Theory & Typography
By: Dan Friedman
A nything could be viewed as natural to the new technology—a preview to the digital typesetting revolution that began in the 1980’s. Typography is central to but surely not always the dominant aspect of graphic design. Although many have made it a specialization, I chose this direction only as a teacher during the transitional time of the late 1960’s and early 1970’s. What beginning students needed then (and still need now) was a reconceived methodology for understanding typography. It would be predicted on the principles of drawing, basic design, and new critical theories and less on the anachronisms of a rapid changing history and technology. The methodology would be seen as a foundation of, not as a replacement for, personal expression. My student often began typographic exercises with experiments in making messages dysfunctional. By studying progressive degrees of illegibility, we were able to establish acceptable tolerance levels. The methods of destroying messages I associated with “noise,” a term borrowed from information theory to refer to disturbances in the communication process which guarantee that messages sent can never correlate exactly with messages received.
Unpredictability promotes interest, pleasure, and challenge in reading. It implies that the design/ text is open-ended, fractured, and ambiguous, which means that a reader can create his or her won multiple interpretations. Because the reader is confronted daily with so much (legible) information from which to choose, it may be the characteristics of unpredictability that will entice the reader in the first place. (The opposite could also hold true as the characteristics of unpredictability eventually become conventional.) These early experiments with their progressive degrees of fracturing messages preceded by many years the functionalism-versus- antifunctionalism arguments that continue to prevail today.It is risky to concentrate typographic investigation at either end of this legibility/ unpredictability spectrum. For those concerned primarily with legibility (conventional functionalism), the creative potential of seeing from an entirely different perspective will be unexplored. For those primarily interested in unpredictability (considered by some to be characteristic of postmodernism), there are potentially greater risks. (I say “greater” because I tend to have a special sympathy for the natural predicament faced by those who opt for the radically unconventional.)
First, overspecialization in an extreme, experimental typography can marginalize designers by enabling them to avoid the more complex problems of graphic design. For example, the typographic identification on medical equipment of highway signage would not appropriately lend itself to multiple interpretations by the reader. Second, visual experiments with layering, deconstructing, and manipulating are often verbally rationalized as expressions of our contemporary milieu, even though others interpret them simply as more garbage in the worldwide glut of indigestible information. Third, experiments with unpredictability have come to depend on a common set of idiomatic elements which carry their own visual and linguistic codes and operate within a rather closed network of converted readers and believers. Extended further, this suggests that each form of unpredictability can
All newer generations tend to claim a better grasp of reality than former generation (and vice versa). The more cynical will suggest that nothing remains to be invented. And the novice chroniclers of design history tend to have fundamentally self-serving of superficial interpretations. Meanwhile those less open to experimentation and expansion resist inevitable changes. Radical Modernism acknowledges our existing culture, conventions, and history contrasted with the creative spirit to question and reconceptualize. In relation to typography, radical modernism includes the full spectrum from legibility to unpredictably. New theories regarding typography should acknowledge the potential of this entire spectrum rather than take sides on one end or the other. There are now glimmers of hope that
This was an early attempt to relate ideas emanating from linguistic and literary theory to the study of typography, an association that has evolved today to the point where some designers now use poststructuralism as a source of inspiration. (It should be noted that the results of such inspirations can be unpredictable, but they are not always of scientific, aesthetic, or practical value.) Another theory I developed in 1969 concerned legibility and unpredictably. This theory is still germane to the problem of communicating with typographic (as well as many of the kinds of) messages. Legibility is by definition dependent on convention and a condition of “optimal” communication between sender and receiver (functionalism). Therefore, its characteristics in typography would normally require it to be orderly, simple, static, and banal, while it allows the reader to be a passive recipient. The term unpredictability (or readability, as I called it in my earlier writings) was coined to describe an opposing set of conditions: disorder, complexity, dynamism, and originality. This characteristic in typography requires the reader to be an active recipient and is more dependent on the receiver than on the sender to formulate the message.
become one more stylistic trend which is eventually appropriated by the market at increasingly accelerated speed. It may reach a larger audience but in the process may be stripped of its meaning (in the manner of the formalistic New Wave or nearly defunct Postmodern styles). These risks also suggest that graphic designers should work past some rather naive positions. It may be an illusion that the newest orientation to typography is automatically better and has more layers of meaning than previous experiments that were either more or less concerned with formalistic possibilities. It may also be an illusion that the new digital technology now transforming typography has a higher authority and represent a kind of progress, considering that technological progress had often caused some erosion of human values.
polarization will fade between these entrenched generational positions and between those who design with typography derived from either traditional or digital techniques. The most encouraging development is that what were lonely conversations twenty-five years ago are now part of a lively discourse among designers in many countries.