I looked into existing exhibition branding, in order to come up with some ideas on what will be needed.
- Japan Week Booklet - Adrian Messeck
celebrating 150 years of friendship between Japan and Germany,
held at the Dusseldorf University of Applied Sciences."
Research, Rethink, Remake
"When asked to find a concept for the MA-Postgraduate exhibition of this year at London College of Communication, we started reflecting about what an MA really meant. The most important aspects we underlined were the research, the will of constantly re-considering an idea in order to improve it, and the process rather than the result. When translating these concepts into graphics we decided to use tridimensionality and optical illusions to convey the evolution and change, the need to go further, always convinced that "good enough" is never enough."
Concept Francesca Oddenino, Vanessa Poli, Nina Frank, Sven Zijderveld
Design Francesca Oddenino, Vanessa Poli, Nina Frank, Pietro Romanelli
Invitation Sven Zijderveld, Silvia Baldan
Animation Bernard Yan, Elias Freiberger
Website Thomas Brasington
- The Swap Show - Foreign Policy
Because sharing is good."
www.theswapshow.com
- Low Stile Della Zar - Alessio Romandini"The exhibition brings together the headquarters of the Textile Museum of Prato more than 130 works including paintings, clothes and fabrics, from the most prestigious Russian museums; illustrates the birth and development of cultural relations, trade relations and diplomatic relations between Italy and the Muscovy, through the preferred channel of trade in textiles and Italian luxury goods."
- Jean Paul Gaultier - Amanda Burglund"This exhibition presents: The works of 23 Taiwanese contemporary artists who, since the 1990s, have springboarded their creative explorations from local historical and cultural contexts, as well as individual life experiences. Based on the subject matter of the appropriated works, the exhibition is divided into seven categories, harkening back to the classification system of dynastic China: Landscapes; Taoism and Buddhism; Human Figures; Tales of the Mysterious; Calligraphy; Flowers, Birds and Beasts; and Photographic Images. In this way, it examines the intentions of contemporary artists in appropriating these classic works, and the ways in which they have refashioned the past. "