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Monday Night, March 3rd, Visual Rhetoric
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2. TODAY
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Checking in
Some of your design task
submissions
The Tagging Assignment/what the
“point” is
A little brainstorming time
Some Brochure working time with
our full data sheet in-hand
Homework
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16. To begin…
I’m going to give you a few minutes
to read, then we’re going to watch
a few video clips.
The readings are linked from the
Tagging Assignment page. Please
go there now.
17. So you might be
asking…
… what’s the point?
Why would we do THIS as a part of
a visual rhetoric class? The answer
might be even more simple than
you can imagine.
19. That is… rhetoric for a
clearly defined public
audience. Rhetorical
moves that “say
something” to society
or a particular culture.
20. Behold, again,
the Space
Invader. He is…
I know it’s
cheesy on some
level…
“invading” your
space. His is a
message of art
out-of-place or
respect for craft
lost.
21. Or Shepherd
Fairey, with his
“Obey” motif.
What is he
REALLY saying
to us? That we
should take our
advice from
Andre the Giant?
22. And the high exalted master of the craft , Banksy.
Why does Banksy do these things?
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24. Brilliant or simply
sarcastic, prolific and
often vilified, Banksy
uses graffiti to critique
culture in ways that are
at once obvious and
slightly obscured.
What is his point?
27. Your task, then…
… is to create a piece of public visual
rhetoric and deploy it.
As I have said before, you don’t need
to be so brazen as to spraypaint
something. I don’t want to get you
into trouble.
But you want to make something that
conveys a public message that you
can place in public space.
28. Suggestions:
1) Think sticker sized. Make
stickers and put them
anywhere/everywhere.
2) There are lots of bulletin
boards on a college campus
and in a college town…
29. 3. We have an internet full of public
space and references.
4. This is still publicity work; it’s just a
little off-of-center. So use the same
sorts of strategies we’ve used so far.
5. Customize the medium to your
message: what do YOU want to say?
30. Brainstorming! For each prompt, write
for as long as I give you (about 5
minutes), or sketch, or whatever helps
you.
Prompt 1: What are things
that matter to you, issues
you have something very
specific to say about?
31. Prompt 2: Remember that
this is visual rhetoric, so
this needs to be an
argument that is more
about the visual than the
text. What images work
with your chosen message?
32. Prompt 3: Think about
places where your message
could best be heard. What
can you put there? How
difficult would it be? How
legal would it be?
33. Prompt 4: Think about the
power of memory. How will
you get your message to
“stick” to the audience?
Why will they remember it a
day later? A week?
34. Prompt 5: What can you use
in this space to make this
point? Where can you
access the materials? Is it
cost effective?
35. Prompt 6: What are the
risks of doing this and can
you afford to risk it? If the
answer is no, return to
prompt 1.
36. Armed with these responses, go to a
computer and spend some time
roughing out a general plan for what
you want to create and how you want
to deploy it.
You can also get started on the
actual design if you can get that
far.
This is due April 7 th .
37. If you look on the website, you will see
that I’ve created a nifty collection of all
our notes about the Literary London
brochure on the assignment sheet.
Let’s go over the expectations
one more time.
Then we’ll spend the rest of class
working in our teams to start
fleshing out our plans for the
38. For next Monday:
Read all about web stuff. There
are links on the schedule. Design
task six is to make a meme using
the software at quickmeme.com.
Pay attention to the nuances of
how it works; next week’s design
task will be to create a NEW
meme from scratch.