No mention of Tadanori Yokoo, a very influential pop artist in the 1970s
@terrypmusic4 ай бұрын
01:41 Nice, keep it up!
@shshnkbhskr5 ай бұрын
Stumbled upon this by chance. Best thing that's happened to me today!
@DubiDesign5 ай бұрын
this was amazing. Crime that this video does not have more views
@LloydSpencer6 ай бұрын
Irving Penn only really took up photography after he had moved to Vogue as assistant to Alexander Liberman.
@aniketnayi39217 ай бұрын
@09:45 begin
@Quadmor9 ай бұрын
Thank you!!!!❤
@moxielouise10 ай бұрын
You cut your meggs to pieces 😂. Your students must love you
@mgurney8810 ай бұрын
Great lesson! I'd love to hear more!
@ThePrinceofPlots10 ай бұрын
Beautiful video
@robertmoorhouse535410 ай бұрын
Maybe learn some basics of Japanese pronunciation first?
@joesharples722411 ай бұрын
Thank you, I am working on a design project in China and this raised some great references for my creative process.
@alechudson631311 ай бұрын
bro i swear this music is from a game or something!!!! i cant remember its killing me
@LindieBotes Жыл бұрын
Keiichi Tanaami reminds me of Yokoo Tadanori and Awazu Kiyoshi. Great video!
@therndabt Жыл бұрын
This is the Africa that is hidden even from Africans themselves. This would gain more views if the title included words like ‘African history or culture or civilization or discovery.. so on..
@alanhansmannkurtcobain8811 Жыл бұрын
Neat!
@KidNasEasy Жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing this knowledge. I would like to add one really important and populair Japanese designer, Takashi Murakami.
@Amoslemon_art Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your comment! Totally agree, I don't know why I didn't include the MASTER! Maybe I was thinking of him as more of a fine artist than designer, but he does cross all categories!
@jaysregularshow4083 Жыл бұрын
I wanna stay here so badly but the mic quality is biting 😬
@Amoslemon_art Жыл бұрын
I knowwwwww sorry so painful it was amateur hour over here in the pandemic times! MAYBE... someday... I will redo?
@SaurabhSingh-dk3ml Жыл бұрын
Amazing. very helpful. thank you so much 🙌subscribed
@bijoylaha7245 Жыл бұрын
Design make future of India all sectors
@mattwood1323 Жыл бұрын
Im a professional illustrator / 30 years - sitting here being inspired beyond measure. Thank you.
@byjordanatkins2 жыл бұрын
@0:33 ummm
@Creatiff7772 жыл бұрын
Thank you! This is exactly the information I was looking for.
@dmswanson56942 жыл бұрын
Lemon, you're doing good work, actually useful.
@mattwood13232 жыл бұрын
Was a budding designer during ALL of this - from paste up to pre-press. I was there, slowly crossing over a divide that would not only change my world but eventually OUR world. It feels like looking back at pictures of myself as a toddler and realizing that at one time everything was once new to me, the basics... walking, talking... things I can't even remember but did. But there was a second growing up... and I remember everything about it... when our 'new world' was young. When ALL of us were learning how to walk and talk and think and design and create and communicate... digitally. Emigre magazines are now packaged up and in boxes in my basement, fonts on 3 1/2 floppy, Syquest disks... along with rubylith, tsquares, Bestine, burnishers. I was there. I am here. What now? Thoroughly enjoying your design history installments - and puppy snoring. :)
@Amoslemon_art2 жыл бұрын
lol... i was right there with you in the olden times! Thanks for nice walk down memory lane!
@mattwood13232 жыл бұрын
Sitting here repeatedly watching (and being very much inspired by) your video - all while creating the working on the components and inner structures of what will be a new company that generates illustration-based visual languages for brands and businesses... and I just wanted to stop into the comments to say thank you for making and posting this. I'm GenX - professional illustrator for 30 years - mid 80s was a graphic designer, then art director, then began my own illustration studio in 98 (editorial / advertising art). The analog years are gone but not forgotten - so many brilliant minds and brave pioneers gave their all to move us forward intellectually and artistically. I wonder what they would see as opportunities today? I think that is what has been inspiring me the most watching... just appreciating the vision and the talent. Again, thank you. All the best.
@ArtRamboPettyQueen2 жыл бұрын
I love this and I think you did a wonderful job explaining this and giving background about movie posters and symbols!
@princevimbai12 жыл бұрын
Great work research wise, but I found the beginning a little off-putting. What I mean by this is all the titles (decolonised, unpatriarchal and queered) makes it sound not so much about presenting African design history as it is, but rather viewing it from what would be a predominantly Western lens of what is good or not good. This comes of as kinda hypocritical or contrary as whilst it claims "decolonised" it presents things from what would be a largely Western framework, which sounds quite colonial in itself. Whilst I do get why one may want to present it in such a way, it is undeniable that the eras people live through impact culture and therefore, design, so it is impossible to completely decolonise African design unless you are to view it plainly from how these groups of people viewed it prior to colonialism and build from that, which even for the current generation would be incredibly difficult due to our lifestyles, and would be all the more impossible whilst simultaneously applying modern standards to it. Also considering how large and diverse the African continent is, and how viewpoints differ greatly between people groups, it is incredibly hard to give one decolonised view on Africa. In the end, such big tags end up just sounding meaningless or taking away from each other and what was achieved. I do get this is your normal title introduction section to show the lens the channel views from, wanted to give my honest feedback on it. Nonetheless, thank you for putting in a lot of work doing deep research into different African cultures, it being a really expansive topic as design in say West Africa is very different from say Southern Africa inasmuch as our cultures are hugely different. Information also tends to be hard to find, I highly commend your efforts.
@Amoslemon_art2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much! I completely agree. These were all part of my ambitious project to broaden the content in a Design History course I taught in 2020. There is no escaping my Westernized lens /brain but I tried! I also had students watch a number of videos from different experts, African and of the African diaspora, to try to include various viewpoints. AND a textbook is begging to be written, with different chapters by different people! But until then - this is a very very very basic overview cramming waaaaaaay too much territory into one survey course. 🤠
@princevimbai12 жыл бұрын
@@Amoslemon_art thank you for endeavouring to cover it. I definitely do respect your effort and it clearly was a lot of research. I think the difficulties come with the area as very little on our own African history or culture is actually written by our own people as was covered, but I think there's also value in different lenses and that can be owned (though it is only problematic when outside lenses are the sole ones by which a topic is viewed). I think that was my main encouragement, to not worry as much about the big titles, but just present what you're able to find as objectively and truthfully as possible. Anyway, hope you're well and safe! Keep up the great work!
@ntan89942 жыл бұрын
wow your channel is a godsend
@PatriciaPageMosaicArtsCrafts2 жыл бұрын
What an unfortunate amount of views for an excellent production. Thank you much appreciated 💜
@Amoslemon_art2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your comment! Professor Ann worked hard in the summer of 2020
@Ahrysa2 жыл бұрын
everything is based on everything else. Its interesting to see how art ideas inspire different movements in totally different time periods
@welpisme2 жыл бұрын
where can i reasearch about new wave?
@MoxyDraws2 жыл бұрын
Great video! also i think you accidently got the dates confused, Elaine lustig Cohen died in 2016 not 2020! not that big a problem just thought i'd let u know ^u^
@Ahrysa2 жыл бұрын
I wonder if Ikea was based on Bauhaus too. Their products look similar I can't describe how much my face contorted when I got to the part about Eric Gill lol
@trannguyennhatnam2 жыл бұрын
thanks for the information, really appreciate it
@Ahrysa2 жыл бұрын
45:15 I was today years old when I realized the correlation between a bird and companies involved with messages (ie Twitter). Jeez lol
@Amoslemon_art Жыл бұрын
Hey you get it when you get it - at least you got it! 😂
@Ahrysa2 жыл бұрын
thought that coconut was a chicken for a sec lol. I like the softness of impressionism more than dramatic hyper realism, the incomplete look gives it a nostalgic feeling
@davidyomi76922 жыл бұрын
I’m blown away. I have been looking for this. Thank you so so much. It’s really hard piecing all this together cus there’s so much detail to every topic you touched but I appreciate this work a lot 😊
@Amoslemon_art2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! It needs to be a book at the very east!
@Ahrysa3 жыл бұрын
In my typography class we learned the serifs helped prevent carved letters from fading during weathering.
@annlemon14383 жыл бұрын
That's so cool! I guess because water would pool outward and run out of the grooves? so they don't get wore worn down? Interesting!
@scotchbonnie41223 жыл бұрын
This is an amazing presentation and super helpful, thanks for sharing!!
@annlemon14382 жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for watching :-)
@Fathom9163 жыл бұрын
Phenomenal
@harperwelch51473 жыл бұрын
So you’re going to summarize the design culture of Asia in 23 minutes? What a ridiculous effort. You cannot treat this topic with respect in that completely abbreviated way. Why even try? There’s little or chance of learning anything of value on a topic so complex and vast in a few minutes.
@annlemon14382 жыл бұрын
I completely agree! Unfortunately, in this "survey" course we only have limited time to cover the entire history of Graphic Design in 14 weeks. By no means do I claim to be an expert on Asia, but it is hard to find good material for undergrads, in English, on (specifically) graphic design from non-European countries. More more resources need to be created! The standard textbook has one chapter - about 6 pages - on "The Asian Connection" (and nothing on India, China , or the Middle East).
@joesharples722411 ай бұрын
Ann can do whatever the hell she likes, this is KZbin. if you don't like that then I suggest turning off your computer and ranting to the mirror, it will do as much good.
@carenburmeister50023 жыл бұрын
That was a great trip back in time! Fifty years later, we still have a long way to go on these issues of our injustice.
@annlemon14382 жыл бұрын
So true. It is.a good reminder to see that some of the basic techniques (signs, posters, marches and SATIRE) can still work. And there is an increasing flood of "propaganda" and disinformation to counter-attack! Sigh...
@marcosbarreto12343 жыл бұрын
Very interesting. I Loved know more about Japan and its arts. Thank you
@annlemon14382 жыл бұрын
My pleasure 😊 I am not a great scholar of Japanese art history but it's a starting point!
@alexburlaka8383 жыл бұрын
So informative! Thank you for this lecture!
@annlemon14382 жыл бұрын
Glad it was helpful! A fascinating topic and so much more is out there!
@LaLA4410003 жыл бұрын
Eurhm....huh? Me 15 seconds in...Japan is not tiny. I come from Burundi and The Netherlands! Can I take anything that is stated after that introduction serious???
@annlemon14382 жыл бұрын
You are correct! :-D I apologize, only makes sense in contrast with previous chapters / videos on Design in Africa, China and the Middle East - by comparison with these it is a small geographic area. But I appreciate the comment! And this is only a tiny introduction to huge, rich histories - a survey course.
@LaLA4410002 жыл бұрын
@@annlemon1438 Thanks for the response! Looking forward to your next video's.