As a mainstay of design, typography is a corner stone of most degree programs in visual communication design. Still questions abound. How and where typography is taught is as varied as its use in design applications. We invite you to join fellow educators in a conversation which will focus on how, where and when we teach typography. Our panelists will explore the role of typography in the continuum of design education and identify areas where traditional programs experience shortcomings and challenges. We will ask what fundamental skills should be taught and whether the way we are teaching typography needs to change in a screen-based world? Finally, we will ask the audience to participate in identifying specific skill sets and methodologies which should be part of type-centric design curriculum in the 21st Century.
The conversation will be moderated by Doug Clouse, President of TDC and Principal at The Graphics Office and Liz DeLuna, Associate Professor of Design at St. John’s University.
Type Directors Club
347 West 36th Street
Suite 603
New York, NY 10018
Saturday, April 1, 2017
2pm–5pm
Moderators
Liz DeLuna
Associate Professor of Design
St. John’s University
Doug Clouse
President, Type Directors Club
Principal, The Graphics Office
Panelists
Thomas Jockin
Founder of TypeThursday
Adjunct Professor
Queen’s College, CUNY
and Fashion Institute of Technology, SUNY
Amy Papaelias
Assistant Professor
Graphic Design
SUNY New Paltz
Co-founder of Alphabettes.org
John Gambell
Senior Critic
Yale School of Art
Yale University Printer
Juliette Cezzar
Designer, Writer
Assistant Professor
Communication Design
Parsons School of Design, The New School
Hosted by the Type Directors Club.