Reykjavík Grapevine - 05.08.2005, Blaðsíða 48

Reykjavík Grapevine - 05.08.2005, Blaðsíða 48
Liberal economist Thorvaldur Gylfason recently mentioned that once upon a time, and until quite late, history had been saturated with politics. Yes, from his words one could gather that history had once even been political history, pure and simple, whereas this would no longer be the case. What history consists of today, he did not mention, but certainly graphic design is a prominent candidate. One might even risk declaring the precise point where it, not so secretly, took over. At the beginning of the 20th century visuality entered a new era with the arrival of the camera. In a civilization founded on texts, where the rule of law has been the rule of the word, the arrival of direct visual testimony to the universe and habitat of humans was loud, even violent. The most violent response to the new visuality may be found in Nazism, which can, quite cynically, be seen as strictly centred on graphic design: to make humanity stylistically coherent. Of course, bringing Nazism up in any context is usually a rhetorical suicide. So this should be clarified and qualified a bit: things have been made to look this way or that way for a long time, for many different reasons, aesthetic or pragmatic. But it was only after the birth of the photocamera, and the subsequent birth of cinema, that propaganda on the scale of Nazi Germany became possible. And Nazi Germany is not merely the most infamous manipulator of those recent visual powers, but the first to employ visuals so fully for conscious mobilization and manipulation of people. What is more, the visual aspects of Nazism reached much further than propaganda, and can be interpreted as its aim: people and their habitat were supposed to fit an overall design concept. Adolf Hitler was stopped, as no graphic designer should be that powerful – and he was probably caught in an incoherent thought anyway: the main conclusion of the 20th century might be that you don’t need to make the world fit an image, you can simply ignore the world and make an image fit the image. Subsequently, reality has now left the planet and landed in Photoshopland, possibly declaring the only actual winner of the wars of the 20th century: the poster. Graphic designers rule The influence of Nazi aesthetics on graphic design is no secret to graphic designers themselves, who generally look in awe at the immense coherence and sophistication of the work of Leni Riefenstahl and her coworkers. The principles of Nazi aesthetics are more easily applied to Iceland than many other places, and its influences can be found, quite clearly in many places. For example in advertisements for Icelandic museums that collectively invite visitors to realize the origins of Icelanders – showing blonde samples of, apparently half-naked natives, in sharp, sophisticated full- page profiles. (Subsequently, foreign visitors have been known to call the museum tour the Eugenics Tour.) The designers. They are no popstars, usually they are rather timid or shy creatures, often handsome, well-dressed or in any case stylistically conscious – but with a slight grin on their faces. Because they know. They might not brag about it, but they know it’s their world now. One pseudo-scientific way to check that statement is the Google test. “Grafískur hönnuður”, Icelandic for “graphic designer” gives around 16,000 result pages. “Ljóðskáld” – poet – gives 850. That’s 20 mentions of graphic designers for every poet. “Myndlistarmaður” – visual artist – gives 3,600. “Blaðamaður” – journalist – does come close to the designers with 15,400, but even “Stjórnmálamaður” – politician – is far behind, at 4,170. “Nakin kona” – naked woman, only receives 194 pages. I guess the outcome might be somewhat different in English, but as I want to keep my bias, I refuse to check. On Icelandic webpages, graphic designers are 800 times more The Violent Outburst of Graphic Design Sassy colours and war images. What’s not to love? 48
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