Thursday 28 February 2013

Egyptian Mythology.

Gathering information to put into our publication on the Egyptian pyramids and their connection with Orions belt, I'm currently collecting information on their mythology for that particular chapter of the book.

Egyptian mythology.

Inspired by the cycles of nature, the Egyptians saw time in the present as a series of recurring patterns, whereas the earliest periods of time were linear. Myths are set in these earliest times, and myth sets the pattern for the cycles of the present. Present events repeat the events of myth, and in doing so renew maat, the fundamental order of the universe. Amongst the most important episodes from the mythic past are the creation myths, in which the gods form the universe out of primordial chaos; the stories of the reign of the sun god Ra upon the earth; and the Osiris myth, concerning the struggles of the gods Osiris, Isis, and Horus against the disruptive god Set. Events from the present that might be regarded as myths include Ra's daily journey through the world and its otherworldly counterpart, the Duat. Recurring themes in these mythic episodes include the conflict between the upholders of maat and the forces of disorder, the importance of the pharaoh in maintaining maat, and the continual death and regeneration of the gods.

Creation.

One common feature of the myths is the emergence of the world from the waters of chaos that surround it. This event represents the establishment of maat and the origin of life. One fragmentary tradition centers on the eight gods of the Ogdoad, who represent the characteristics of the primeval water itself. Their actions give rise to the sun (represented in creation myths by various gods, especially Ra), whose birth forms a space of light and dryness within the dark water. The sun rises from the first mound of dry land, another common motif in the creation myths, which was likely inspired by the sight of mounds of earth emerging as the Nile flood receded. With the emergence of the sun god, the establisher of maat, the world has its first ruler. Accounts from the first millennium BC focus on the actions of the creator god in subduing the forces of chaos that threaten the newly ordered world.
Atum, a god closely connected with the sun and the primeval mound, is the focus of a creation myth dating back at least to the Old Kingdom. Atum, who incorporates all the elements of the world, exists within the waters as a potential being. At the time of creation he emerges to produce other gods, resulting in a set of nine deities, the Ennead, which includes Geb, Nut, and other key elements of the world. The Ennead can by extension stand for all the gods, so its creation represents the differentiation of Atum's unified potential being into the multiplicity of elements present within the world.

 The sun rises over the circular mound of creation as goddesses pour out the primeval waters around it










The reign of the sun god.

n the period of the mythic past after the creation, Ra dwells on earth as king of the gods and of humans. This period is the closest thing to a golden age in Egyptian tradition, the period of stability that the Egyptians constantly sought to evoke and imitate. Yet the stories about Ra's reign focus on conflicts between him and forces that disrupt his rule, reflecting the king's role in Egyptian ideology as enforcer of maat.

As Ra grows older and weaker, humanity, too, turns against him. In an episode often called "The Destruction of Mankind", related in The Book of the Heavenly Cow, Ra discovers that humanity is plotting rebellion against him and sends his Eye to punish them. She slays many people, but Ra apparently decides that he does not want her to destroy all of humanity. He has beer dyed red to resemble blood and spreads it over the field. The Eye goddess drinks the beer, becomes drunk, and ceases her rampage. Ra then withdraws into the sky, weary of ruling on earth, and begins his daily journey through the heavens and the Duat. The surviving humans are dismayed, and they attack the people among them who plotted against Ra. This event is the origin of warfare, death, and humans' constant struggle to protect maat from the destructive actions of other people.

Osiris myth

In the first portion of the myth, Osiris, who is associated with both fertility and kingship, is killed and his position usurped by his brother Set. In some versions of the myth, Osiris is actually dismembered and the pieces of his corpse scattered across Egypt. Osiris' sister and wife, Isis, finds her husband's body and restores it to wholeness.[83] She is assisted by funerary deities such as Nephthys and Anubis, and the process of Osiris' restoration reflects Egyptian traditions of embalming and burial. Isis then briefly revives Osiris to conceive an heir with him: the god Horus.

The next portion of the myth concerns Horus' birth and childhood. Isis gives birth to and raises her son in secluded places, hidden from the menace of Set. The episodes in this phase of the myth concern Isis' efforts to protect her son from Set or other hostile beings, or to heal him from sickness or injury. In these episodes Isis is the epitome of maternal devotion and a powerful practitioner of healing magic.

n the third phase of the story, Horus competes with Set for the kingship. Their struggle encompasses a great number of separate episodes and ranges in character from violent conflict to a legal judgment by the assembled gods In one important episode, Set tears out one or both of Horus' eyes, which are later restored by the healing efforts of Thoth or Hathor. For this reason, the Eye of Horus is a prominent symbol of life and well-being in Egyptian iconography. Because Horus is a sky god, with one eye equated with the sun and the other with the moon, the destruction and restoration of the single eye explains why the moon is less bright than the sun.


Texts present two different resolutions for the divine contest: one in which Egypt is divided between the two claimants, and another in which Horus becomes sole ruler. In the latter version, the ascension of Horus, Osiris' rightful heir, symbolizes the reestablishment of maat after the unrighteous rule of Set. With order restored, Horus can perform the funerary rites for his father that are his duty as son and heir. Through this service Osiris is given new life in the Duat, whose ruler he becomes. The relationship between Osiris as king of the dead and Horus as king of the living stands for the relationship between every king and his deceased predecessors. Osiris, meanwhile, represents the regeneration of life. On earth he is credited with the annual growth of crops, and in the Duat he is involved in the rebirth of the sun and of deceased human souls.

 Osiris, Isis


















Birth of the royal child

Several disparate Egyptian texts address a similar theme: the birth of a divinely fathered child who is heir to the kingship. The earliest known appearance of such a story does not appear to be a myth but an entertaining folktale, found in the Middle Kingdom Westcar Papyrus, about the birth of the first three kings of Egypt's Fifth Dynasty. In that story, the three kings are the offspring of Ra and a human woman. The same theme appears in a firmly religious context in the New Kingdom, when the rulers Hatshepsut, Amenhotep III, and Ramesses II depicted in temple reliefs their own conception and birth, in which the god Amun is the father and the historical queen the mother. By stating that the king originated among the gods and was deliberately created by the most important god of the period, the story gives a mythical background to the king's coronation, which appears alongside the birth story. The divine connection legitimizes the king's rule and provides a rationale for his role as intercessor between gods and humans.
Similar scenes appear in many post-New Kingdom temples, but this time the events they depict involve the gods alone. In this period, most temples were dedicated to a mythical family of deities, usually a father, mother, and son. In these versions of the story, the birth is that of the son in each triad.Each of these child gods is the heir to the throne, who will restore stability to the country. This shift in focus from the human king to the gods who are associated with him reflects a decline in the status of the pharaoh in the late stages of Egyptian history.

The journey of the sun
Ra's movements through the sky and the Duat are not fully narrated in Egyptian sources, although funerary texts like the Amduat, Book of Gates, and Book of Caverns relate the nighttime half of the journey in sequences of vignettes. This journey is key to Ra's nature and to the sustenance of all life.
In traveling across the sky, Ra brings light to the earth, sustaining all things that live there. He reaches the peak of his strength at noon and then ages and weakens as he moves toward sunset. In the evening, Ra takes the form of Atum, the creator god, oldest of all things in the world. According to early Egyptian texts, at the end of the day he spits out all the other deities, whom he devoured at sunrise. Here they represent the stars, and the story explains why the stars are visible at night and seemingly absent during the day.
At sunset Ra passes through the akhet, the horizon, in the west. At times the horizon is described as a gate or door that leads to the Duat. At others, the sky goddess Nut is said to swallow the sun god, so that his journey through the Duat is likened to a journey through her body. In funerary texts, the Duat and the deities in it are portrayed in elaborate, detailed, and widely varying imagery. These images are symbolic of the awesome and enigmatic nature of the Duat, where both the gods and the dead are renewed by contact with the original powers of creation. Indeed, although Egyptian texts avoid saying it explicitly, Ra's entry into the Duat is seen as his death.
 The key event in the journey is the meeting of Ra and Osiris. In the New Kingdom, this event developed into a complex symbol of the Egyptian conception of life and time. Osiris, relegated to the Duat, is like a mummified body within its tomb. Ra, endlessly moving, is like the ba, or soul, of a deceased human, which may travel during the day but must return to its body each night. When Ra and Osiris meet, they merge into a single being. Their pairing reflects the Egyptian vision of time as a continuous repeating pattern, with one member (Osiris) being always static and the other (Ra) living in a constant cycle. Once he has united with Osiris' regenerative power, Ra continues on his journey with renewed vitality. This renewal makes possible Ra's emergence at dawn, which is seen as the rebirth of the sun—expressed by a metaphor in which Nut gives birth to Ra after she has swallowed him—and the repetition of the first sunrise at the moment of creation. At this moment, the rising sun god swallows the stars once more, absorbing their power. In this revitalized state, Ra is depicted as a child or as the scarab beetle god Khepri, both of which represent rebirth in Egyptian iconography.

End of the universe

Egyptian texts typically treat the dissolution of the world as a possibility to be avoided, and for that reason they do not often describe it in detail. However, many texts allude to the idea that the world, after countless cycles of renewal, is destined to end. This end is described in a passage in the Coffin Texts and a more explicit one in the Book of the Dead, in which Atum says that he will one day dissolve the ordered world and return to his primeval, inert state within the waters of chaos. All things other than the creator will cease to exist, except Osiris, who will survive along with him. Details about this eschatological prospect are left unclear, including the fate of the dead who are associated with Osiris. Yet with the creator god and the god of renewal together in the waters that gave rise to the orderly world, there is the potential for a new creation to arise in the same manner as the old. 

Flocking and Metallic prints.

As me an Frankie need to begin printing ASAP we decided to expose some screens and start testing out the desired process for each poster today. We began with metallic printing and flocking. All the test turned out really well and got us both very excited to begin printing. Luckily they didn't take too long to do either which gave us more confidence in the over all project. We will continue to test processes as the module goes on.


Print processes.

After gathering research for mine and Frankie's collaborative print project we have decided on a range of appropriate print processes for the classification of orbiting bodies in the universe. They are as follows;

Stars

The stars are split into 7 different categories according to how hot they are. Wikipedia categorised them firstly with letters, O, B, A, F, G, K, M. 'O' being the hottest and 'M' being the coolest, we also found a way to remember this through the quote, 'Oh Be A Fine Girl Kiss Me'. We would like to include a typographic poster within the project as a free-be with any stellar poster. The letters then have a number system after the letters to add to the classification. If a star was in between 'O' and 'B' it would be O-5, if it were hotter than this it would be O-1.

For the stellar posters we will be using fluorescent acrylics to show luminosity with a spot varnish over the top. The colour choice will be, going from 'O' to 'M', blue, blue-white, white, yellow-white, yellow, orange and red.

Planets

The planet categories will be split into three sub-categories, these being Ice giants, Gas giants and Terrestrial planets.

Ice Giants

Ice giants being mainly composed ice and gas will have an opaque pastel print to represent the gas with a solid inner circle of an iron colour to represent their core, finished with a spot varnish to represent the ice.

Gas Giants

Gas giants being mainly composed of gas will have an opaque colour printed, similar to the ice giants without the spot varnish and still containing an inner core print.

Terrestrial planets

Terrestrial planets having a solid surface will be printed with a newly found print process, flock printing. Usually this process is done by applying glue to the stock and laying the flock material over the top but there is now a new process where by you print with a specific flock binder. Once the print is dried with your desire colour, you iron the print and the ink will rise to give off a texture, this represent the terrestrial planets solid surface. As with the other planets the terrestrial prints will also have an iron core printed in the center.

Moons

Due to the moons ability to reflect the suns light during night time, we will apply both reflective metallic acrylic paint to the print with a half tone image of the specified moons surface, once the prints have dried we will apply a glow in the dark half tone print on top. This represents the orbiting bodies ability to reflect sun light and be luminous when there appears to be no light.

Wednesday 27 February 2013

Neue.

a 'Neue' studio found today through Collate, based in Oslo, which from what I've seen so is my favorite city for Graphic Design in the world. Neue beleive curiosity is key to design, and personally I feel the same way, I love finding out new information especially information that is new to the world. This project for Tegn3 an Architect firm from Oslo is wonderfully simple and uses brilliant print finishes to execute the brief with a professional innovative feel. I had an idea to use patterns that would be embossed for the front cover of my Architecture publications and now I've seen this I want to better that idea and expand it further. The Isometric grid use shows their design process while the variety of carefully selected colour promotes the creativity used throughout projects.


Tuesday 26 February 2013

Richard Swales.

Rationale.

Create a brand identity for Richard Swales, a mature furniture making student from Leeds College of Art. Focusing on his approach to creating designs with hidden aesthetics through the use of natural materials. The structure of his designs usually have a fluid aesthetic apposed to a geometric one. 

He also often creates interesting connections between different materials such as, stone looking pebbles made from polished wood.

Brand name would either be, Richard Swales or his nickname Swallow.

Deliverables; Logo design, business card, letterheads, invoices, compliment slips, look book

The Architecture Foundation.

After having a quick chat with Andy, our tutor, about how things are going, he pointed me onto The Architecture Foundation's for help with my Architecture brief. As I'm setting up a lecture series for the publication designs I would like to propose the event through this website, using it as a base for promotion. The event will be aimed mainly at students who already know of the Architects, this will allow me to keep a consistent design through the publications as the students will already know the Architects speaking. Also the design of this site is wonderful, utilising a lovely typeface that compliments the architecture practice really well.













Peter & Paul a design studio from Sheffield designed the website. I'm really happy Andy suggested me looking at The Architecture Foundation as it has led me to fine this lovely studio. They create work for both small clients and corporate ones, I'd love to contact them, if I got the opportunity of a placement I would be able to experience both corporate work and smaller client based work.



Monday 25 February 2013

DF3.

This project by Build executes every design aspect of this project wonderfully, considering how the packaging and publication design come together in the final product. The project is for 3 design films, all on typography, Build used minimal design for the covers focusing strongly on typography as this is the subject matter. The different stock choice for the individual publication works great and is something I will consider whilst designing briefs 1 & 2. Build often take a lot of pride in their designs and pay attention to detail, something I wish to continue to focus on throughout my practice as a designer.


Essential Minimalism.

After doing some research on Minimal Architecture I have found a lot of useful information which is helping develop concepts for the publication design. Firstly I read a book called Minimal Architecture by Ilka & Andreas Ruby, Angeli Sachs and Philip Ursprung, which outlined where this movement came from and how it developed, throughout the book it contains three different approaches to Minimal Architecture, these being; Essential minimalism, Meta-Minimalism and Trans-Minimalism. I have chosen to focus on Essential Minimalism, 'Essential minimalism is frequently distinguished by qualities of introspective and introversion; it transforms the building into an object with perfected external form and surfaces' a definition given in the book I found sparked a lot of inspiration and ideas for my project.
My chosen Architects for this brief will be; Tadao Ando, Peter Zumthor, Herzog & Demeuron, Morg & Degelo and Claus en Kaan. All of which are Minimalist architects with a similar approach to design. A quote which the design will be based around is 'Light, materials and atmosphere', I will carefully select stock and typeface to create an aesthetic which complies with the approach of these designers.

















Tadao Ando.















Peter Zumthor.


















Herzog & Demeuron.















Morg & Degelo.













Claus en Kaan.

Sunday 3 February 2013

1.1 Architects.

Looking through C ØOP's website. A favorite studio of mine from Australia, they use really nice geometric compositions within all their designs, none of which are more appropriate than this particular brief. It has given me a lot of inspiration for my Architect publication, I want to create a pattern by overlaying vector imagery of each sections of each architects buildings. I think this could be create a really nice aesthetic especially if applied with a nice print finish.

Also this project has been put into context in a very impactful way, as I will be setting up a lecture series to compliment the publication this is something I want to consider. Using simple things like installation pieces outdoors to reflect how architecture resides in a public spaces is a great idea.


Pgerossi.

As there are a fair few projects that I really like from Pgerossi studio I thought it best to group them all in one post. Each project uses beautiful stock choice, print finishes and colour plans all that are appropriate to the specific needs of the brief.

These designs correspond strongest to my Wineries brief, combining appropriate colour plans to wonderful stock choices and the use of serif typefaces to create a traditional but welcoming feel.

I particularly love the I.J.Mellis project as it shows the processes the cheese makers use to create their product through a simple publication. A heavy image based publication using minimal body text and great stock choice. Creating a warming hand crafted piece of design that shows the company cares about it's product and customers.


Hudson shoes.

Lovely little promotional pack design by Iya Studio for Hudson Shoes. I've been thinking of designing a promotional pack for Richard Swales, a mature furniture student from Leeds college of art. He uses really interesting materials and a very abstract approach to creating his design which already gives me a lot to work with in terms of stock and aesthetics. Luckily he told me he would be working free lance and is in the midst of finding a space to create his work so I won't be designing for no reason, he needs to get himself out there and a promotional pack is perfect for his practice.

I really like the simplicity of the single cards to show off the work, this is something I would like to do as each of my clients projects will have a unique approach and aesthetic.






Glitch.

Glitch is a publication design by Joe Gilmoore, founder of Qubik studio. The work Joe produces is always high concept considered design, appropriate to the content, I was lucky enough to go an visit his studio and have a quick chat with him about his practice. Then again he visited our college and gave me some feedback on a few projects which in turn lead me to appreciate how much there is to consider whilst producing publication design. I love the cover design for this publication as it is created from placing the publication document as a raw file into photoshop, the outcome is a beautifully structured pattern that informs the kind of design throughout the publication.

http://www.qubik.com/portfolio.php?id=5







Plow.

I found this project earlier today by a studio called 'Perky Bros LLC', I'm not a great fan of their work as a whole but this project really stood out to me. The approach taken was to create aesthetics around the company name 'Plow', utilising natural stock choices and colour plans, whilst bringing in a structured aesthetic on the design side to balance the look. Also including small details throughout the stationary gives the project more of an identity as apposed to just creating a logo and applying it, something I will be taking into account when designing for my wine and furniture branding.

http://www.perkybros.com/project.php?id=39