Carl Dair
Carl Dair is one of Canada's preeminent designers and he left a lasting legacy as a teacher, type designer, design practitioner, and author. Even though he was primarily a self-taught designer, Dair would emerge to win international recognition and codify visual design principles still relevant today.[1]
Biography
Dair was born in Welland, Ontario, in February 1912. Dair's first job as an 18-year-old was creating advertising and layouts for the Stratford Beacon-Herald.[1] He would move on to form a partnership with Henry Eveleigh and set-up the Dair-Eveleigh Studio from 1947-51 in Montréal, Quebec. He worked principally as a freelance designer on a variety of jobs from department store art director to the typographic director for the National Film board of Canada (1945).[1] Dair lectured on typography at the Ontario College of Art between 1959 and 1962, as well as teaching at the Jamaica School of Arts and Crafts for two years.[2]
With the publication of Design with Type in 1952, revised and republished in 1967, he demonstrated a deep understanding of how to design using primarily type and formal design principles. He outlined visual principles of harmony and contrast codifying seven kinds of typographic contrast: size, weight, structure, form, texture, colour, and direction. "Contrast is the opposite of concord; it is based on a unity of differences."[3] Design with Type became the first Canadian book to receive the Book of the Year Award from the American Institute of Graphic Arts (AIGA).[4] It was republished by the University of Toronto Press (First Edition) in 2000.
The period from 1956-57 was extremely productive for Dair when he received the RSC fellowship to study type design and manufacture in the Netherlands.[1] During this period he had the opportunity to study metal type and hand-punching at Enschedé Foundry in Haarlem, Netherlands, where he created a silent film called Gravers and Files documenting "one of the last great punchcutters, P. H. Radisch, demonstrating his craft—it is perhaps the only such film in existence".[5] His experiences at Enschedé were also a formative influence in the typeface, for instance, Dair later created a typeface called Cartier.[5]
Cartier was commissioned and released for Canada's 1967 centenary celebrations. The original design was based on hand-lettering and had some failings as a typeface until it was sensitively adjusted by Rod McDonald for Monotype Imaging and released in 2000.[6] Cartier can be identified as an attempt to create a regional typeface for Canada. "It is now widely used and appears to have achieved the status of an identifiable national type."[7]
Through his practice, teaching, and writing, Dair built an international reputation and received a number of awards.[1] In 1959, he was awarded the silver medal at the Internationale Buchkunst-Austellung in Leipzig, East Germany. In 1962, The Royal Canadian Academy of Arts awarded him its Arts Medal. In 1967, he became a fellow in the Graphic Designers of Canada (GDC).
Carl Dair died on the flight from New York City to Toronto on September 28, 1967.[1] The Faculty of Fine Arts at York University honors Dair's contribution to design in Canada with the Carl Dair Memorial Scholarship. A large collection of Dair's work can be seen on Centre for Contemporary Canadian Art website.
Typefaces
Typefaces Designed by Carl Dair:
- Cartier (1967, Mono Lino)[8]
- Raleigh a 1977 revival of Cartier by Robert Norton, available as digital type from URW++, ParaType, Bitstream Systems, Adobe Systems, Linotype, and Monotype.
- Cartier Book (2000, Monotype) another revival by Rod McDonald.[9]
Quotes
Letters are like molecules when they combine with one another. (Dair, 1967)
Typographical rhythm is no less a rhythm because it exists only in space and is perceived instantaneously. (Dair, 1967)
Publications
Dair, C. Design with type. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, (1952; 2nd ed 1967)
A Typographic Quest, 6 pamphlets published by Westvaco Papers in the 1960s
Dair, C. (Director). (1957). Gravers and Files [Film].
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Graphic Designers of Canada (GDC). (2007, November 17). Gdc fellows: 1960 recipients. Retrieved from http://www.gdc.net/about/fellows/articles67.php
- ↑ Carl Dair Fonds. Massey College, Toronto (MS Word doc). Retrieved from http://masseycollege.ca/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/Carl-Dair-Fonds-Finding-Aid.doc
- ↑ Dair, C. Design with type. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1967
- ↑ University of Toronto Press (Retrieved August 3, 2011) "Timeline." http://www.utpress.utoronto.ca/noflash.html
- 1 2 The Devil's Artisan. (2008). A rogue's gallery of the canadian book and printing arts: carl dair. Retrieved from http://devilsartisan.porcupinesquill.ca/rogues_gallery_dair.html
- ↑ Fonts.com (2011). Cartier. Retrieved from http://www.fonts.com/findfonts/hiddengems/cartier.htm
- ↑ Lewis, L. (2011). The canadian encyclopedia/the encyclopedia of music in canada: dair, carl. Retrieved from http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=A1ARTA0002105
- ↑ Jaspert, W. Pincus, W. Turner Berry and A.F. Johnson. The Encyclopedia of Type Faces. Blandford Press Lts.: 1953, 1983, ISBN 0-7137-1347-X, p. 37
- ↑ "Carl Dair Pro". MyFont. 1999-02-22. Retrieved 2011-10-20.
External links
- Typography Exhibits Best of Canadian Printing
- Typographic Contrast and the Web
- AIGA Design Archives
- Haley, A. (2006, February). Rod McDonald, Canada's Typographer Laureate. Step Inside Design article at the Wayback Machine (archived July 19, 2011)
- Berry, J. (2003, July 28). Dot-font: Seven Principles of Typographic Contrast. Via CreativePro.com
- Carl Dair Fonds. Massey College, Toronto (MS Word doc)
Examples of work
- Centre for Contemporary Canadian Art: The Canadian Art Database
- Stamp Designs at the Library and Archives Canada
Cartier typeface suppliers
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