Monday 7 January 2008

Designers Republic


Initially, Ian Anderson founded tDR to design flyers for the band Person to Person, which he managed at the time. His first ideas were inspired by Russian constructivism. From their beginning, the works should be viewed in contrast to the current understanding of design (Quote: tDR is a declaration of independence from what we perceive to be the existing design community[citation needed]).
An early client was Leeds band Age of Chance, for whom they developed a series of striking record covers from 1986-1987. The sleeve of Don't Get Mad ... Get Even was one of Q Magazine's 100 Best Record Covers Of All Time (2001).[1]
The Designers Republic were introduced to a larger audience by their record covers for the English electronica label Warp Records. They designed the covers of CDs by Autechre and Aphex Twin, but also for artists such as Fluke, Funkstörung, Supergrass, Pop Will Eat Itself and Towa Tei.
Outside of the musical sector, tDR created the visuals, packaging and manual for the PlayStation/Sega Saturn game Wipeout, the interface for the PC game Hardwar, and packaging and posters for the first Grand Theft Auto. They cooperated with the Swatch company in 1996 to design their own watch. They also designed the packaging for Sony's Aibo.
The book 3D → 2D: Adventures In And Out Of Architecture, released in 2001, was an architectural examination of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Slovenia presented in the graphic style of their previous work. The book was preordered by over 3,000 fans[citation needed], but fell short of the expectations of some due to a lack of seemingly innovative material.
Current members are Ian Anderson, Darren Pascoe, Richard Wright, Antony Smith, Tom Smith, Nick Tymn, Nicole Jacek, Lydia Lapinski, Richard Wilson
Past members include: Nick Bax, Matt Pyke, Michael C. Place and Sanderson Bob.
[edit]Influence

The work of tDR had great influence on the development of graphic design, especially in the fields of web and cover design in the electronica scene.[citation needed]
[edit]Style

The Designers Republic's works are playful and bright, and considered Maximum-minimalist, mixing images from Japanese anime cartoons and subvertized corporate logos, with a postmodern tendency towards controversial irony, featuring statements like "Work Buy Consume Die", "Customized Terror", "Buy nothing, pay now", or indeed ""Made In The Designers Republic"". They also celebrated their northern roots with phrases like 'Made in the Designers Republic, North of Nowhere' and 'SoYo' (referring to Sheffield South Yorkshire - stating they were not from London's design community in Soho.

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