Exhibits

Appetite—A Reciprocal Relation Between Food & Design Exhibit

I was dying to go to this exhibit but a 15 hour roadtrip wasn’t in the cards. Sounds exciting!

http://lubalincenter.cooper.edu/

Appetite–A reciprocal relationship between Food & Design

Opening reception: Tuesday, September 14, 2010 6–8pm
Exhibition dates: September 14–October 9, 2010

41 Cooper Gallery at The Cooper Union
41 Cooper Square, New York, NY 10003

Curated by Alexander Tochilovsky
Coordinated by Emily Roz
Research and design assistance by Wai-Jee Ho

From restaurants and supermarket aisles to the corner store, there is an inherent relationship between graphic design and food. “Appetite,” an innovative exhibition at 41 Cooper Gallery curated by the Herb Lubalin Study Center at The Cooper Union, explores the role and influence of design in the food industry. Design has the power to alter our experience and influence our perception of food. By charting the current landscape of where and how we encounter food-related design in New York City, “Appetite” illustrates the ubiquitous presence of the designer in food packaging, store and restaurant branding, cookbooks, magazines, menus and other objects—both historic and contemporary.

While “Appetite” includes important works by AvroKO, Matteo Bologna, DuPuis Group, Edenspiekermann AG, Louise Fili, Derick Holt, Sterling Brand’s Debbie Millman, and Douglas Riccardi, the exhibition also acknowledges the subtle and unexpected ways designers influence our lives and daily relationship with food such as the design of the waiter’s check, the typeface on the grocery store’s price labels, the Nutrition Facts label, and hand-painted signs on bodegas, to name a few. “Appetite” investigates the designer’s process and motivation, and will leave the viewer contemplating the influence of graphic design on food and if design creates appetite?

Graphic Designer and Adjunct Instructor at The Cooper Union, Alexander Tochilovsky http://someat.com/about sees cooking and designing as similar processes. “In both, different ingredients have to work together. The only difference is that one is based on sight and the other on taste.”

For more information about the exhibition please email Alexander Tochilovsky,
or to schedule an appointment to visit the Herb Lubalin Study Center Archive, please email Emily Roz.

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