This course is part of Graphic Design Specialization

Instructors: Louise Sandhaus +1 more

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What you'll learn

  •   Learn about the history of graphic design
  •   Understand the emergence of design as a recognized practice
  •   Learn about graphic design radicalism in late 1950s to early 1970s
  •   Make informed design choices
  • Skills you'll gain

    There are 4 modules in this course

    Students will develop an understanding of where the wide variety of today’s design practice comes from. By participating in this survey of the works of innovative groups and individuals, we outline the process by which graphic design moved from a purely instrumental practice, to becoming a demanding creative and hybridized field. Each week, a short quiz will test your knowledge of concepts, and a short reflective assignment will give you the opportunity to analyze the questions designers ask themselves today. This is an essential course for emerging designers entering the field, or for students interested in learning more about visual culture and analysis. No previous experience is required. A note about this course: This course is taught from the perspective of contemporary design, to connect ideas that helped formulate design practice from the 1850s through the 1960s to the ways that designers think today. The relationship of words and pictures in graphic design is looked at through the ever-changing social and cultural contexts, technologies, aesthetics, and politics of their eras. The definition and practice of graphic design includes all public visual communications, which is a global practice. It was the evolution of mass production and communication in the West that specifically redefined graphic design as a professional practice and is this course’s particular narrative. We hope students will consider how to connect the themes and ideas offered in this course to your own culture.

    The Bauhaus

    Modernism in America

    Graphic Design Radicalism

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