July / August 1997
Cover Image Herb Ritts's Malaika, Hands Touching Feet, Manyra Salt Lake, Africa, 1993.
The 310th issue of Graphis magazine contains the following articles: Herb Ritts: The Changing Faces of Humanity, by Michael Kaplan; Emery Vincent: Shaking the Tree, by Virginia Trioli; Wired Ventures: Seeing Digital in a Wired World, by Ken Coupland; Fernando Medina: Time of the Essence, by Rynn Williams; Design & Business: Dysoning up the Competition, by Jan Burney; BJ Krivanek’s Monuments to the Masses, by Juanita Dugdale; and ADCN: Lamps to the Future, by Tracy Metz.
CONTENTS
11 Contributors to this Issue
14 Global Report
Meier's "Church of the Year 2000", by Gianfranco Mantegna.
SVA Panel: "Magazines: Collaborative Design", by Bret Senft.
16 Book Reviews
Charles Schorre, reviewed by Rynn Williams.
Designing Business: Multiple Media, Multiple Disciplines, reviewed by Ken Coupland.
Building a Collective: Soviet Design, reviewed by Edna Goldstaub-Dainotto.
18 Consumer Products
Technological innovations in high-end cameras...the interactivity of designer silverware...the art of the modern nutcracker...clocks and locks from the MoMA Design Store.
22 Industry Products
Electronic World Without Wires: Unplugged but Still Connected. By Richard Lewin
25 Interview: Jane Alexander
The chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts speaks out about the controversies surrounding her agency-and the crucial importance of the arts. By Jacqueline Trescott
28 Herb Ritts: The Changing Faces of Humanity
Whether he's photographing native cultures in remote areas of Africa or shooting the stars in Hollywood, Herb Ritts has a gift for enhancing the aesthetics of his subject's persona. By Michael Kaplan
40 Emery Vincent: Shaking the Tree
As the creative force behind one of the premier graphic design consultancies in Australia, Garry Emery is unapologetically emphatic about the intellectual basis of good design. By Virginia Trioli
52 Wired Ventures: Seeing Digital in a Wired World
After making magazine history with their brash publication about the brave new electronic world, the creators of Wired have discovered some of the business perils of cyberspace. By Ken Coupland
62 Fernando Medina: Time of the Essence
Faced with the design challenge of creating "something new and personal," Spanish-born designer Fernando Medina turned to something as old as time itself. By Rynn Williams
70 Design & Business: Dysoning up the Competition
Inventor James Dyson found that when he tried to use his vacuum cleaner, "there was hardly any suck." With frustration as the mother of invention, he created a juggernaut. By Jan Burney
74 BJ Krivanek's Monuments to the Masses
As a designer, artist, and educator, Iowa native BJ Krivanek has dedicated his career to celebrating people who are shunned, ignored and pushed to the edges of society. By Juanita Dugdale
84 ADCN: Lamps to the Future
After experimentation and trendiness, the advertising industry in northern Europe seems headed back to the basics. In the Netherlands, this returns an emphasis on content over form. By Tracy Metz
100 Graphis Call for Entries
102 Type Directors Club News
105 ADC International Review: Art Directors Club Newsletter
145 Graphis Creative Showcase
146 Russian Posters, Graphic Design, Moscow, Russia, by Catherine Burer
150 Susumu Sato, Photography, New York City
152 Michal Batory, Graphic Design, Paris, France, by Chloe Braunstein Danos
154 Machineart, Industrial Design, Hoboken, New Jersey