Michael Bierut|Slideshows, Vignelli
September 15, 2010
Dot Zero
Dot Zero was the house organ of Unimark, the firm that Massimo Vignelli cofounded with Ralph Eckerstrom, Wally Gutches, Larry Klein, Bob Noorda, Jim Fogelman and Bob Moldavsky in 1965. The prototypical corporate design consultancy, Unimark created identities and graphic programs for American Airlines, Memorex, Target, and the New York Subway System that are still in use today. In its attempt to reconcile what was widely considered an intuitive, artistic process with rigorous methodologies and a dedication to sophisticated marketing practices, Unimark in many ways anticipated the current interest in design thinking in business circles, and expanded the debate on the relationship of good design and good business that continues to this day.
Michael Bierut:
Massimo Vignelli:
Did Finch know what they were getting into? Dot Zero certainly doesn’t look like a paper promotion like the Imagination series that Jim Miho designed for Champion Paper, with lots of demonstrations of fancy printing techniques.
MV:
We did Dot Zero long before all that fancy stuff. That came later. Finch didn’t know what to expect. Luckily, the reaction among designers and specifiers was very positive.
How was the content developed?
There was an editorial board consisting of me, Herbert Bayer, Ralph Eckerstrom, Bob Malone, Jay Doblin and Mildred Constantine.
MV:
Yes. And each person would bring different ideas. There was a Aspen connection thanks to Bayer and Eckerstrom. There was a New York MoMA connection with Constantine along with Arthur Drexler. And with Jay Doblin you had the Chicago connection. Bob Malone was mostly operational. His responsibilities were connected with the publishing aspects. We would all meet to discuss the content of every issue. I was designing it, so I participated in all the discussions, suggested subjects, and so forth.
The first issue featured writing from, among others, Drexler and Marshall McLuhan. Subsequent issues would feature John Kenneth Galbraith and Umberto Eco. How did you get such illustrious writers?
Between the different people on the board, we all knew them personally, more or less, so we just asked them. It was fun for us and fun for them.
MB:
That was our class, you got it!
MB:
Did Dot Zero have any models, either from a design, or an editorial point of view?
Never! I was doing the magazine I wanted to have and Ralph liked it! We completely agreed on what we were doing. We were just doing what we wanted to do.
MB:
How was each issue assembled? I assumed it was all put together from galleys originally set in hot type but maybe you were already into photocomposition.
MV:
MB:
In the end, what were you hoping to accomplish with Dot Zero?
MV:
MB:
MV:
Did you succeed?
MV:
I think that Dot Zero contributed a lot to positioning Unimark, at the beginning at least, as a superior design company. As long as the sponsor supported us, we were able to continue at that level. Impossible without the support.
Was it a difficult decision to cease publication?
MV:
Observed
View all
Observed
By Michael Bierut
Recent Posts
Announcing: Design As Season Two The Design Observer annual gift guide! ‘The creativity just blooms’: “Sing Sing” production designer Ruta Kiskyte on making art with formerly incarcerated cast in a decommissioned prison ‘The American public needs us now more than ever’: Government designers steel for regime change