Tag Archives: Visual Design

SXSWi: Creating Visual Stories – [GRAPHIC]

This year’s South by South West (SXSW) festival saw Ogilvy Notes partner with ImageThink and others to create visual notes for a number of the conference sessions. Artists sketched notes from hour long sessions in real time, and the results of these were made available for free to conference attendees on the OgilvyNotes website.

Sean Parker Presentation

Today’s Observer has an interview with Nora Herting – one of the founding members of ImageThink – in which they explain how they can take complex theories on technology and turn them into dynamic visual stories:

Compressing knotty discussions into easy-to-digest visual stories is hard work. Before they started Image Think in 2009, Herting and her co-founder, Heather Willems, spent four years at a consulting company in New York where part of the job involved what they call “graphic facilitation”. They would turn up at private business meetings and engage the participants by sketching the discussion as it unfolded. Backgrounds in fine art helped, but getting their drawing up to speed took practice.

“We had to very quickly develop a visual language,” says Willems. “Now, if somebody talks about innovation and change, there are immediate icons that pop into my head. We’re constantly trying to develop our skills: listening and synthesising as well as the more graphic components of the work.”

Now, the little start-up is working with some of the biggest organisations in the US, including Google, Disney, Microsoft and Nasa. The advertising and PR giant Ogilvy commissioned ImageThink – Herting, Willems and a small team of freelance illustrators – to sketch the talks at SXSW.

ImageThink in action.

(via Observer)

Art Infographic

Infographic Thinking – [VIDEO]

Nate Garvis has an thought provoking blogpost on infographics as a “new language for our new world”. In the post he examines the impact infographics can make in the construction of a good story – in terms of aggregating information to construct a narrative:

An infographic presents a visual landscape of the story being told. The language used in an infographic is nearly universal, as while not everyone can relate to numbers for instance, everyone with sight can interpret shapes and arrows and bubbles. This type of story construction is compelling, what with the stunning graphics and the stories within the story, but it also helps the readers (or viewers) understand the story better. In other words, an infographic is more than just a pretty picture – it is a narrative with context and as such it holds that much more power and impact.

He references a Fast Co Design article Why “Infographic Thinking” Is The Future, Not A Fad, in which visual designer Francesco Franchi, explains how technology is changing the language of design. He outlines his thoughts on “infographic thinking” and “visual journalism” as a narrative language –  “representation plus interpretation to develop an idea”.

From the FastCo Design article:

He talks about “the nonlinearity of reading” an infographic, which is something that can set a true example of the form apart from its faddish imitators. Infographics aren’t like Powerpoint presentations — they don’t have to be one-dimensional. In the hands of a Fathom or a Felton, even a static infographic can feel immersive and interactive because of the way it offers multiple paths for discovering stories.

Francesco Franchi: On Visual Storytelling and New Languages in Journalism from Gestalten on Vimeo.

In the video above he also stresses the importance of content as a platform upon which ideas must rest:

If we do not have content we do not have design, You have to be informative, but at the same time entertain the reader.

To see more of Francesco Franchi’s work check click here.