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aiga

Home Tag aiga
chicago designer robert vogele. 1928 > 2018.

chicago designer robert vogele. 1928 > 2018.

Aug 10, 2018

above > ruth and bob vogele at their phoenix home

vogele died at his home in burr ridge, illinois, on friday morning. he was 89.

visionary chicago design entrepreneur and mentor, robert vogele, is known for founding two of chicago’s most significant design consultancies. he’s remembered as challenging a long list of designers, business leaders, and anyone who would listen, to consider ‘big d’ design a valuable source of inspiration and goal attainment.

bob was gifted with an eye for creative talent, passion, and focus. he believed that the average person operated at less than 40% efficiency and his goal was to be twice as efficient. he would leave for the office at 4am and leave at 3p to avoid traffic. as much as he loved design though, he spent most of his time finding others to make things happen…a more efficient process to spread big d.

arguably a defining moment for bob was found at the first international design conference in aspen (1951) themed design as a function of management. designer ralph eckerstom (a unimark international founder) had hired vogele in 1949 while bob was studying advertising and graphic design at the university of illinois at urbana-champaign. eckerstrom ran the school’s press department and the two of them went to the conference. design’s relationship with management became a cornerstone of bob’s professional career.

in chicago, vogele’s professional and managerial presence was evident. in 1974 bob and patrick whitney founded the design foundation to promote chicago as a design capital and they collaborated with the international icograda congress to create a conference themed, design that works!

again, wanting a more national platform, vogele lobbied for installing an american institute of graphic arts (aiga) presence in chicago which did come about in 1986, under bart crosby and wendy pressley-jacobs. between 87-90 while i was president aiga restructured creating official chapters and we became aiga chicago. vogele served on both its board of directors and advisory board.

in 1989, the society of typographic arts (sta) found bob moving forces again to rename and reposition the sta to the american center for design (acd), essentially turning a local organization into a national. the acd shut down in 2002 and one wonders today if the internet could have saved it. and the sta is back in business again.

among his many professional achievements he was recently awarded the graphic design community’s most prestigious award, the 2011 aiga medal for being a business strategist and visionary.

bob also passionately loved architecture and art. he and his wife ruth were avid collectors of modern, native american, and folk art.

since 2002, bob among others, helped me create designapplause. he has been an official advisor since 2004.

he is survived by his beloved wife of 65 years ruth gorman vogele; his children and their spouses tom and jennifer vogele, mark and lisa vogele, bruce and tammy vogele, and nancy vogele and lynn feenan; his grandchildren, britta, margit, patrick, taylor, ross, adam, felix, mikkel, lucas, alex, ariel, and lily; and his great-grandchildren, maddox, bo, warren, jude, aidan, olivia, amelie, and link.

century: 100 years of type design opens at aiga.

century: 100 years of type design opens at aiga.

May 3, 2014

above> the century identity installed in the storefront window of the aiga national design center

aiga14-100years-gallery1

[ On view at the AIGA National Design Center 1 May > 18 June 2014 ] Interest in type, typefaces, typography and fonts has grown far beyond the graphic design community, yet few truly understand how and why these vital components of design are created and applied. This exhibition, organized by Monotype and designed by AIGA Medalist and Pentagram partner Abbott Miller for the AIGA National Design Center, celebrates 100 years of type as a constant influence in the world around us.

Gathering rare and unique works from premier archives in the United States and London, “Century” will serve as the hub of a series of presentations, workshops and events held at the AIGA gallery as well as the Type Directors Club and the Herb Lubalin Study Center of Design and Typography at Cooper Union in New York City. The “Century” exhibition features a range of artifacts representing the evolution from typeface conception to fonts in use. Typeface production drawings by the preeminent designers of the last 100 years, proofs, type posters and announcement broadsides are supplemented by publications, advertising, ephemera and packaging.

aiga14-100-1
[ aiga celebrating 100 years of design ] In 2014, AIGA turns 100! Established in 1914 as an institute dedicated to the graphic arts, AIGA’s focus and reach have continually expanded. From 40 founders to 25,000 members and from a New York club to a nationwide network, what began as the old guard of a new profession has become a rich and active community embracing diverse and rapidly changing expressions of design.

<a href="about phil patton

Chicago design week 2013.

Jun 2, 2013

2013chidesignweek1 10 > 15 june 2013 | this is the fourth annual chicago design week #chidw. quite a bit of design going on elsewhere too. [ aiga @AIGAchicago ] [ chicago design museum @chidm ] [ idsa @IDSAchicago ] [ luminaire @luminaire_ ] [ neocon @neocon ] [ shared practice @SharedPractice ] [ sta @STA_CHICAGO ] [ the guerrilla truck show @GrillaTruckShow ] @DesignApplause encourages to ‘proceed to add value’ by sharing and via ‘comments’ below.

chidw13-chdm-banners1as seen from the chicago design museum, banners promoting the one month pop-up exhibition are currently lining state street directly in front of the museum space located in block thirty seven, 3rd floor | click > enlarge

chidw13-truck1guerrilla truck show / 11 june 2012 / 6:30p

neocon13-ideas300-2

W-G13-ForceofNature3force of nature | an installation by the guild, karlssonwilker and wolf-gordon

izzy13-mini1showroom 11-100

cdw13-vitra-physix1hanging with physix by alberto meda | vitra showroom #1192

legacy_model2model 2 bike | custom bike by legacy frameworks, a step-through bike frame with a belt drive | at the guerrilla truck show

neocon13-haworth-bluescape1thinking bigger > bluescape | haworth showroom 312

hm13-AnEngineOfProsperity1showroom 3-321

Decca13-1decca élan / showroom 3-101

JANUSetCieBMW2win this bmw 128 | janus et cie showroom 3-107

aiga91_Conference_banner2love power money | 1991 aiga national conference || head heart hand | 2013 aiga design conference

Interview with chicago design museum. Launch 2012.

Jun 11, 2012

click >enlarge

We are talking to Tanner and Amanda Woodford on the premises of the soon-to-be-ready-for-prime-time Chicago Design Museum. The museum (CHIDM) is of the pop-up variety and will pop-up in a week. Between now and then there is a lot of work to do. Let’s find out what’s happening.

[DesignApplause] Tanner, what’s your idea of a pop-up museum?
[Tanner Woodford] The whole idea is to host annual design exhibitions and events in a local, historically significant space. In addition, we’ll have events throughout the year that will support the broader initiative of the Design Museum.

[DA] Tanner and Amanda, tells us a little about yourselves and how this idea came up and your roles in it.
[Amanda Woodford] I became involved in the museum through Tanner; currently, I am the Director of Ignorance & Ambition, our official store. We’ve been married for five years and attended the Herberger School of Art & Design together at Arizona State University, where all of this started.
[TW] The concept started five years ago in Phoenix with a friend, Mark Dudlik. At the time we wanted to create a magazine, so we started interviewing designers such as Rick Valicenti, Milton Glazer, and Ivan Chermayeff. While we gathered quality content, the magazine unfortunately never came to fruition. Eventually, we started thinking about Phoenix Design Week – centered around a conference, the first of which was in 2008. It evolved into something very credible and is still going on today. During the whole process, we talked about the general lack of design museums the U.S. The pop-up model of a museum appealed to us, as it would bring a celebratory feeling to the process of design. The first pop-up Design Museum was in Phoenix, in October of 2011, during the AIGA Pivot Conference. Two months prior to this, Amanda and I moved to Chicago. Eventually we decided to open up a Chicago satellite, and so far the city seems very receptive to the concept.

[DA] Is the sole focus of the museum graphic design?
[TW] Currently we are 90% print driven. We are living in a flat world, but because the museum is in it’s first year, it makes sense to keep a tight focus and enables us to present comparable typologies.
[AW] Print) was a natural start for us and fairly easy to curate for our first run. Next year we (with our board/committees) may decide to go in a completely different direction. For now, graphic design works for us.


[DA] What’s your opinion of a museum vs a gallery installation?
[TA] We’ve been involved in big conversations of “what’s a gallery” vs “what’s a museum”. You can show current, popular pieces in both but the museum seems better suited for exhibiting items with historical significance, whether it be in the field of design or elsewhere.

[DA] What was interesting to me as I found out more about your museum and finding something interesting to present via the Chicago Design Archive was the extent of interest for looking at the historical work.
[TW] Exactly. There’s a need to provide easy access a wide range of creative history.

[DA] The Modern Wing at the Art Institute is finally mounting design. Thank you Zoe Ryan. And graphic design you certainly show the poster, the book. The Wing also shows motion pieces but I’m not sure if there is interactive pieces.
[TW] Last week I read, although I can’t remember the source, an article that said that interactivity will be pervasive in museums in the next two to five years. We (CHIDM) do have motion pieces, though they are confined to a small video viewing room. I would love to have more.

[DA] Let’s sum things up. This is the first Chicago Design Museum and when did you decide to have it here and why now? Was it to coincide with a somewhat new Chicago Design Week? I think this is the third consecutive year for Design Week. How did you orchestrate this event?
[TW] Amanda and I only started talking about this nine months ago.
[AW] We’ve been in Chicago a little less than two years. Our work on the Phoenix museum last October brought us to the idea that we’d like to bring it to Chicago.
[TW] It took a lot of time to actually commit to it. We really didn’t start working on it until January 2012. We started by building a small board together about five months ago. Initially, we asked five people to come to our one bedroom Logan Square apartment and started talking about what we might want to do. We made a list of exhibition ideas and started pouring into those.
[AW] When we started, we didn’t have a timeline in mind. But pretty quickly everything fell into place and here we are in June with the museum open.

very first chicago design museum site sign.

[DA] You’ve built a very clear and easy to navigate web site. How did we ever get by without a Web presence before? How tight is your business model, your goal, your mission statement? Do you have this plan in writing, a graphic standards guide?
[TW] It’s always changing. Some days we’re very structured, and others we flew by the seat of our pants. We didn’t start by asking people to come on board with a specific task for them in mind. We asked everyone how they would like to participate and then our titles and duties evolved. We responded to the needs of the museum; some have taken tasks on that they’ve never done before, but have become really good at.
[AW] Our board now numbers around nine. We first started by meeting every Tuesday and we now have full board meetings every other Tuesday, with separate committee meetings in the weeks between. For the month of May, we were almost always at the space getting things ready.

[DA] You perfectly describe the passion and commitment required to make this happen. And most if not all have full-time jobs. How are you funded?
[TW] We started with sponsors. We have different levels starting at $5 up to $5,000. All our levels are now covered. We’ve set funding goals and assigned our committees tasks that are aimed toward funding. Amanda runs the store. There is the funding committee. There are committees for marketing, space, events, and exhibits. We’ve been lucky to hit our goals very quickly. I can’t tell you the number of people who told me in this short period of time who would say “I’ve been thinking about this for 10 years.” Everyone is asking how they can help, many have contributed financially, and a few have actually joined the board. We’re also a not-for-profit organization and a subsidiary of Lost Creature (founded by Mark Dudlik) in Phoenix and some support comes through that company.

[DA] 10 years! I’ve bring up every once in a while over the past 30 years. Either talking about it amongst designers or going to the museum’s directly. Though architecture has been well represented. The museum’s were afraid to touch it. They were afraid of putting images of their collection on the Internet for fear that someone would download it. Seems almost funny now to talk about those days.
[TW] The museum concept, a small one such as ours, is less fearful and more adventuresome. We don’t feel we have much to lose as long as we provide a quality presentation. We can bring in the superstars if we’re lucky, as well as introducing talent that is unknown.
[AW] And we have the store we showcases local talent.
[TW] Four of our exhibitions in this year’s show are renowned in their fields.

debbie millman’s installation arrives

[DA] You set your sight on Design Week based on last year’s success. How did you integrate your new effort with theirs?
[TW] We first went to AIGA and then to STA. That’s pretty much it as far as organizations. We also talked to sponsors who supported Design Week.

[DA] How long will you be up?
[TW] For the entire month of June. We have a reception on 11 June and there are other events planned during the month. Debbie Millman will give a talk on 13 June and on 20 June Adobe will be giving a Creative Suite 6 workshop. We also have open hours from noon to 8p on Fridays and Saturdays.

[DA] What can we expect at the reception. I just returned from Design Week in Milan and their Temporary Museum had lectures, presentations, bands, it was huge, noisy, and inspiring.
[TW] No lectures at the reception, but there will be music, beer and wine, a photo booth, and of course the exhibitions and video room. It will be largely celebratory. We hope to see around 500 people come through that evening.

[DA] It all sounds it will be fun and inspiring. How do you get here if you don’t have a car?
[AW] There’s a bus on both Chicago and Sacramento. There’s the green line a short taxi ride away. We are also talking to the taxi companies about putting up a taxi stand.

[DA] How did you find this space. It’s a bit out of the way if you are thinking downtown, but it’s very nice space with parking.
[TW] Finding the space was the most difficult part of making this happen. David Szef, our Chief Facilities Officer, must have contacted 40 realtors. Then he had to go out of town so I took over and contacted another 80. It’s difficult to lock down a space for just a month. We had a couple of great spaces that were rented right from under us. It seemed if we could get a commitment two months before our event, we had a chance. Catherine Caravette was a huge help in us finding and utilizing this space.

[DA] You should talk to Sam Vinz and Claire Warner of Volume Gallery. They have to go through this all the time.
[TW] I was thinking about that very thing.

[DA] What’s next?
[TW] We are planning to have events throughout the year and have this event again next year.
[AW] I&A will be online after this event. We may also add items from the PHXDM.
[TW] We are thinking that the store doesn’t even have to be tied to our events, but can be popped at any creative event, an art fair for example.

[DA] Ok, see you for sure at the reception if not sooner. This great and thank you.
[TW] It goes without saying we are really excited too! Thank you.

100 year anniversary: 100 icons | vsa partners

resources
[ chicago design museum ] [ phoenix design museum ] [ adobe ] [ aigachicago ] [ chicago design archive ] [ sta ]

Chicago design week 2012.

Jun 6, 2012

11 > 16 june 2012 | this is the third annual chicago design week. quite a bit of design going on elsewhere too. [ aiga @AIGAchicago ] [ chicago design museum @chidm ] [ idsa @IDSAchicago ] [ neocon @neocon ] [ shared practice @SharedPractice ] [ sta @STA_CHICAGO ] @DesignApplause sez can you tweet that ?

Chicago design museum. Chicago design week 2012.

May 24, 2012


The Chicago Design Museum launches for first time in Chicago, celebrating and coinciding with Chicago Design Week. The museum, a pop up, will be “popped up” 1 > 30 June.
[ information ] [ reception ] [ chicago design week ]

reception date: monday 11 june
time: 7p > 11p
venue: 700 north sacramento #201
event cost: $10 suggested donation to the museum

Abstract maine 2011.

May 11, 2011

AIGA maine presents ABSTRACT. the future of design in media. june 10 | portland maine [details]

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