Thursday, 28 April 2011

Wim Crouwel at the Design Museum

If you get the chance, take an afternoon out to visit the Design Museum where the Wim Crouwel retrospective is showing until July.

Regarded as one of the leading designers of the twentieth century, Crouwel embraced modernist principles, producing a wide range of typographic designs that influenced the course of graphic design through the 50s and 60s and continues to have resonance today.

Heavily influenced by the Bauhaus and the modernist design work of Jan Tischold and Josef Muller-Brockmann, Crouwel’s initial work as an exhibition designer gave him a great sense of spatial awareness that he brought to his poster and programme designs, first for the Van Abbe Museum in Eindhoven, and later for the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam.

Wim Crouwel's work at the Design Museum
Gifted with a sympathetic museum director who allowed him the freedom to develop a signature look, Crouwel developed a structured grid system which acted as a unique template for the Stedelijk Museum's graphic identity. The logic of his designs distil the subject down to its absolute essence, yet often the poster layouts contain an experimental element or visual pun, playing off the exhibition title or the subject artist's style.

In 1963 Crouwel founded the multi-disciplinary design agency Total Design creating the identity for numerous Dutch companies, working for clients such as IBM, and typeface commissions for Olivetti. He was instrumental in leading a controversial redesign of the dutch telephone book using only lowercase letters - offering major savings on ink and paper - but one which failed to find favour with its audience.

New Alphabet (redrawn)
Whereas his strength lay in designing one-off grid-based posters and wordmarks, primarily supported by easily readable sans serif type, his interest in letterforms as graphic objects led Crouwel to design the radical New Alphabet typeface as a visual experiment. Based on the look of type as seen in emerging computer systems, it appeared almost alien, a cipher script of vertical and horizontal lines. This almost Illegible font challenged the design establishment and provoked debate amongst modernists - a debate which Crouwel was happy to engage in - openly admitting to placing visual aesthetics above function.

(Although never meant to be really used, New Alphabet was subsequently redrawn by Brett Wickens and Peter Saville for the Joy Division album, ‘Substance’ in the late 80s.)

Some of his work has dated, but there are many pieces that still retain a freshness and vitality and demonstrate a clarity of thought. Set beside contemporary work by design groups 8vo, Cartlidge Levine, Studio Myerscough and Peter Saville, the influence and legacy of Wim Crouwel can be clearly seen.