1. Wim Crouwel

    Title: Wim Crouwel
    Location:
    LCC
    Description:
    Wim Crouwel, born in 1928 in Groningen, Netherlands, is a Dutch graphic designer and typographer. He is known for his posters and exhibition design for the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam. Crouwel has designed several font sets, of which the New Alphabet (1967) is best known. New Alphabet is a highly abstract font, based on a dot-matrix system. Crouwel intended it to be easily read by computers.
    Start Time: 18:30
    Date: 2009-02-05
    End Time: 20:30


  2. The Ideology of the ‘Iconic’

    Title: The Ideology of the ‘Iconic’
    Location: ARCHITECTURAL ASSOCIATION
    Description: Love her or loathe her’ says Kirsty Wark of Madonna, ‘you cannot underestimate the impact she has had on music, or her iconic status.’
    The word ‘iconic’ might be the best way into a discussion of where postmodernism’s collapse of high and low has led us: to a situation in which opting out of mass market phenomena simply isn’t considered to be an option. The ‘iconic’ as an ideology means that, regardless of taste, we all have to pay attention to – and analyse, preferably in a sub-Barthesian manner infused with terms like ‘guilty pleasures’ and ‘getting my fix’ – a new canon in which commercial status and cultural status are one and the same thing. As a result, even in the academy quantitative terms have swamped qualitative ones, and criticism – co-opted and confounded by the comforting repetitions of celebrity culture and PR – is in crisis. As we approach the end of this postmodern tyranny, Momus signals what he calls Unpop as one possible exit strategy.

    Momus is a singer, writer and artist living in Berlin. As well as 18 albums of ‘disorienteering’ pop music, he’s written for Wired, Frieze, and has a weekly design and culture slot on the website of the New York Times. His first novel, The Book of Jokes, will appear in 2009, when Sternberg will also publish his Book of Scotlands, a piece of speculative non-fiction listing 1000 parallel world Scotlands.

    Future guests in the ‘Pop and Populism’ Lecture series include Sam Jacob.

    Start Time: 18:00
    Date: 2008-10-14