24 Oct 2011

Visual Communication: Conclusion


Visual Communication

"WE KNOW YOU KNOW NOTHING / SIT DOWN SHUT UP & BUY MORE SHIT"

The initial impetus for this project came from our summer project, and our chosen subject of landscape from the options given to us in the original brief (playground, docks, woodland etc). My choice for the summer project whoever ended up becoming fairly irrelevant to this project, as through free-assocation I began to think more about the circumstances surrounding the summer project rather than the project itself. When the brief was sent out to students, I was still in full time employment, working for a large firm of conveyancers (property lawyers), a job that I was in a great hurry to leave and was deeply unhappy with. The initial thoughts about the summer project that I was putting down on paper were largely unemotive and fairly typical, mainly to do with architecture and as such as I was straining to conjure anything of any real interest to develop upon. I am very much interested in architecture, space and the significance of our presence in specific environments, but I found the summer project brief to be fairly limiting with regards to this and I was struggling to make each area connect. At this point, I began to think more about my time in employment, as a loose connection to the summer project, and very quickly thoughts and feelings began to surface.

The feelings underpinning most of what I wrote down were very negative. I felt deep frustration with the job, with how my time there ended, and with particular personalities in the organisation that I felt made my life more difficult or less enjoyable outside of work. There were factors about the job that affected my relationships with other people, and my physical and mental wellbeing. I felt great resentment and hostility, and although the feelings being summoned were thoroughly negative, there was a sense of righteous anger and satisfaction in bringing it up and writing it all down, itself not a characteristic that I am comfortable with in others and subsequently much less so in myself. I would rather move forwards and allow positive things to come to me instead of dwelling purposely on negative feelings and experiences.

I often find myself in great dismay at the current state of politics in the world at large, with how companies large and small treat their staff and exploit people's needs and fears. Politicians lie and mislead, scheme and cheat, and we are now in a situation in this country where we are effectively powerless to stop them – when the votes of so many became worthless, because no matter what is said or how much protestation might occur, the machine keeps on rolling forwards regardless, stripping us of all the support systems we rely upon, to the point where our human rights are at risk. This dismay and anger that I feel towards these groups extends furthermore to those that might try and push me in one direction or another to suit themselves, and this is the central driving point in the work that I have produced in this project.

The original phrase that was the focal point for the project was "We Know You Know Nothing", implying complicit ignorance, a patronising acknowledgement of weakness in the face of authority, a sense of resignation to our fate as subservients, and the idiocy of beurocracy. I worked on several images with variations on orientation and emphasis, as well as overall placement and repetition, with an interesting variety of results.
RESEARCH:

See also polish film posters comparison

EXPLOITATION, CENSORSHIP AND HYSTERIA

I have long had an interest in censorship, particularly with regards to cinema, and so as a result I have often come across exploitation cinema as a point of interest. My view of censorship is that it is a failure for audience and art to relate in an even enough ratio, for whatever reason, whether it's because of moral outrage or for political reasons, or both. It is by definition a fluid state – what may have been indecent or considered damaging fifty years ago may not be considered the same way now, or vice versa. Social standards shift and change over time, and although some notions tend to stay fairly constant (child cruelty for example), issues of racism, sexism, homophobia and acceptable images of violence have all changed dramatically in the last century. What makes work so objectional that we are not to be allowed to view it, an arbitrary decision made by those in power supposedly on our behalf – indeed, who has the right to choose for any of us what we can and cannot see, listen to or read, under the proviso that it be for our own protection? Often, work is censored or attempts are made to restrict access to material out of the supposed fear that it might incite violent behaviour, but evidence for such claims is usually anecdotal at best, or outright fabricated at worst. In Britain, we have the 1984 Video Recordings Act solely because of the moral outrage that came about as a result of Christian pressure groups such as the Festival of Light or career-oriented Conservative politicians and high-ranking police.

In America in the 1980's, there was considerable efforts made by Christian-right groups such as the Parents Music Resource Centre (led by Tipper Gore, wife of Al Gore) to effectively ban works by forcing record labels to use '"Parental Advisory" stickers, which in turn would blacklist certain recordings from major retailers, such as Wal-Mart. This wide-range blacklisting could effectively prevent a release from seeing the light of day, such is the market dominance of these companies. The "Parental Advisory" sticker itself has absolutely no legal power and the PMRC had no legislative powers whatsoever. The PMRC of course would not admit to seeking to ban artists, only to prevent objectionable material falling into the hands of impressionable youth, but their actions directly limited the accessibility of these works for adults, and indrectly affected the freedom for artists to speak freely with their music. Strongly political groups such as the Dead Kennedy's, as well as rap groups such as N.W.A, Public Enemy and 2 Live Crew with violent and/or sexual themes in their lyrics, were significant targets. Heavy metal bands such as Judas Priest, Twisted Sister, Venom and Black Sabbath were targeted for violent, sexual or supposedly satanic themes, amid an air of so-called 'satanic panic' that was a popular topic for TV chat shows at the time, and well into the 1990's. Such 'satanic panic' is also largely responsible for the infamous case of the 'West Memphis Three', three teenagers imprisoned for the murder of three eight year-old boys in 1994, on circumstancial evidence including owning black t shirts, listening to Metallica and being interested in the occult. The three have recently been released from prison after eighteen years, as part of a bizarre plea deal. One of the three, Damien Echols, was on death row. All three are continuing to try and clear their names.

The power of censorship, hysteria and manipulation of public opinion have influenced the themes in my work for this project. Coercion, exploitation and control are themes that deeply bother me, and I look to explore these issues more in the future.

V1-V3 are variations on the same visual motif, with the image emphasising the authoritarian element of the theme, with the instruction to be silent as demonstrated with the 'hushing' silhouette. The variations on text produce a variety of different readings of the same basic sentence, with V1 implying dual levels of ignorance, with V2 emphasising the word 'know' as a constant whilst all the other elements gradually fade to obscurity, which is a direct counter-message to V1. V3 is or less a reworking of the same principle used in V1, except with the text kept closer together and emboldened for greater emphasis.

V4 stands out from all the other designs as a considerably more simplistic approach, relying purely on the boldness of the text to make it's impact. The central feature dominating over all else is the abbreviation NDA, which stands for "Non Disclosure Agreement", a direct reference to events at my place of employment where staff were forced to agree not to disclose information about the company and it's dealings with other third parties. There was no choice in the matter, and if staff refused then it would likely affect their continued employment there. I felt this was pure coercion in a manner that, whilst fairly innocuous there (I for one did not much care at all about the companies interests, as their interests never did represent my own at any point beyond that they continued to pay me), the principle of a NDA and the power which it grants an employer or other party over an individual is frightening to me as a concept. Furthermore, by signing such an agreement, you are signing yourself over to third parties who have next to no concern for your interests.

The NDA motif did not remain in the design past this point, as it was too vague a term to adequately convey the messages I wanted to put across, however I was pleased with the absolute nature of the black-on-black text against white background – it does create a sense of strong pressure.

V5 is a development on the idea of the 'hush' motif, and was created by first all photographing myself, then using a graphics tablet in photoshop to trace over the key lines and creating a basic outline on which to add colour. The colour scheme chosen was design to create reasonably high contrast, the use of red, white and blue for the text (hastily 'scratched' into place, again with a graphics tablet) conjuring nationalistic themes and subsequently, government.

The red lines placed over the mouth and eyes emphasise the 'hush' motif further, but do not reappear as I feel this lessens the authoritarian element and again hints at it being more responsive to authoritarianism instead. The entire purpose of the piece is for it to be an affront, to be abrasive and objectional in as far as to be putting people 'in their place'.

V6 shows the introduction of the second phrase, "SIT DOWN SHUT UP & BUY MORE SHIT". I wanted to use this text boldly to be a direct attack, an order and an attempt at pushing people down. The line itself is loosely drawn from an anecdote by Henry Rollins, taken from one of his 'spoken word' performances, where he is discussing the possible benefit of there being an electronic notice on a plane, similar to a "no smoking" or 'fasten your seatbelt" sign, instead saying "sit the fuck down and shut the fuck up", the context being that trying to board an aircraft full of bumbling American tourists (Rollins himself is American but often critical of American culture) is a particularly unpleasant experience.

The design itself is tighter and also includes a tagline, like you might find on food advertising. This was meant to be sardonic, but again ultimately I felt it undercut the overall impression that I was trying to create, so I did not use it again.

The vertical alignment of the text carried through into what would become the final version of this piece, with the text rolling down the right side of the page, however in quite a modified form ultimately. The original phrase, "We Know You Know...", although absent in this design, comes back in another version after being tested again in a variety of orientations. I wanted to create a kind of logo, something symbolic of a possible order of rule or authority, that summarised all the of main facets of the design (superiority, silence, confusion).

The logo would find itself used in conjuction with the other phrase, sharing the space with a variety of shapes and colour blocks, as well as the subtle inclusion of one other element, a combination of a tracing of a photograph of workers in a supermarket bakery (the tracing and subsuqent colourisation creating a rather ghoulish effect) with a portion of the logo design repeated in triplicate, to enforce the idea that workers are subservient to the rule. With the colour scheme being limited to green, red and black, the image had to be fairly carefully manipulated to fit in relatively unnoticed, and sits inside a block of colour to the top of the design.

I wanted the piece to be uncomfortable and for a while I was at risk of making things too symetrical, too much of a straightforward piece of graphic design, which then led on to the slight skewing of the vertical text, the inversion of part of the text toward the bottom, and the uneven blocks of colour inversely interacting with each other, leading downwards. Finally, I added a high-resolution scan of a test print I did into my journal of the words 'buy' and 'shit, and used it as a background layer to add a greater sense of texture, again to make it less comfortable and less like a straightforward piece of graphic design. This test page was from four similar pages, and was done to see if I could use print as a means of achieving the uneven effect I wanted. For some while I was considering the use of screenprinting, but with the addition now of the extra layer of the scanned page, this would not ultimately give me the control required to replicate the image as precisely as the source material dictates. Instead, I am taking the Photoshop file to a printers to reproduce at full-scale (around A1/A2 size, in length at least).

I produced a second piece for comparison, this time using more of a deliberate sense of symmetry but re-using the background image again to create the uneven texture. I feel it is less successful but this also serves to illustrate the ways in which the first piece succeeds instead. The high contrast and high resolution of the background image however is quite dramatic and in using high resolution scans I have noticed great potential for creating texture for further digital works out of analogue creations.