idi

LANGUAGE

word AS image: verbivisual

Word AS Image concentrates on the presentation of the word—be that in print, on the screen, in space, or whatever medium we choose for its visual experience with it. To start with, “writing” means to give a "visual" presence the “word” like sound does for the orality of words.

This meeting of the verbal and visual creates an engagement wherein the word becomes an experience wherein the visual responds to and presents and enhances the word’s content.That is, after all, what we become engaged with in any object of design, which is then necessarily an interface for human experience.

But, what is a word? The answer to that is not all that simple. For example Alfred Korzybski (Polish mathematician/philosopher) said so famously in his General Semantics theory: “The word is not the thing” and similarly “The map is not the territory”. Hence the word pencil is not the pencil; the word hope is not “hope”— and so on. The word is a conceptual means to direct the mind toward a certain idea, and in that process the “word” has its own existential reality. Furthermore, the word is NOT limited to what it points to! Just consider that your mind pictures an idea, yet each mind of each human being is comparatively unique.

In writing a word graphic designers and artists tend to use typography. But in these examples you can see that each version has its own “existential” (visual) reality: we realize a difference that each version instantly attaches some meaning to as we read or see. Like this example the artist Robert Indiana paid homage to his iconic LOVE painting from 1966 with the word “hope”—here recreated into a public sculpture in Vinalhaven, ME.

To consider typographic options can offer a “voice” or “expression” to the word depending on what we might want to bring into that picture. Paying attention to this fact we (designers) are bound to become more and more aware of value such treatment and its implications have! The world of options are endless and fun to experiment with, BUT ask yourself also what value the visual form has as in our experience of reading/seeing and experiencing the object itself and what ideas this can generate.

Your question for inquiry is how the graphic medium can enhance and enrich the verbal message, and to what depth and breadth?

What I have called an inquiry into "word and image equations" has occupied my professional interests for decades. Teaching has helped me consider various ways we can look at this—as you can see in this diagram. Note, however, that the idea within each square holds the same idea for each square, although each square with that word in it appears different, its only unique quality is in the "voice" for the word, hinted at with the word at the top.