OTHER PROJECTS AND TESTS



Logotype tests for N.A.W, an free programme for young design critics of colour





Identity, event posters and merch ideas for cultural and music magazine Inverted Audio.





Using string and pinholes for investigation into the development of a typeface.  
















Flagged up is a proposal project in which we encourage members of the Foundation to make their own flags to represent RFF and the work they have made with the foundation. We have designed flags, posters and social media content that can be used by RFF to promote the activity to its members. Alongside this, we have re-designed the four pillars to cohesively merge under a more accessible design language that seeks to encourage younger generations to take advantage of the Foundation’s offerings.






Experiment from ‘DATA’










Stills from experimentation with ‘Movement Systems’ exploring texture.












‘Common rhythms’responds to Ryuchi Sakamoto’s idea of a copyleft music culture and making music widely available for all. Common Rhythms offers a platform whereby producers and consumers are able to exist far more closely.  





Further exploring materiality for ‘Cognitive Flash’ 



Experiments



Taking the methods of cognitive flash further into developing marks for a typeface from a scanner. 




A reader which explores different ways to understand colour, Albers on the one hand who offered a far more practical, hands on approach to colour theory while the two oppossing essays look at it in far more theoretical way. In a sense they explain as to why humans’ perception of colour is influenced by not only the language they speak but also the culture they grew up in. 




A test for ‘Acid House...’ where I was trying to convey the theme of transcendence, exploring how optical illusions can distort ones vision along with photography to play with the idea of what it was like to be there. Looking into how I could achieve ‘transcendence’ through parts of a publication.  






Collages expolring form and color interaction theory.

©JOSHSEAGON