Visualizing design history: an analytical approach



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Figure 7 Cross-relationship of the paths of nations (partial)

4. Conclusion and Future Study

The graphic design publications, reviewed in this research, represent important general conventions in graphic design history. These selections also allow us to reflect on their limitations, which are restrictive in both their publication language and distribution. They do not however, present a worldwide view of design history, especially not of domestic graphic design history. English is undoubtedly the dominant language of global communication, affecting and reflecting the viewpoints and perspectives of the largest territory in graphic design history. Consequently, using English as a vehicle of expression and communication, as well as the fact that the majority of research material is in English, can be seen as representing and reproducing cultural imperialistic behaviour, reflecting the power of the hegemony. This is represented by Western, liberal-minded academics writing about what is considered an "intellectual commodity" in their cultural context.17 We might even say that English is a major colonial-cultural language, and the historiographies of design research are based on the ideology of hegemony. The history we have been exposed to has pandered to the narrow perspectives, intentions and customs of its authors. Although it may be unrealistic to expect absolute truth in history, it is not unreasonable to look for an alternative angle, from which to configure our past, and provide hope for a broader audience in the future.


Graphic design offers new ways to explore the organisation of knowledge. The experimental scheme of timeline design demonstrates that graphic design has the latent capacity to be a way to strengthen and construct knowledge at different levels.This research endeavours to expand the references and interpretative frameworks surrounding design history by offering a critique of prevailing methods, and by understandings and reflecting on significant specialist writings. Indeed, certain preoccupations and limitations are present in any graphic design history perspective, so it is important that we appreciate the contributions made by the historians we have focused on. The canonized perspective of ‘Graphic Design History’ was questioned by Martha Scotford.18 Philip Meggs responded to Scotford by admitting that ‘the dangers of a canon should be acknowledged, however, there are risks in repudiating canonical figures whose philosophies or works had seminal or pivotal impact upon the evolution of graphic design. To repudiate seminal works, or for designers to avoid a canon - with the repudiation based on nationalistic, ethnic, political, or gender issues separate from the evolution of graphic design and its cultural role - is an equal danger’.19 Rick Poynor believes that a canon can provide a common body of knowledge, a shared basis for judgment and a starting point for discussion.20 It exposes us to essential material we might otherwise overlook, and helps set the agenda. It is one more approach in accessing and understanding graphic design history; one more step towards understanding our past and magnifying the potential of graphic design. Historical studies are valuable in that they bring forth an energetic and able direction which enables designers to find their place in a research environment, and to develop a creative calling. In this way, graphic design can make a difference in the world.
The history we have been exposed to has pandered to the narrow perspectives, intentions and customs of its authors. Although it may be unrealistic to expect absolute truth in history, it is not unreasonable to look for an alternative angle, from which to configure our past, and provide hope for a broader audience in the future.

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1 Clive Dilnot, ‘The State of Design History: part 1:Mapping the field’, in Margolin, Victor ed., Design Discourse, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1989, pp.213-232

2 Tony Fry, Design History Australia: a source text in methods and resources, Sydney, Hale & Iremonger and the Power Institute of Fine Arts, 1988, pp. 52-54

3 Tony Fry, Design History Australia: a source text in metho125

ds and resources, Sydney, Hale & Iremonger and the Power Institute of Fine Arts, 1988, p. 27.

4 Dick Hebdige, “Object as Image: the Italian Motor Scooter” in Hiding in the Light, Routledge, London, 1988, pp. 77-115

5 Bruce Archer, “A View of the Nature of the Design Research”, Design: Science: Method, R. Jacques, J. A. Powell, eds. Guilford, Surrey: IPC Business Press Ltd., 1981, pp. 30–47. L. Bruce Archer gave this definition at the Portsmouth DRS conference.

6 Tacit knowledge is a concept which was formalised by Michael Polanyi. Polanyi believed that creative acts are shot-through or charged with strong personal feelings and commitments. Arguing against the then dominant position that science was somehow value-free, he sought to bring into creative tension a concern with reasoned and critical interrogation with other, more 'tacit', forms of knowing. The classic statement of tacit knowledge is in Michael Polanyi, Personal Knowledge. Towards a Post Critical Philosophy, London, Routledge, 1958

7 Chris Rust, Design Enquiry: Tacit Knowledge and Invention in Science, Sheffield Hallam University, Art and Design Research Centre working paper, 8 July 2003

8 R. Edward Tufte, Envisioning Information, Connecticut, Graphics Press, 1990, p. 12

9 Jacques Derrida, Writing and Difference, Alan Bass trans, Chicago U.P., 1978, p. 263

10 Jacques Derrida, Writing and Difference, Alan Bass trans, Chicago U.P., 1978, p. 255

11 Roland Barthes, Annette Lavers trans. , Mythologies, New York, Hill and Wang, 1972, pp. 114-115

12 Roland Barthes, Image-Music-Text, London: Fontana, 1977, p. 148

13 Pangea supposedly covered about half the Earth, and was completely surrounded by a world ocean, called Panthalassa. Late in the Triassic Period (248–206 million years ago), Pangea began to break apart. Its segments, Laurasia (composed of all the present-day northern continents) and Gondwana (the present-day southern continents) gradually receded, resulting in the formation of the Atlantic Ocean.

14 Stuart Hall, ‘What Is This 'Black' in Black Popular Culture?’ in Gina Gent, Black Popular Culture, Seattle, Bay Press, 1992, pp. 21-23,

15 Peggy Walker, Mapping the Homunculus,03/07/04, http://www.accessexcellence.org/AE/AEC/AEF/1994/walker_mapping.html (10 July, 2004)

16 Janin Hadlaw, ‘The London Underground Map: Imagining Modern Time and Space’, Design Issues 19 no1 Wint, 2003, pp. 25-35

17 John Tomlinson, Cultural Imperialism, John Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, 1991.p. 14

18 Martha Scotford, ‘Is There A Canon of Graphic design History?’, in Steven Heller and Marie Fenimore, Marie Fenimore (Ed.), Design Culture: an anthology of writing from the AIGA Journal of Graphic Design, New York, Allworth Press and American Institute of Graphic Arts, 1997, pp. 218-227.

19 Philip B. Meggs, ‘Is A Design History Canon Really Dangerous?’, in Steven Heller and Marie Fenimore, Marie Fenimore (Ed.), Design Culture: an anthology of writing from the AIGA Journal of Graphic Design, New York, Allworth Press and American Institute of Graphic Arts, 1997, pp. 228-229

20 Rick Poynor, ‘Optic Nerve: Canon Fodder’, Print, Vol. 56, No. 3, 2002, pp. 180-1.


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