Marian Bantjes
Marian Bantjes | |
---|---|
Designer Marian Bantjes at Pop!Tech 2008. | |
Born | 1963 (age 52–53) |
Residence | Canada |
Nationality | Canadian |
Occupation | Typographer, Illustrator, Graphic Designer |
Website |
bantjes |
Marian Bantjes (born 1963) is a Canadian designer, artist, illustrator, typographer and writer.
Biography
Bantjes started working in the field of visual communication in 1983 and worked as a book typesetter from 1984–1994. She became well known as a talented graphic designer from 1994–2003, when she was a partner and senior designer at Digitopolis in Vancouver, BC, Canada, where she created identity and communication designs for a wide range of corporate, education and arts organizations.[1] She owned and ran the design firm, with a small staff.[2]
In 2003 Marian left her firm and "strategic design" behind to embark on the work that she has since become internationally known for. Describing herself as a Graphic Artist, working primarily with custom type and ornament, Bantjes' highly personal, obsessive and sometimes strange graphic work has brought her international recognition and fame as a world-class visual designer.[3] Bantjes is known for her detailed and lovingly precise vector art, obsessive hand work, patterning and highly ornamental style.
Stefan Sagmeister calls Bantjes "one of the most innovative typographers working today," and Noreen Morioka calls Bantjes "the Doyald Young of her generation." In 2005 Bantjes was named one of 25 up-and-coming Designers to Watch (STEP Magazine, January 2005).
Bantjes' clients include Pentagram, Stefan Sagmeister, Saks Fifth Avenue, Bruce Mau Design, Young & Rubicam Chicago, Anni Kuan, Houghton Mifflin, Print Magazine, Wallpaper* , WIRED, The Guardian (UK), The New York Times, among others. She has also worked on design materials for AIGA, TypeCon 2007, and the Society of Graphic Designers of Canada (GDC).
Her work has been featured in STEP, étapes (Paris), Azure, Matrix (Quebec) Tupigrafia (Brazil) and Print, Fontshop's Font 004, and Eye magazine (#58). She has written the design book "I wonder",[4] published by the Monacelli Press, which was dubbed one of the 13 best design books of 2010 by Fastco design.[5] Bantjes has been honored with numerous awards and her work is now part of the permanent collection at the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum.[6]
Bantjes is an accomplished writer on the subjects of typography and design, and was a regular contributor to the popular design website Speak Up. Speak Up is no longer in publication. Bantjes is frequently invited to sit on design award juries and speak at design conferences and design schools around the world. Bantjes says "throwing your individuality into a project is heresy" but she has built a career doing just that, as her signature style is unmistakable.[7] In 2007 she released Restraint, a typeface that integrates her style of ornamentation to be used as shapes and borders.[8]
From 2002–2006 Bantjes served as the Communications VP of the Society of Graphic Designers in British Columbia. She was also the Chair and Creative Director of the 2006 Graphex Canadian design awards. In 2008 Bantjes was invited back to serve as a judge for 'Graphex 2008 Canadian National Design Awards'. Bantjes lives and works internationally from her base on Bowen Island off the west coast of Canada, near Vancouver, BC.[9]
Shows
- March 2008 - Included in the exhibit “Rococo: The Continuing Curve” at the Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum (Smithsonian), New York, NY.
- Jan–Feb 2009 - Solo exhibit at the University Art Gallery, Department of Art and Design, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, CA
- December 2009 - Included in the exhibit “Lubalin Now,” at The Cooper Union, School of Art, New York, NY.
- April 2010 - One of 14 designers represented in droog’s “Saved by droog” exhibit at the Salone del Mobile in Milan, Italy.
- July–October 2010 - Centraal Museum Utrecht, Netherlands in "Saved by droog" collection.
- March–June 2011 - Solo exhibit - OnSite Gallery at OCAD, Ontario College of Art and Design, Toronto, ON, Canada
- June 2013 - Included in the exhibit "Work at Play," at the Chicago Design Museum, Chicago, IL.
Awards
- Print’s Regional Design Annual, Certificate of Excellence, with Stefan Sagmeister for “The Vanity of Allegory”. 2006.
- Communication Arts, Award of Excellence, (as writer) with Pentagram for “The Alphabet.” 2007.
- Print’s Regional Design Annual, Certificate of Excellence, with Pentagram for “Yale School of Architecture, Seduction Poster”. 2007.
- 26th Annual Western Magazine Awards. For illustration “My Dear Can We Work Together” in Vancouver Review. 2008.
- Type Directors’ Club tdc2. With Ross Mills for the font “Restraint”. 2008.
- Type Directors’ Club 54. For the TypeCon 2007 material. 2008.
- Communication Arts Design Annual 2009. With Pentagram for Strathmore paper ream wrap.
References
- ↑ 'Marian Bantjes background'
- ↑ 'DesignBoom'
- ↑ 'Designweek'
- ↑ Bantjes, Marian (2010). I wonder (1st American ed.). New York: Monacelli Press. ISBN 1580932967.
- ↑ '13 of the best design books of 2010'
- ↑ 'Seduction Offset lithograph on white wove paper Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum, Smithsonian Institution'
- ↑ 'Ted Talk: Intricate beauty by design'
- ↑ "Cooper-Hewitt, New:Type Restraint"
- ↑ bantjes.com
Further reading
- Telford, Anne. "Marian Bantjes: Designing a Life". Communication Arts.
- Bantjes, Marian, Rick Poynor, and Marian Bantjes. Marian Bantjes: Pretty Pictures. New York, NY: Metropolis Books, 2013.
- Bantjes, Marian. I Wonder. London: Thames & Hudson, 2010.
- "Marian Bantjes." IdN (2012): 107-9.
External links
- Official website
- Marian Bantjes - Designing Minds - Adobe TV (video, 8 minutes)
- Marian Bantjes at TED - Intricate beauty by design (TED2010)