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What graphic design will look like in 2023?

Posted on 07/01/2023

As part of our series on design in 2023, Fraser Muggeridge offers his take on what he wants graphic design to look like this year.

What graphic design will look like in 2023?

There will be a huge gap between what I want the graphic design to look like, and what it will actually look like in the coming year. Rather than focusing purely on aesthetics, I would like to see improvements in how content is supplied, questioning the design process itself, with clear responsibility for every aspect from those with specific training and knowledge acquisition.

Print is permanent and so editorial graphic designers need to be responsible not only for the design, but also for copy editing and proofreading so as to ensure that all the words, punctuation and spaces are in the right place and in the right order. It’s a difficult task that nonetheless comes with all the advantages of being in control. However, we need to know what we are doing, be deliberate, and assume responsibility for our actions. Micro and macro details are as important as the big idea, that can, at times, suffocate the work. Reading, questioning, knowing, and upholding standards is what’s needed to advance and save the discipline.

A good place to start is ‘Stop Sitting Around and Start Reading’ (Eye Magazine, no. 11 vol. 3, 1993) by Paul Stiff, one of my teachers at the University of Reading in the 1990s.

What was your favorite graphic design project from 2022, and why?

STEIDL–WERK No.30: KUNSTHAUS GÖTTINGEN, image credit Steidl.

Singapore-based WERK Magazine, spearheaded by Theseus Chan, is something to behold. Every issue challenges the notion of a publication through a forward-looking blend of designing, printing and making. STEIDL–WERK No.30: KUNSTHAUS GÖTTINGEN, featured in the installation Printing Futures as part of documenta 15, is a collaboration between Theseus Chan, Gerhard Steidl and Kunsthaus Göttingen.

The cover, unassuming gray boards covered with cloth, is attached to the book block inside-out, thus exposing the binding process of hardback books; it is wrong but, at the same time, beautifully right. Described as “printed anarchy” by WERK and Steidl, the book’s inside pages playfully showcase the possibilities of introducing variations while the press is running. Inconsistencies are created by turning off the water supply during the printing process, a technique similar to that used by Dieter Roth in his Collected Works, Volume 38, 1980. Each copy is therefore unique, contradicting the typical process of offset printing that aims to produce identical copies.

These kinds of projects are only made possible through the close collaboration and co-operation of the designer, printer and publisher, who ought to work towards a common goal. Equally, they need to be willing and prepared to embrace the risks that come with this kind of design and print production process. The workmanship of risk, a term coined by David Pye, resonates here. He defined it as “using any kind of technique or apparatus, in which the quality of the result is not predetermined, but depends on the judgment, dexterity and care which the maker exercises as he works”.

It’s no surprise that I purchased two copies.

Banner image of STEIDL–WERK No.30: KUNSTHAUS GÖTTINGEN courtesy of Steidl.

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