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^ a b "AGI Congress Paris - Ken Garland". ^ a b c "Ken Garland - Design Lectures". ^ a b c "Lifetime Achievement Medal Winner 2020 Ken Garland | London Design Festival". Archived from the original on 20 January 2021. ^ a b "Ken Garland: Structure and Substance-review and interview". ^ a b "Ken Garland Was Graphic Design's Moral Compass". Archived from the original on 28 February 2021. ^ a b c d e f "Eye | Feature | Reputations: Ken Garland". "From CND to Hollywood: the ruthlessly brilliant designs of Ken Garland". ^ a b c d e f Wainwright, Oliver (7 September 2020). "Graphic designer Ken Garland dies aged 92". There are signs for streets and buildings, books and periodicals, catalogues, instructional manuals, industrial photography, educational aids, films, television features, scientific and industrial publications and all the other media through which we promote our trade, our education, our culture and our greater awareness of the world. We think that there are other things more worth using our skill and experience on. we have reached a saturation point at which the high pitched scream of consumer selling is no more than sheer noise. that totally unfashionable device, a Manifesto." Garland recalled first scribbling it down during a meeting of the Society of Industrial Arts: "I found I wasn't so much reading it as declaiming it. This text argued for a return to humanist design, positioned against mainstream advertising: "in favour of the more useful and more lasting forms of communication". Garland's most famous piece of writing about the ethics of graphic design is the First Things First manifesto, published in 1964. The studio's clients included Galt Toys, Abbatt Toys, Race Furniture, the Butterley Group, Dancer & Hearne, the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, Barbour Index, the Labour Party, Paramount Pictures and the Ministry of Technology and Keniston Housing Association. Garland insisted that work made at the studio was a team effort. Ken Garland & Associates employed a rotating group of designers over its 47-year period including Robert Chapman, Ray Carpenter, Trilokesh Mukherjee, Gill Scott, Patrick Gould, John O'Neil, Norman Moore, Frank Hart, Daria Gan, Colin Bailey, Peter Cole, Ian Moore, Paul Cleal, Richard Marston and Anna Carson. Garland established Ken Garland & Associates in 1962. #Graphic design studio philadelphia series#
Pudkin is known for a series of picture books each on the theme of "A Close Look at." a particular subject. In 2008, Garland founded Pudkin Books with his wife, artist Wanda Garland (Wistrich). He is the author of five books on design, including Graphics Handbook (1966), Illustrated Graphics Glossary (1980), Mr Beck’s Underground map (1994) and A word in your eye (1996). His work has been published in Baseline, Blueprint, Creative Review and Eye magazine. Garland taught throughout his career at the Central School of Art and Design (1986–91), University of Reading (1971-99), Royal College of Art (1977–87) and University of Brighton, among other institutions. It was during this time that he redrew the peace sign to the simplified, bold graphic widely used today.
Garland produced material for the CND from 1962–68. Garland was politically active throughout his career, notably as a member of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. In 1962, he left Design to form his own studio, Ken Garland & Associates. This period was a foundational for Garland’s future work and was commissioned to go to Switzerland to survey Swiss graphic design. In 1956, he became art editor of Design magazine, the trade journal of the Society of Industrial Arts, until 1962.
Career Īfter graduation, Garland became the art editor of Furnishings magazine. That same year, he married Wanda Wistrich. His classmates included Derek Birdsall, Alan Fletcher, Colin Forbes, Peter Wildbur and Philip Thompson. He later studied design at London's Central School of Arts and Crafts, graduating in 1954. In 1945, he enrolled at the Royal West of England Academy in Bristol and served in the Parachute Regiment after graduation where he was sent to Lübeck, Germany in 1948. Garland was born in Southampton, and he grew up in Barnstaple, north Devon.