According to 100 Ideas that Changes Graphic Design Manifestos provocative pronouncements by groups of artists tend to share one characteristic. The people usually favor stark black- and- white, Typography, on the assumption that colorful statements could be construed as frivolous. In fact a lot of them looked like ordinary pamphlets, as if their authors had gone out of their way not to let the form of their proclamations detract from the content of their subversive messages. Here is some of their work.
This is called Love your mess
because life is messy, and you can’t fight it. You can’t sweep it
under a rug. Most of your most important decisions in life will be
messy, embrace it. Your messiness is unique, it makes you who you are. Be honest, be open, be real.
This is called Napkin Manifesto.
Stanford wanted to become the best design school
out there. Period. In the process they came up with a Napkin Manifesto
that inspires us to be crazy, be brave, take on projects–big projects.
Reinvent. Design. Be an Innovator.
This is called Incomplete Manifesto for Growth.
This design manifesto was first written by Bruce Mau in 1998,
articulating his beliefs, strategies, and motivations. It has since
taken the minds of everyone by storm to work hard and make changes as a
creative person.
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