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Graphic memory: the many lives of letters, from handwriting to digital fonts & back


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19 AUGUST 2021 • 2:00–5:00 PM (UK)
In-person event • Hackney, London

20 AUGUST 2021 • 3:00–7:00 PM (UK)
Online conference hosted on Zoom


Online conference programme

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Graphic memory: the many lives of letters, from handwriting to digital fonts & back


• • •

19 AUGUST 2021 • 2:00–5:00 PM (UK)
In-person event • Hackney, London

20 AUGUST 2021 • 3:00–7:00 PM (UK)
Online conference hosted on Zoom


Online conference programme

Detail of a canvas from Oscar Murillo’s Frequencies project, 2013–ongoing. (Image courtesy of Oscar Murillo and Frequencies Foundation)


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This in-person event and online conference brings together a wide-ranging group of researchers and practitioners to examine the mutual dependencies, and the crossflow of influences, between handwriting, hand-drawn characters, and typographic printed/digital letterforms.

Exploring the interflows between handwriting, lettering, typographic characters, and broadly letterforms in all their variety, our aim is to examine formal ideas and stylistic influences across conventions, media, and practices. We propose to look at how significant overlaps have been manifested over different sites of graphic expression across history, and how they continue to shape current practice. Spanning a range of topics – from the paradoxical construct of ‘handwriting fonts’ to the absorption and reimagining of typographic forms in handwriting; from the development of formal models of letterforms to the strong associations between certain styles of letters and their perceived meaning – this in-person event and conference aim to address the rich media archeology and graphic apparatus of text: within, across, and in-between different contexts of use.

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Detail of a canvas from Oscar Murillo’s Frequencies project, 2013–ongoing. (Image courtesy of Oscar Murillo and Frequencies Foundation)

This in-person event and online conference has been organised in collaboration with the Frequencies Foundation, a non-profit organisation founded by artist Oscar Murillo and led by political scientist Clara Dublanc.

From 24 July to 30 August 2021, over 40,000 canvases by more than 100,000 school children across the world will be brought together by Turner Prize-winning artist Oscar Murillo in a major installation marking the culmination of his eight-year project ‘Frequencies’. The project will be presented in its entirety for the first time by Artangel at Cardinal Pole Secondary School in Hackney, London.

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Conference organiser: Vaibhav Singh
Email enquiries: conference@contextual-alternate.com

Date of in-person event: 19 August 2021 • 2:00–5:00 pm (UK)
Date of online conference: 20 August 2021 • 3:00–7:00 pm (UK)


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SPEAKERS  [In-person event]

ANTHONY BURRILL

Graphic artist Anthony Burrill combines a knack for simplicity that packs a punch with analogue craft skills and powerful, positive messages. Burrill frequently collaborates with other forward-thinking creatives across disciplines spanning music, architecture, curation, education and more; pushing his traditional discipline of choice, letterpress printing, into bold new territories.



ROSALIND WYATT

Rosalind Wyatt trained initially in Calligraphy and Bookbinding, then completed an MA in Textiles at the Royal College of Art, London. She has worked with stitch and textiles for over twenty years, across the worlds of film, fashion, design, and art. Recent work includes training the leading cast how to write with a quill on the Oscar winning film The Favourite, and couture hand embroidered garments for Burberry UK. Rosalind uses her needle as a writing tool, and much of her work is informed by language, philosophy and textile provenance.



DAVID PEARSON

David Pearson is a world-renowned book designer. He graduated from Central Saint Martins in 2002 before working for Penguin Books as a text designer and later, a cover designer. He left to establish his own studio in 2007, which specialises in print design where typography is the principle form of expression. David has been listed as one of Britain’s Top 50 Designers by the Guardian, named by Debrett’s as one of Britain’s 500 most influential people and was appointed Royal Designer for Industry in 2015.



Steven Appleby

Steven Appleby is an absurdist cartoonist and the creator of comic strips, radio, theatre and the animated television series, Captain Star. He has published over 25 books and his paintings and drawings have appeared in numerous gallery exhibitions and, notably, on the Pixies’ album, Trompe le Monde. His comic strips have appeared in a wide range of publications including The Times, the Sunday Telegraph, and The Guardian. His comic strip, Small Birds Singing, ran for eight years in The Times.


 

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SPEAKERS  [Online conference]

TIMOTHY INGOLD (University of Aberdeen)

On opening the book of surfaces

Timothy Ingold is one of the foremost anthropologists of his generation. He is the author of over fifteen books covering topics from evolution and social life to creativity and perception. He attended Churchill College, Cambridge, initially studying natural sciences but shifting to anthropology (BA in Social Anthropology 1970, PhD 1976). He is a fellow of both the British Academy and the Royal Society of Edinburgh, and Chair of Social Anthropology at the University of Aberdeen.



JILL GAGE (Newberry Library, Chicago)

The pen’s triumph: the tenacity of handwriting in the age of print

Jill Gage is Custodian of the John M. Wing Foundation on the History of Printing, and Bibliographer for British Literature and History at the Newberry Library, Chicago. She received her PhD in English Literature from the University of London. She holds an MA in English Literature from the University of Illinois at Chicago, and an MS in library and information science from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She has contributed to the Oxford companion to the book and The Newberry 125, and curated a number of exhibitions at the Newberry.



HUNTER DUKES (Tampere University, Finland)

Scratching out the self: autography through the ages

Hunter Dukes is University Lecturer in English Literature at Tampere University, Finland, in the Faculty of Information Technology and Communication Sciences. He was educated at Pomona College (BA), King’s College (MPhil), and Peterhouse, Cambridge (PhD), where he also held a Research Fellowship. He is a Contributing Editor at The Public Domain Review, and the author of Signature, a narrative history of autography, published by Bloomsbury in the ‘Object Lessons’ series.



Ueli Kaufmann (University of Bern, Switzerland)

Exchanges between modernist typography and Swiss school handwriting

Ueli Kaufmann is a designer and design historian focusing on the history of typography and letterforms, their historiography, and their intertwinement with economy, technology, education, and politics, as well as different professional and cultural practices. He is a doctoral researcher at the University of Bern and a visiting lecturer at the Salzburg University of Applied Sciences.



Andrea Wunderlich (Calligrapher, designer, lettering artist)

Finding inspiration in medieval manuscripts

Andrea Wunderlich is a calligrapher, book artist, and designer based in Germany. She has exhibited her artwork internationally, and her work is held in public collections such as the Berlin Calligraphy Collection. She has worked in various fields of lettering-design, on a wide range of commissions, including sign-painting, chalkboard lettering, logo-design, and murals. She is a member of the German calligraphy society Schreibwerkstatt Klingspor Offenbach and was awarded fellowship of the Calligraphy & Lettering Arts Society in 2017.



Julia Vance (Sculptor, calligrapher, lettercutter)

Draw the line: letters in three dimensions

Julia Vance is an artist based in Norway and Italy (Oslo/Pietrasanta) whose work translates letters into sculpture. Her word-sculptures bend stone into tightly stretched surfaces with precisely defined curves and edges. In expressing a third dimension to the two-dimensional world of lettering and words, she seeks form for the eye and food for thought. She has undertaken several official commissions in Norway (County of Larvik, Munch Museum, Vigeland Museum/Vigeland Sculpture Park in Oslo) and exhibited her work internationally.



Harald Geisler (Typographer, typeface designer)

The margins of reading and writing: handwriting of the future

Harald Geisler is an artist known for his typographic projects on the role of writing in society. He is a broadly skilled typographer specialising in handwriting fonts. He received his formal education in design from The HfG in Offenbach, during which he republished the book Designing Programs by Karl Gerstner, with Lars Muller Publishers (Switzerland). He currently directs his own studio based in Frankfurt. He has worked for, among others, Linotype (Germany) and the Goethe University (Frankfurt).


 

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GRAPHIC MEMORY: PART 1
Recording available to registered participants for a limited period only.
 

GRAPHIC MEMORY: PART 2
Recording available to registered participants for a limited period only.