Home Actress Debbie Millman HD Photos and Wallpapers February 2024 Debbie Millman Instagram - New project alert! I will be working with @thedailyheller on a visual dictionary about DEMOCRACY. You can read more at @print_mag! More to come. Thank you Steve! via @repost Over the next eleven months (and doubtless beyond), The Daily Heller, Debbie Millman and a host of guest contributors will display and examine through a variety of media and formal approaches, the essence(s) of democracy—as manifest through design—and how there has been a consistency of spirit through the signs and symbols used to portray this precious virtue over time and place. We will start with American democracy. This is not an attempt to be chronological but to exhibit, as we find them, the artifacts that remind us to preserve and celebrate democratic ideals—and uphold the Constitution. By the end of this tense election year we should have what amounts to an archive of diverse objects that represent how designers view(ed) the democratic experiment. These pieces will be random at the outset but as they build, they’ll grow into a visual dictionary of democracy. Contributions are welcome. It will be fascinating to see what “brands” democracy, and for whom. These advertisements for The New York Times, created in 1940–41, echo warnings of the threat of hard-right thinking today. Democracy needs a free press. Although there has always been partisan editorial pages, journalism is meant to be fair and balanced—in 1940 especially, when America was under attack from within. Anti-democratic forces under various banners were infiltrating state and national government, the courts and the law. These cautionary ads were not just handsome pieces of modernist collage but calls to action. It is not entirely clear who designed them: George “Kirk” Kirkorian was the Times promotion art director from 1939–1941, when he took a leave-of-absence to work for the Office of War Information (OWI). Shirley Plaut, the first woman AD at the Times, replaced him until war’s end. Then he returned as art director until 1963. It is possible that she, who worked in a modernist style, did the ads with Kirk as AD, or on her own. Either way, they are splendid examples of graphic design in the service of democracy.

Debbie Millman Instagram – New project alert! I will be working with @thedailyheller on a visual dictionary about DEMOCRACY. You can read more at @print_mag! More to come. Thank you Steve! via @repost Over the next eleven months (and doubtless beyond), The Daily Heller, Debbie Millman and a host of guest contributors will display and examine through a variety of media and formal approaches, the essence(s) of democracy—as manifest through design—and how there has been a consistency of spirit through the signs and symbols used to portray this precious virtue over time and place. We will start with American democracy. This is not an attempt to be chronological but to exhibit, as we find them, the artifacts that remind us to preserve and celebrate democratic ideals—and uphold the Constitution. By the end of this tense election year we should have what amounts to an archive of diverse objects that represent how designers view(ed) the democratic experiment. These pieces will be random at the outset but as they build, they’ll grow into a visual dictionary of democracy. Contributions are welcome. It will be fascinating to see what “brands” democracy, and for whom. These advertisements for The New York Times, created in 1940–41, echo warnings of the threat of hard-right thinking today. Democracy needs a free press. Although there has always been partisan editorial pages, journalism is meant to be fair and balanced—in 1940 especially, when America was under attack from within. Anti-democratic forces under various banners were infiltrating state and national government, the courts and the law. These cautionary ads were not just handsome pieces of modernist collage but calls to action. It is not entirely clear who designed them: George “Kirk” Kirkorian was the Times promotion art director from 1939–1941, when he took a leave-of-absence to work for the Office of War Information (OWI). Shirley Plaut, the first woman AD at the Times, replaced him until war’s end. Then he returned as art director until 1963. It is possible that she, who worked in a modernist style, did the ads with Kirk as AD, or on her own. Either way, they are splendid examples of graphic design in the service of democracy.

Debbie Millman Instagram - New project alert! I will be working with @thedailyheller on a visual dictionary about DEMOCRACY. You can read more at @print_mag! More to come. Thank you Steve! via @repost Over the next eleven months (and doubtless beyond), The Daily Heller, Debbie Millman and a host of guest contributors will display and examine through a variety of media and formal approaches, the essence(s) of democracy—as manifest through design—and how there has been a consistency of spirit through the signs and symbols used to portray this precious virtue over time and place. We will start with American democracy. This is not an attempt to be chronological but to exhibit, as we find them, the artifacts that remind us to preserve and celebrate democratic ideals—and uphold the Constitution. By the end of this tense election year we should have what amounts to an archive of diverse objects that represent how designers view(ed) the democratic experiment. These pieces will be random at the outset but as they build, they’ll grow into a visual dictionary of democracy. Contributions are welcome. It will be fascinating to see what “brands” democracy, and for whom. These advertisements for The New York Times, created in 1940–41, echo warnings of the threat of hard-right thinking today. Democracy needs a free press. Although there has always been partisan editorial pages, journalism is meant to be fair and balanced—in 1940 especially, when America was under attack from within. Anti-democratic forces under various banners were infiltrating state and national government, the courts and the law. These cautionary ads were not just handsome pieces of modernist collage but calls to action. It is not entirely clear who designed them: George “Kirk” Kirkorian was the Times promotion art director from 1939–1941, when he took a leave-of-absence to work for the Office of War Information (OWI). Shirley Plaut, the first woman AD at the Times, replaced him until war’s end. Then he returned as art director until 1963. It is possible that she, who worked in a modernist style, did the ads with Kirk as AD, or on her own. Either way, they are splendid examples of graphic design in the service of democracy.

Debbie Millman Instagram – New project alert! I will be working with @thedailyheller on a visual dictionary about DEMOCRACY. You can read more at @print_mag! More to come. Thank you Steve!

via @repost

Over the next eleven months (and doubtless beyond), The Daily Heller, Debbie Millman and a host of guest contributors will display and examine through a variety of media and formal approaches, the essence(s) of democracy—as manifest through design—and how there has been a consistency of spirit through the signs and symbols used to portray this precious virtue over time and place.

We will start with American democracy. This is not an attempt to be chronological but to exhibit, as we find them, the artifacts that remind us to preserve and celebrate democratic ideals—and uphold the Constitution. By the end of this tense election year we should have what amounts to an archive of diverse objects that represent how designers view(ed) the democratic experiment.

These pieces will be random at the outset but as they build, they’ll grow into a visual dictionary of democracy. Contributions are welcome. It will be fascinating to see what “brands” democracy, and for whom.

These advertisements for The New York Times, created in 1940–41, echo warnings of the threat of hard-right thinking today. Democracy needs a free press. Although there has always been partisan editorial pages, journalism is meant to be fair and balanced—in 1940 especially, when America was under attack from within. Anti-democratic forces under various banners were infiltrating state and national government, the courts and the law. These cautionary ads were not just handsome pieces of modernist collage but calls to action. It is not entirely clear who designed them: George “Kirk” Kirkorian was the Times promotion art director from 1939–1941, when he took a leave-of-absence to work for the Office of War Information (OWI). Shirley Plaut, the first woman AD at the Times, replaced him until war’s end. Then he returned as art director until 1963. It is possible that she, who worked in a modernist style, did the ads with Kirk as AD, or on her own. Either way, they are splendid examples of graphic design in the service of democracy. | Posted on 01/Feb/2024 05:22:34

Debbie Millman Instagram – The #OnAirFest Friday, March 1st Line-Up is not to be missed! 🔊 @MalcolmGladwell will be honored as our 2024 Audio Vanguard Award recipient and will have a discussion with @pushkinpod’s Gretta Cohn. Also, Freakonomics host Stephen Dubner in a career-spanning conversation with Hot Pod’s Ariel Shapiro, musical mysteries from @switchedonpop and hosts @charlieharding and natesloan and so much more!
Debbie Millman Instagram – The idea for Design Matters began in late 2004 as a Hail Mary experiment to try and save my creative spirit. We launched on February 4th, 2005 from a telephone landline in my office in the Empire State Building and now, 19 years later, the show has turned into one of the biggest and most creative aspects of my life and is one of the first and longest podcasts in the world! With over 500 episodes with some of the most creative people on the planet, 10 Webby nominations (and two wins, at long last, thank you very much), a Signal award, a Cooper Hewitt National Design Award, an Ambie nomination, an AIGA lifetime achievement award and a bunch more 🙏, I AM SO FREAKING GRATEFUL! None of this—NONE OF THIS—would have happened without YOU! My beloved audience! Thank you for showing up all these years! Thank you for listening when the sound was terrible! Thank you for putting up with my long learning curve! And thank you to my generous guests who have shared so much and gave me their trust and allowed me to share their brilliance on the show. We’ll be gearing up for a 20th anniversary celebration next year and I hope to bring you lots more heartfelt, soulful, deeply researched episodes in the meantime. Special thanks to my producer of 15 years Curtis Fox, my editor @emilywetland, my pals at @ted (especially @wjhennessy) my pals at @print_mag, and my executive producer David Rhodes at @svanyc who believed in the value of the show in 2008 and helped me build my little studio. And of course thank you to @roxanegay74 who watches as I worry week after week that I’m not doing a good enough job and supports me every minute with patience, love, kindness, generosity, humor, insight and more love. Thank you thank you.

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