Friday, 11:00am
25 November 2011

Tinkering with the form

Do you want a movie poster or a ‘designer poster’?

September 2011 saw the release of Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, a star-studded British film based on the John le Carré thriller about Cold War paranoia at the British intelligence service, writes Alex Cameron.

What caught the imagination of the design community was the production of four limited-edition posters (below) from the studio of British fashion designer Paul Smith (who also worked as a visual consultant in the early stages of the movie).

PaulSmith4

By contrast the official studio posters (top and below) designed by Ego Communications didn’t even merit a mention – never mind a critique.

BenedictCumberbatch

This oversight deserves a broader response from Eye readers and the design community. It is an opportunity to illuminate the difference between the two approaches and, in turn, the role of graphic design.

The Ego Communications posters sit squarely in the poster tradition of mass communication. Smith’s screenprints belong more to the art world. The studio posters attempt to inform, cajole and excite the public by illuminating the content of the film.

PaulSmith2

Smith’s are collectable objects, with the dual intention of personal aesthetic satisfaction and raising money for Maggie’s Cancer Caring Centres. While the descriptive forms of both seem indistinguishable, their context and intent are worlds apart. Though Smith’s prints adopt the language of design, these ‘posters’ have more in common with the work by British artists for next year’s Cultural Olympiad that have caused so much controversy among designers.

TomHardy

By setting the Paul Smith prints alongside the Ego Communications posters we might clarify the role of the poster in contemporary design. Through such a critique we might prove our worth, rather than hoping that the attention given to Smith’s work might somehow rub off on graphic design.

PaulSmith1

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