Design through the ages

  • Graphic design styles through history

    Design history is the study of objects of design in their historical and stylistic contexts.
    With a broad definition, the contexts of design history include the social, the cultural, the economic, the political, the technical and the aesthetic..

  • How does design change over time?

    One of the most notable changes in graphic design over the past decade has been the shift from print to digital.
    With the rise of social media and other digital platforms, designers are now creating content that is optimized for a wide range of digital devices, from desktop computers to smartphones and tablets..

  • Modern graphic design styles

    Design history is the study of objects of design in their historical and stylistic contexts.
    With a broad definition, the contexts of design history include the social, the cultural, the economic, the political, the technical and the aesthetic..

  • What is the earliest form of design?

    Historians trace the origins of graphic design to early cave paintings from about 38,000 BCE.
    These early forms of cave paintings were how people communicated from one generation to another.
    Subjects in these cave paintings mainly featured animals, handprints, weapons, and other references to hunting..

  • What is the evolution of design?

    Design evolution is a simplified form of network optimisation, since the basic structure of the network is maintained while smaller changes are made to the network by removing small heat exchangers.
    As in any optimisation, design evolution also needs degrees of freedom..

  • What is the relationship between art and design through ages?

    Artists and designers have always been influenced by their environment, so art often reflects its time and place.
    Design, which is another word for composition, has changed with times and places since the first small sculptures and cave paintings..

  • Minimalism and Simplicity: Clean lines, minimal ornamentation, and simplicity of form are prevalent in 21st-century design.
    There is a focus on decluttering and creating visually clean and functional designs.

1920s Graphic Design

The 1920s marked one of the most important and exciting decades for the visual arts, and its remarkable influence is still felt across the design industry today.
The ‘Jazz Age’ marked an era of new social freedoms and economic growth, and favoured design styles followed suit.
At the start of the decade, more fluid, realist graphic art styles such a.

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1930s Graphic Design

The excesses of the 1920s unfortunately couldn’t last forever.
The Great Depression had a sombre influence over 1930s graphic design, with a more restrained form of Art Decowhich focussed on curved forms replacing the glitter and glamour of the decade before.
In poster art, we can see how the rich palette of colours from early Art Deco is replaced .

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1940s Graphic Design

With the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939, fascism began to creep across Europe and threatened to spill over onto a global platform during the early part of the 1940s.
This frightening new reality led to the once commercial emphasis of design being replaced by propaganda and motivational imagery.
Some of the most interesting 1940s graphic d.

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1950s Graphic Design

Designers have looked back to 1950s graphic design time and time again, and with good reason.
The era was an incredibly rich, optimistic and exciting time for design.
Just as we have today, there were many different trends which found their place in the Fifties design landscape.
In America, a booming economy meant that ordinary homes now had kitche.

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1960s Graphic Design

1960s graphic design tended to split into two main stylistic groups.
Some designers continued to evolve the simple, modernist style favoured during the 1950s, and many were influenced by the Swiss Style, which came to have a huge influence over layout design and typography during the decade.
The Sixties were also a wonderful time for modernist illu.

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1970s Graphic Design

1970s design has enjoyed a recent revival in design, fashion, and illustration, and perhaps this is in part because it’s such a rich resource for retro design in so many forms.
The decade was defined by a diverse range of pop culture and social movements, which allowed individuals to express who they were more boldly through fashion, music, and art.

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1980s Graphic Design

In the decade of boom and excess, there’s also nothing subtle about Eighties design.
Topping the Seventies for sheer ‘look at me’ value, this decade carried over the more brash elements of Seventies design, such as disco typography, and exaggerated them even more.
Punk still had a huge influence on popular culture in the early 1980s, and an anarchi.

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1990s Graphic Design

The designs that defined the 1990s take a little longer to come to mind than the visual culture of the hippy 70s and brash 80s, but it’s actually an incredibly significant decade for the development of graphic design as we know it today.
Digital design technology had evolved and become more accessible (remember Microsoft Paint?), which meant that t.

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2000s Graphic Design

While the 90s marked the first venture into digital design for many designers, it was inescapable during the 2000s.
No longer was computer-aided design simply an option, it became a necessity, with designers needing to craft layouts that would work just as well on computer screens as they would on handheld devices like mobile phones.
Logos had been.

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How did the 'Jazz Age' impact the design industry?

The 1920s marked one of the most important and exciting decades for the visual arts, and its remarkable influence is still felt across the design industry today.
The ‘Jazz Age’ marked an era of new social freedoms and economic growth, and favoured design styles followed suit.

,

What is a graphic design era?

Graphic design eras and illustration offer amazing insights into the social and cultural trends and changes that defined decades.
I hope you’ve found this trip of styles through the decades interesting and perhaps inspiring for your own creative work.

Cross-disciplinary action research programme

DesignAge was a cross-disciplinary action research programme within the Royal College of Art in the UK, founded in 1991 in partnership with the Helen Hamlyn Foundation to explore the implications for design of ageing populations in the developed world.
It was directed by Roger Coleman until 1999 when it was merged into the newly created Helen Hamlyn Research Centre.
The programme was the recipient of the Queen's Anniversary Prize for Higher and Further Education in 1994 in the category of the Arts
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Design through the ages
Design through the ages
Through the Ages: A Story of Civilization is a board game for 2–4 players designed by Vlaada Chvatil and published by Czech Board Games in 2006.
Its theme is the development of human civilization and the players determine the progress of their own civilization in different fields including culture, government, leadership, religion and science.
The game won multiple awards including the International Gamers Awards in 2007 and Game of the Year in Poland in 2010, where it was published as Cywilizacja: Poprzez Wieki.

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