The Designers Republic

The Designers Republic
Formation 14 July 1986 (1986-07-14)
Founders
  • Ian Anderson
  • Nick Phillips
Founded at Sheffield, England
Type Graphic design studio
Legal status Company
Slogan Thinking and Doing
Website www.thedesignersrepublic.com
Part of a series of posters for the third Wipeout game Wip3out, design by TDR, 1999.

The Designers Republic (tDR for short) is a graphic design studio based in Sheffield, England, founded in 1986 by Ian Anderson and Nick Phillips. They are best known for electronic music logos and album artwork[1] and their anti-establishment aesthetics, which embrace brash consumerism and the uniform style of corporate brands. Work by tDR is held in the permanent collections of MoMA and the V&A.[2]

The studio in its larger form closed in January 2009, with Anderson stating that it would continue in a more 'slimline' form.[3][4]

Style

Work by the Designers Republic is often playful and bright, and considered Maximum-minimalist, mixing images from Japanese anime and subvertised corporate logos, with a postmodern tendency towards controversial irony. It often features statements/slogans such as "Work Buy Consume Die", "Robots Build Robots", "Customized Terror", "Buy nothing, pay now", and "Made in the Designers Republic". They also celebrated their northern roots with phrases like "Made in the Designers Republic, North of Nowhere" and "SoYo" (referring to Sheffield's county of South Yorkshire) — affirming they were not from London's design community in Soho.

History

Initially, Ian Anderson founded The Designers Republic to design flyers for the band Person to Person, which he managed at the time. His first ideas were inspired by Russian constructivism.[5] Nick Phillips, a sculptor and the organ player in World of Twist, soon joined him, and the duo created a visual identity for Fon Records, and album cover for Chakk’s 10 Days in an Elevator. This financed a studio space in the boardroom of a former engineering works.[3]

Another early client which brought them to the wider public's attention was Leeds band Age of Chance, for whom they developed a series of record covers between 1986 and 1987, beginning with a cover of the Prince track "Kiss". The duo worked 72-hour shifts, doing everything by hand using photocopiers, craft knives and spraymount. The record label loved the artwork but not the repro costs, which came to £9000 for Age of Chance's debut album, 1000 Years of Trouble.

The sleeve of the 1987 12-inch "Don't Get Mad... Get Even! (The New York Remixes)" was selected as one of Q’s "100 Best Record Covers of All Time" in 2001.[6]

Their work for Age of Chance led to further record sleeve work for Krush and Pop Will Eat Itself, for whom tDR famously bastardised the Pepsi logo to form the band's visual identity. [7]

In the 1990s, they established a faux corporation branded 'Pho-Ku' (intended to be a phonetic name), to express their dislike of corporate-driven consumerist identity.[8]

In 1994, Emigre magazine devoted a whole issue to the Designers Republic. A copy is held by MoMA. This issue is still Emigre’s best-ever seller and is now sold out, changing hands for up to £750.[9]

The Designers Republic came to even greater recognition through their album cover designs for the electronica label Warp Records (also based in Sheffield). They designed the covers for most Warp artists, including Autechre and Aphex Twin. They also worked for other labels, designing sleeves for Moloko, Fluke, Funkstörung, The Orb, Pulp (and Jarvis Cocker), Supergrass and Towa Tei.

Outside the music industry, tDR created the visuals, packaging and manual for the PlayStationSega Saturn game Wipeout (1995), the interface for the PC game Hardwar (1998), and packaging and posters for the first Grand Theft Auto (1997). They collaborated with Swatch in 1996 to design their own watch. They also designed the packaging for Sony's AIBO.

The book 3D → 2D: Adventures in And Out Of Architecture, released in 2001, was an architectural examination of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Slovenia presented in the graphic style of their previous work.

tDR has consulted on the re-branding of the city of Quito, capital of Ecuador, and was the only non-national design company to be invited to propose a new flag for Slovenia.[10] tDR was also commissioned to create a logo and general graphic design by French musician-producer Julien Civange for its Music2titan mission to take music on the European Space Agency's Cassini–Huygens probe to the moon Titan in 2004.[11]

On 20 January 2009, after 23 years in operation, tDR went into voluntary liquidation, Anderson bought back the company name and assets, and relaunched tDR as a smaller outfit.[3][4]

Works

Part of a series of posters for fetish clothing company Murray and Vern, design by tDR.

TDR have worked in a diverse range of media, including:

Notable clients

Members

References

  1. Almeida, Cláudia (30 September 2011). "Ian Anderson, English". Up Magazine. Retrieved 29 May 2015.
  2. "The Designers Republic in the V&A's collections". Retrieved 29 May 2015.
  3. 1 2 3 Farrelly, Liz (Spring 2009). "Reputations: Ian Anderson". Eye Magazine Blog. Retrieved 21 August 2014.
  4. 1 2 Burgoyne, Patrick (23 January 2009). "The Designers Republic Is Dead; Long Live The Designers Republic". Creative Review Blog. Retrieved 24 January 2009.
  5. Andrew Collins, Design o' the Times, NME, 11 February 1989, retrieved 29 May 2015
  6. Harrison, Ian (2001). "Age of Chance: Don't Get Mad Get Even! (The New York Remixes)". Q: The 100 Best Record Covers of All Time. EMAP. p. 72. Retrieved 24 January 2009.
  7. Burgoyne, Patrick (27 January 2009). "The Designers Republic Remembered". "Creative Review" Blog. Retrieved 29 May 2015.
  8. "work buy consume die". Retrieved 29 May 2015.
  9. 1 2 3 4 "Back Issues: Emigre 29". Emigre. Retrieved 24 January 2009.
  10. Brain Aided Design SoYo: The Designers Republic
  11. http://www.music2titan.com/

External links

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