GRAPHIC DESIGN Ⅰ
Back to Basics
DSD-2020-A
Sept. 9 – Dec. 16, 2024


GRAPHIC DESIGN Ⅱ
Beyond Fundamentals
DSD-2025-A
Jan. 13 – May 5, 2025

with Philip DiBello
Monday 12:10pm–3:00pm
209 E 23 St. Room 303

Assignment 10
Collection: Catalog

Create a collection catalogue showcasing your collection of 50 objects, 8.5×11 inches. Your collection catalog should include a front and back cover, table of contents and category title pages (if applicable), page numbers, and your artist statement introducing your collection (approx. 200 words) – either at the beginning or end of the book.

CATALOG
— 50 documented objects
— Front cover
— Back cover
— Table of contents page
— Category title pages (if applicable)
— Page numbers
— Collection statement




NEXT WEEK
Spend your time designing your publications grid, typographic system, pacing and organization. For next week, bring your catalog to class, full scale and trimmed to size. Hang your work as spreads. Design the following:

— 10 documented objects
— Front Cover
— Table of Contents page
— 1 category title page (if applicable)
— Collection statement




Other Libraby is a resource to view rare and beautiful books. Care and attention to detail has been documented and described by Other Work.



Informational Affairs is an ever growing index of books collected by Folder Studio. Many of the books are typical of their time, but when considered in a modern context, offer something unexpected.



Take care and design your books grids, margin, and structure at this point in the process. Revisit The Grid, as exemplified by Obys Agency. This site documents their different grid structures in various projects. “The grid divides an available surface into a number of proportioned subdivisions serving the needs of the work in hand, and provides a visual structure on which the design can be based. The grid makes it possible to bring all the elements of design - type, photography, illustration and colour - into a formal relationship to each other; that is to say, the grid system is a means of introducing order into a design.” — Josef Müller-Brockmann, The Graphic Artist and his Design Problems (link)

This has been adapted from an assignment given by Julien Bittner at Yale University. Thank you.