONI
HORN
When
Dickinson
Shut
Her
Eyes:
No.
859
A
DOUBT
IF
IT
BE
US
4
Roni Horn’s work concentrates
on the materiality of the objects
depicted. She also uses words
as the basis for drawings and
other works. Horn crafts complex
relationships between the
viewer and her work by installing
a single piece on opposing
walls, in adjoining rooms, or
throughout a series of buildings.
She subverts the notion of
“identical experience,” insisting
that one’s sense of self is
marked by a place in the “here-
and-there” and by time in the
“now-and-then.” She describes
her artworks as “site-dependent,”
expanding upon the idea of
site-specificity associated with
minimalism.
“This type of work—where you’re
supposedly in this visual realm
and all of a sudden there is text—
is not easy for a lot of people. I
think of text as visual. When you
are brought up with the graven
image as forbidden—because
the graven image is a metaphor
for a visualization—then it’s
absolutely primary that language
would replace that role. I never
really distinguished between
symbolic visual language versus
descriptive visual photograph.
My relationship to my work is
extremely verbal, extremely
language-based. I am probably
more language-based than I
am visual, and I move through
language to arrive at the visual.
So, I’ve always questioned
whether I am really a visual
artist.”
3
KOSUKE
TAKAHASHI
Braille
Neue
2018
Braille Neue is a universal
typeface that combines braille
with existing characters. This
typeface communicates to both
the sighted and blind people in
the same space. Currently, we
rarely see braille implemented
in the public space since it takes
additional space and sighted
people consider it not important.
Braille Neue addresses this
issue by making braille easy to
use for sighted people.
In Latin alphabets, attempts to
combine braille with existing
characters have been made
by various designers all
over the world. Through the
contribution of increasing
the variation of typeface that
combine braille with existing
characters and thinking about
its implementations, Takahashi
aims for an inclusive society
where using braille becomes
commonplace. 
“By spreading this typeset I
believe more people will get
acquainted with braille. I also
conducted a research to see
if large signage with braille
was readable for blind people.
Through the research, I found
out that as long as there is the
6 dotted pattern, it is possible
for them to read it regardless
of its size. Braille tends to be
small and invisible, but with
Braille Neue it has the possibility
to expand spatially into public
signages in new ways.”
8
7
BIANCA
NG
Everything
is
Temporary
2016
“Graphic designers are no longer
simply being responsive, but
instead, they are redefining the
potentials for the future of visual
communication. I was asked
to respond to the question,
‘What is my statement as a
graphic designer?’ I designed
an interactive, typographic
installation out of post-it
notes, which emphasized
communication, but the
‘interaction’ aspect touches upon
the idea of responsibility and
relevance to society. People
were allowed to interact with
the piece by contributing or
taking away. I wanted people
to question the ephemeral
nature of life. If everything is so
temporary, including graphic
design, what is the point?
The quote is significant to
my personal life and my
professional life. As a designer,
I was interested in the idea of
temporary marks of design such
as flyers, posters, tickets, and
calendars. These designs are
extremely temporary so do they
even matter? Some last one day,
a week, a month, a year. What
about the history of designers
who have created works and
were not marked in the history
of design? Do they have
significance?
The things that matter only
matter because we as humans
put significance to it. We make
the connections and we make it
matter. It’s all about perspective.
I think the reason I love this
quote so much is because it can
be read positively or negatively,
depending on your perspective.
In general it is a positive
statement. I think it also signifies
keeping a balance in your life.
Everything matters, but also
don’t stress out so much about
everything because to some
degree it doesn’t matter.”
11
SUMMER
STUDIO
Queertype,
Avec
and
Sans
2015
Typography appears to be a
particularly male-dominated area
of the design industry. It’s been
suggested that type design’s
roots in the historically male-
dominated world of printing
has resulted in today’s gender
disparities. Recent graduate
students Minna Sakaria and
Carolina Dahl of Summer
Studio in Stockholm are
addressing gendered use of
type with their work. Sakaria
first became interested in the
subject when researching
gendered sub-brands—she
was looking at H&M, Coca
Cola, and Gillette, noticing how
a neutral, angular sans-serif is
used to signal masculinity, while
the feminine binary is inevitably
represented by a flowing, soft,
and curling font.
“Typography is the perfect
medium for contradiction
because it allows for
redundancy: you can say ‘girl’
twice with the same word by
using a girly typeface.”
For the Queertype project,
Summer Studio used the
typographic stereotypes but
challenged them by switching
their application, ie. writing
words associated with girls
with a masculine typeface
and vice versa. The typefaces
were used for t-shirts featuring
slogans found at high-street
clothing stores. T-shirts “for boys”
reading things like “trouble
is my middle name” were re-
appropriated with Avec, the
curled font, while slogans “for
girls,” like “I wear flowers” and
“cats have more fun,” were
printed using the neutral Sans.
16
JENNY
HOLZER
Projection,
Paris
2009
22
Jenny Holzer is an American
artist best known for her text-
based public art projects.
Exploring how language is used
both as a form of communication
and as a means of concealment
and control, Holzer has
employed a variety of media
throughout her career, including
large-scale projections, LED
displays, T-shirts, and posters.
“I used language because I
wanted to offer content that
people—not necessarily art
people—could understand.”
Her stark one-liners call
attention to social injustice and
shed light on dark corners of
the human psyche. They are
intended to generate debate
and make us think critically.
A political activist as well as
an artist, Holzer’s aim is to
disrupt the passive reception
of information from damaging
sources. As her reputation has
grown, so has the ambition
and scope of her work, which
has traveled to public spaces
in much of the world. In her
profound skepticism toward
power, Holzer joins the ranks of
anti-authoritarians in art.
Both message and medium are
equally important in Holzer’s
work. Her iconic LED signs
use the same technology
that transmits dates, speeds,
temperatures and other
impersonal information in public
places. This allows her to launch
a sneak attack on the urban
environment, short-circuiting
the system when, in place of the
impersonal signage we expect
to encounter, we find private,
personal, or politically sensitive
information.
21
PETER
DOWNSBROUGH
HERE/THERE
1992
Peter Downsbrough has
developed a strongly reduced
visual vocabulary, which he uses
to investigate the given space in
a very personal and precise way.
His material consists of letters
and lines. He uses adhesive
letters, forming conjunctions,
prepositions, verbs and/or nouns
and applies them to the walls,
floors and/or ceilings. Lines,
for which he uses cloth tape,
emphasize certain architectural
elements. Metal pipes, in the
space and sometimes on the
wall, accentuate the space.
Areas defined by lines or
painted black sometimes play a
role, and, with the lines and the
words reveal the architecture of
interior or exterior spaces.
He has examined language
and constructed space since
the mid 1960s. He leads a
very personal and extremely
thorough search which consists
in structuring the space and
creating discreet yet clearly
visible volumes using a refined
plastic vocabulary, made from
simple geometric figures, lines,
words and painted surfaces.
His numerous artistic practices -
sculptures, photographs, mural
works, books, films, publications,
sound works, urban space
interventions - are based on the
concept of position, sequence,
interval and frame, and question
the viewpoint.
All of Peter Downsbrough’s
works evoke place, placement
and displacement. They result
in a relationship, offering the
viewer to take up a position:
“the pieces are not ‘objects’ but
rather elements which engage
the subject in a dialogue.”
“With the word, one takes part
in a dialogue, a discourse on its
precise meaning. The word for
me is an object. It has both a
precise and a vague meaning. It
is a universe one is confronted
with. But there is no obligatory
way of reading.”
26
25
Exhibition Catalog

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Exhibition Catalog

  • 1.
  • 2. CONTENTS Roni Horn 1 Kosuke Takahashi 5 Bianca Ng 9 Summer Studio 13 Jenny Holzer 17 Peter Downsbrough 23 Copyright © 2018 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission in writing of the publisher. Design Ali Mahoney Editor Ali Mahoney Photography credits Roni Horn, Kosuke Takahashi, Bianca Ng, Summer Studio, Jenny Holzer, Peter Downsbrough Printed and bound by Ali Mahoney Typefaces: EloquentJFPro and Proxima Nova Paper: Epson Ultra Premium Presentation Paper Matte
  • 4. 4 Roni Horn’s work concentrates on the materiality of the objects depicted. She also uses words as the basis for drawings and other works. Horn crafts complex relationships between the viewer and her work by installing a single piece on opposing walls, in adjoining rooms, or throughout a series of buildings. She subverts the notion of “identical experience,” insisting that one’s sense of self is marked by a place in the “here- and-there” and by time in the “now-and-then.” She describes her artworks as “site-dependent,” expanding upon the idea of site-specificity associated with minimalism. “This type of work—where you’re supposedly in this visual realm and all of a sudden there is text— is not easy for a lot of people. I think of text as visual. When you are brought up with the graven image as forbidden—because the graven image is a metaphor for a visualization—then it’s absolutely primary that language would replace that role. I never really distinguished between symbolic visual language versus descriptive visual photograph. My relationship to my work is extremely verbal, extremely language-based. I am probably more language-based than I am visual, and I move through language to arrive at the visual. So, I’ve always questioned whether I am really a visual artist.” 3
  • 6. Braille Neue is a universal typeface that combines braille with existing characters. This typeface communicates to both the sighted and blind people in the same space. Currently, we rarely see braille implemented in the public space since it takes additional space and sighted people consider it not important. Braille Neue addresses this issue by making braille easy to use for sighted people. In Latin alphabets, attempts to combine braille with existing characters have been made by various designers all over the world. Through the contribution of increasing the variation of typeface that combine braille with existing characters and thinking about its implementations, Takahashi aims for an inclusive society where using braille becomes commonplace.  “By spreading this typeset I believe more people will get acquainted with braille. I also conducted a research to see if large signage with braille was readable for blind people. Through the research, I found out that as long as there is the 6 dotted pattern, it is possible for them to read it regardless of its size. Braille tends to be small and invisible, but with Braille Neue it has the possibility to expand spatially into public signages in new ways.” 8 7
  • 8. “Graphic designers are no longer simply being responsive, but instead, they are redefining the potentials for the future of visual communication. I was asked to respond to the question, ‘What is my statement as a graphic designer?’ I designed an interactive, typographic installation out of post-it notes, which emphasized communication, but the ‘interaction’ aspect touches upon the idea of responsibility and relevance to society. People were allowed to interact with the piece by contributing or taking away. I wanted people to question the ephemeral nature of life. If everything is so temporary, including graphic design, what is the point? The quote is significant to my personal life and my professional life. As a designer, I was interested in the idea of temporary marks of design such as flyers, posters, tickets, and calendars. These designs are extremely temporary so do they even matter? Some last one day, a week, a month, a year. What about the history of designers who have created works and were not marked in the history of design? Do they have significance? The things that matter only matter because we as humans put significance to it. We make the connections and we make it matter. It’s all about perspective. I think the reason I love this quote so much is because it can be read positively or negatively, depending on your perspective. In general it is a positive statement. I think it also signifies keeping a balance in your life. Everything matters, but also don’t stress out so much about everything because to some degree it doesn’t matter.” 11
  • 10. Typography appears to be a particularly male-dominated area of the design industry. It’s been suggested that type design’s roots in the historically male- dominated world of printing has resulted in today’s gender disparities. Recent graduate students Minna Sakaria and Carolina Dahl of Summer Studio in Stockholm are addressing gendered use of type with their work. Sakaria first became interested in the subject when researching gendered sub-brands—she was looking at H&M, Coca Cola, and Gillette, noticing how a neutral, angular sans-serif is used to signal masculinity, while the feminine binary is inevitably represented by a flowing, soft, and curling font. “Typography is the perfect medium for contradiction because it allows for redundancy: you can say ‘girl’ twice with the same word by using a girly typeface.” For the Queertype project, Summer Studio used the typographic stereotypes but challenged them by switching their application, ie. writing words associated with girls with a masculine typeface and vice versa. The typefaces were used for t-shirts featuring slogans found at high-street clothing stores. T-shirts “for boys” reading things like “trouble is my middle name” were re- appropriated with Avec, the curled font, while slogans “for girls,” like “I wear flowers” and “cats have more fun,” were printed using the neutral Sans. 16
  • 12.
  • 13. 22 Jenny Holzer is an American artist best known for her text- based public art projects. Exploring how language is used both as a form of communication and as a means of concealment and control, Holzer has employed a variety of media throughout her career, including large-scale projections, LED displays, T-shirts, and posters. “I used language because I wanted to offer content that people—not necessarily art people—could understand.” Her stark one-liners call attention to social injustice and shed light on dark corners of the human psyche. They are intended to generate debate and make us think critically. A political activist as well as an artist, Holzer’s aim is to disrupt the passive reception of information from damaging sources. As her reputation has grown, so has the ambition and scope of her work, which has traveled to public spaces in much of the world. In her profound skepticism toward power, Holzer joins the ranks of anti-authoritarians in art. Both message and medium are equally important in Holzer’s work. Her iconic LED signs use the same technology that transmits dates, speeds, temperatures and other impersonal information in public places. This allows her to launch a sneak attack on the urban environment, short-circuiting the system when, in place of the impersonal signage we expect to encounter, we find private, personal, or politically sensitive information. 21
  • 15. Peter Downsbrough has developed a strongly reduced visual vocabulary, which he uses to investigate the given space in a very personal and precise way. His material consists of letters and lines. He uses adhesive letters, forming conjunctions, prepositions, verbs and/or nouns and applies them to the walls, floors and/or ceilings. Lines, for which he uses cloth tape, emphasize certain architectural elements. Metal pipes, in the space and sometimes on the wall, accentuate the space. Areas defined by lines or painted black sometimes play a role, and, with the lines and the words reveal the architecture of interior or exterior spaces. He has examined language and constructed space since the mid 1960s. He leads a very personal and extremely thorough search which consists in structuring the space and creating discreet yet clearly visible volumes using a refined plastic vocabulary, made from simple geometric figures, lines, words and painted surfaces. His numerous artistic practices - sculptures, photographs, mural works, books, films, publications, sound works, urban space interventions - are based on the concept of position, sequence, interval and frame, and question the viewpoint. All of Peter Downsbrough’s works evoke place, placement and displacement. They result in a relationship, offering the viewer to take up a position: “the pieces are not ‘objects’ but rather elements which engage the subject in a dialogue.” “With the word, one takes part in a dialogue, a discourse on its precise meaning. The word for me is an object. It has both a precise and a vague meaning. It is a universe one is confronted with. But there is no obligatory way of reading.” 26 25