This is why you should pay a visit to the 27th Brno Biennial asap
“Is it possible to describe new things with old words?” The 27th Brno Biennial examines the key phenomena of contemporary graphic design and visual communication. “It will loosely follow in the tracks of the 25th edition which opened the Biennial to all forms of graphic design and in particular the previous one, thematically focused and dedicated to graphic design, education and schools. Brno Biennial responds to the metamorphoses and the state of contemporary graphic design; its multitude, variety, vagueness and apparent superficiality. Its ambition is to elucidate both on the general and subjective levels some of the phenomena which define or influence contemporary graphic design. It will attempt to identify, specify and display some of its basic parameters, current themes and motivations”.
The cultural and political backdrop to the Brno Biennial’s origins was 1960s’ Czechoslovakia, with artists and designers asserting their right to free artistic expression while also comparing their work with that produced by their international counterparts.
The First Czechoslovak Exhibition of Poster and Promotional Graphics was organised by the Moravian Gallery, Brno, in 1964. From 1966 onwards, regular international exhibitions embracing a wide spectrum of graphic design were to follow. The original multi-thematic structure of the Brno Biennial comprised three exhibition disciplines. After 1968, one of these disciplines – exhibition design – was abandoned, as it proved too demanding. Two basic subjects have alternated at the Brno Biennial since 1970: (1) poster, corporate identity, information and promotional graphics; and (2) graphic design and typography in books, magazines, newspapers and the digital media.
Many eminent figures in graphic design have taken part in the Brno Biennial over the years, whether as exhibiting artists, members of international juries, or lecturers at international symposia. The Biennial has played host to such graphic design luminaries as Saul Bass, Roman Cieślewicz, Wim Crouwel, Alan Fletcher, Adrian Frutiger, Shigeo Fukuda, Milton Glaser, Ivan Chermayeff, Seymour Chwast, Mitsuo Katsui, Herb Lubalin, Ladislav Sutnar, Josef Týfa, Tadanori Yokoo, and Hermann Zapf.
For over five decades, the Brno Biennial has provided a major international platform for exhibitions, discussions, and relevant accompanying programs on the dynamically expanding field of graphic design and its importance to visual culture.
The catalogue for the 27th Brno Biennal (designed by Radim Peško, Tomáš Celizna and Adam Macháček) not only provides an excellent snapshot of the event, but also makes for an impressive publication in its own right.
The 27th International Biennial of Graphic Design Brno 2016 is a must through 30/10/2016. For more info check here.
Tags/ graphic design, exhibition, posters, herb lubalin, milton glaser, saul bass, 27th brno biennial, brno biennial, brno, moravian gallery, radim peško, tomáš celizna, adam macháček