About the Speakers and Presentations

4:30pm – 5:30pm, Friday, April 4th, professional networking hour
4:30pm, Friday, April 4th, Kean University alumni networking even
9:00am – 10:00am, Saturday, April 5th professional networking hour
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MORNING MAIN STAGE
10:00am – 10:50am
Breaking Down the Silos: The Evolution of
Brand Collaboration
Moira Cullen, Design Director, Coca-Cola North America
Today’s creativity economy demands that brand building become a collaborative act. Consider this next phase in brand evolution: a strategic synthesis of brand and design management that transcends organizational and professional rivalries and barriers to create meaningful, measurable consumer experiences.
Moira Cullen, Design Director, Coca-Cola North America, has built a career directing creative business solutions that honor the essence and heritage of organizations, institutions and brands. A design strategist, writer and educator, she was creative director for one of Japan's leading fashion specialty retailers; design research manager at Pentagram; marketing director at The Pushpin Group; AIGA’s national director of programs; and department chair of Communication Arts at Otis College of Art and Design. At Hallmark Cards, Inc., she led the corporate design group and leveraged design as a corporate asset. Her essays and criticism have been published in leading design publications and anthologies. She is past president of AIGA’s Los Angeles and Kansas City Chapters and AIGA’s Center for Brand Experience, serves on AIGA’s national board, and was named an AIGA Fellow. Atlanta is currently home, where as design director she and her team are responsible for The Coca-Cola Company’s North American brands.
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BREAKOUT SESSIONS (select one of
three)
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11:00am – 11:50am
Winning in The Age of Disruption
Brad Jakeman, Former Managing Director, Global Marketing Citigroup, Inc.
Large corporations
are risk-averse, and the degree of aversion is usually proportionate to
the size of the enterprise. In today's marketing environment the
opposite to "Risk" is no longer "Security". It is generally agreed upon
that we are entering an era of disruption in technology, media, agency
structures and messaging. Brad will talk about how agencies and
marketers can be successful in this new age by going back to the basics
of focusing on a big brand idea which is rooted in an compelling
consumer insight. He will draw on his experiences while creating the
much acclaimed "Live Richly" advertising for Citi and use this as a
case study for how a big corporation, in a highly conservative
category, can deliver a disruptive brand promise and gain notoriety.
Brad Jakeman has a
passion for developing game-changing ideas that challenge category
convention. On both the Agency and Client side Brad has lead ideas and
marketing programs that have reinvented, reinvigorated and re-launched
major brands.
In 2004 Advertising Age magazine named
Brad one of America’s “Top 50 Marketers.”
In the last 7 years he has been responsible for leading brand ideas
that have won over 200 awards at almost all of the world’s
most prestigious shows, including an Emmy from the Academy of
Television Arts and Sciences.
In a career that has included fashion,
retail, packaged goods and financial services, Brad has managed some of
the world’s biggest brands on a global basis. Recently named
by Davis Consulting as one of America’s top clients, Brad has
built a reputation as a senior strategic, integrated marketer with
experience in advertising, direct marketing, branding &
identity, customer experience and interactive, across geographies
(Asia, Europe, North America) and businesses (Fortune 500
corporate/client and agency side).
Brad’s first client-side
role was in 1998 when he accepted a newly created position of Managing
Director, Global Advertising at Citigroup in New York. In a
recently merged company, he was tasked to re-engineer and manage the
integrated advertising efforts of the company’s consumer
brands – Citibank, CitiCards and Citifinancial.
When Brad joined Citi the brand was
described by some as being “a mile wide and an inch
deep” – great awareness but little meaning or
differentiation. His first task was to create a
consumer-centric brand positioning that could work across lines of
business and geographies. Once completed, Brad translated
that into a communications idea that expressed the positioning through
the “Live Richly” campaign. He also drove that
positioning into the product development process which produced the
critically acclaimed Citi Identity Theft Solutions service.
Now proven successful in North America
– Citi’s biggest business – Brad began
rolling the ‘Live Richly’ brand platform to key
international markets in Germany, Greece, Brazil and Japan.
Brad was born in Australia and now
resides in New York City. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in
Mass Communication and Psychology from Macquarie University. He sits on
the Board of the Advertising Club of America and is a frequent judge at
major creative and marketing award shows.
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11:00am – 11:50am
Non-Font Typography, or look out Helvetica
here come the green M&Ms
Allan Haley, Director of Words & Letters at Monotype Imaging
Fonts are great design tools. But
sometimes – even if you have an abundance of them –
there are occasions when something other than a font may be the right
typographic choice. Whether to create graphic impact, set a mood,
fashion a visual pun – or just to engage readers like no font
can – skillful non-font typography is more than just words on
paper.
Attend this presentation and you will
see some of the best non-font typography around, learn why it was the
perfect typographic choice and – most important
– pump up your creative arsenal.
Attendees will discover:
- How the best and brightest delight
us with non-font solutions
- The three most important rules for
creating non-font typography
- How to stretch your typographic
imagination
- When non-font typography may be
just plain bad design
Allan Haley is Director of Words
& Letters at Monotype Imaging. Here he is responsible for
strategic planning and creative implementation of just about everything
related to typeface designs, and editorial content for the
company’s type libraries and Web sites.
Prior working for Monotype, Mr. Haley
was Principal of Resolution, a consulting firm with expertise in fonts,
font technology, type and typographic communication. He was also
executive vice president of International Typeface Corporation.
In addition to his responsibilities at
Monotype Imaging, Mr. Haley is Chairman of the Board of the Society of
Typographic Aficionados, and a past President of the New York Type
Directors Club. He is highly regarded as an educator and is a
frequently requested speaker at national computer and design
conferences.
Mr. Haley is also a prolific writer,
with five books on type and graphic communication and hundreds of
articles for graphic design publications to his credit.
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11:00am – 11:50am
Hands-on Drawing in the Computer Age
Stephanie Travis, Architect and Interior designer
Drawing (not the computer) is the most
important tool for a designer. The process of creating
through drawing enhances a way of seeing, and a designer’s
main strength is the way they see. Many studies done in
sketch form are actually more evocative than the final work, as they
describe the process and show the evolution of an idea.
Drawings that show the process of drawing, as seen through erased or
light pencil lines, reveal a depth of thought and consideration that
the computer could never match. Drawing is about the
impression of the subject and the artist’s interpretation,
not a final, finished piece of work. This presentation will focus on
the advantages of free-hand drawing and its importance in interior
design education and professional practice (but it certainly applies to
other design disciplines as well).
Stephanie Travis has a B.S. in
Architecture and a Master of Architecture from the University of
Michigan. Her 12 years of professional experience in interior
design and architecture firms include design giant Gensler and
acclaimed interior designer Vicente Wolf, both in New York
City. After adjunct teaching positions at the Fashion
Institute of Technology (FIT) and the University of Bridgeport, she is
now an Assistant Professor of Interior Design at Kean University where
she teaches courses in Interior Design Studio, Hand Drafting, Drafting
and Graphic Presentation, and Human Factors. She has also
written and developed two new courses for the curriculum --
Illustrative Sketching for Interior Designers and History of 20th
Century Interior Design -- that she plans to teach in Fall
2008.
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QUICK BREAK (refreshments provided)
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MID-DAY MAIN STAGE
12:10pm – 1:00pm
Emerging
Media in Action
Richard Ting, VP, Executive Creative Director, MEMA (Mobile and Emerging Media/Applications), R/GA
Richard is VP, Executive Creative
Director, of R/GA’s MEMA (Mobile and Emerging
Media/Applications) group. In this role, he leads a team consisting of
MEMA strategists, designers, technologists, and quality assurance (QA)
specialists, to help clients develop mobile marketing strategies,
design, and nontraditional advertising campaigns. To help foster
creativity and innovation, Ting manages the MEMA Lab, an environment
where creative and technology teams can prototype, develop, and test
their creative inventions. The MEMA Lab also serves as an educational
resource for the agency, housing the latest mobile devices, gaming
platforms, and signage systems.
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SPECIAL LUNCH TIME
CREATIVITY &
TECHNOLOGY WORKSHOPS
(Select one of three. You are welcome to bring lunch. Please arrive promptly.)
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1:15pm — 2:30pm
Preserve the Environment by Turning
Over a New Leaf
Debra Rizzi, Founding Partner,
Rizco Design and BeLeaf
Going green – Is it a trend of a movement toward a new way of
life? Small changes can make a big impact
– especially within the graphic design industry, where the
end product relies heavily on natural resources such as paper.
Join Debra Rizzi, as she: defines the key buzz words in
today’s green scene; provides an overview of green
initiatives within the graphic design industry and outlines how to
“green” your working environment and specify
sustainable paper and printing; provide valuable resources to further
learning on this topic; and showcases Rizco Design’s new
BeLeaf program with visual case studies.
RIZCO DESIGN IS A SUPPORTER OF THINKING CREATIVELY
Debra is a founding partner of Rizco
Design. She and her husband, Keith, started the boutique firm in New
York City in 2000. In 2004, Rizco relocated from New York City to the
Jersey Shore, and with the help of her vision and direction, Rizco
Design has grown from two to six employees and has earned dozens of
awards. In January 2007, Graphic Design USA featured both Debra and
Keith in their “People to Watch” issue.
Debra has dedicated this past year to
going green. In May 2007, Debra led the design firm in the launch of
Beleaf, a measurable sustainability program that ensures that a
percentage of each their client’s jobs are environmentally
friendly. Rizco recognizes that small changes can make a big impact
– especially in the graphic design industry – where
the choice of paper and printing can directly effect the environment.
Beleaf’s end-goal is to encourage the elimination of
deforestation, which negatively reshapes our climate, geography and
biodiversity.
It was Debra’s
forward-thinking that made Beleaf more than just a statement: it needed
to be accountable; it had to be measurable. From that conviction, came
the on-line report card, which all clients receive at the end of each
project. The report card “grades” how well Rizco
has managed eco-friendly decision making throughout the creative
process. The BeLeaf campaign has received recognition by
Re-Nourish.com, How.com and has won gold awards with the NJ Art
Directors Club and Jersey Shore Public Relations and Advertising
Association.
The success of the mission catapulted
the start of environmentally friendly fashion, available at beleaf.com.
Currently, a 100 percent recyclable, organic cotton tote bag is the
first piece launched from the collection. The bag was originally used
as part of a creative marketing campaign to announce BeLeaf and
encourage clients to join Rizco’s environmental efforts and
create a cycle of change that will make a difference, and since it has
caught the attention of key movers and shakers who share this same
vision.
Prior to Rizco Design and BeLeaf,
Debra was a manager of the creative department at Porter Novelli, a
marketing-based public relations firm where she managed
business-to-business, consumer, technology and healthcare clients,
including Kellogg’s Smart Start Cereal, Gillette
Mach 3 Razor, SmithKline’s World No Tobacco Day and the
Rolling Stones Bridges to Babylon Concert Tour. Debra started her
career as the assistant manager of special projects for corporate Lord
& Taylor in New York.
Debra acts as Awards Co-Chair for the
Jersey Shore Public Relations and Advertising Association, Awards Chair
for the 2008 Art Directors Club of New Jersey and is an active member
of the NJ Ad Club and writes for Printing News and the Art Directors
Club of NJ’s New Directions newsletter. She is a graduate of
Bucknell University with a Bachelor of Science in Business
Administration and a second major in Art History, where she acted as
co-captain of the Swimming & Diving Team and made Academic
All-American Honor Roll her senior year. She recently went back to her
roots and takes gymnastics once a week.
Debra lives in Wall, NJ with her
husband Keith, two daughters, Amelia and Marley, two bull dogs, Milo
and Sarah, and Persian cat, Valentina.
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1:15pm — 2:30pm
CS3
Tips & Techniques
Kathy Evans, Essex Computers
Kathy Evans graduated from William Paterson University with a BFA in
Graphic Design. Following college, Kathy managed a
Digital Print firm, only to shortly succeed as
Entrepreneur. Kathy moved forward orchestrating
design projects from small to international organizations,
which included logo's, brochures, websites, posters and
related direct marketing materials.
ESSEX COMPUTERS IS A SUPPORTER OF THINKING CREATIVELY
In 2001, Kathy enlisted her talents
with Essex Computers, assisting the Department of Educational
Services (DES) in its training requirements. Kathy works closely
with DES account rep's constructing course roadmaps from syllabus to
training. In addition, Kathy has chaired Essex seminar events
in the latest graphic software applications . Kathy's fluency
in both Mac and PC operating systems gives her the advantage of
relating to all users, regardless of environmental
preference.
To her credit, Kathy's broad
experience adds to her ability to conceptually view a project and
orchestrate with a personal effectiveness which stands on its
own. This unique ability aids her desire in working
with the hearing-impaired and other challenged students
respectively.
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1:15pm —
2:30pm
Sketching
Workshop: Drawing as a Tool for Seeing
Stephanie Travis, Architect and Interior designer
Drawing requires another way of
thinking, a shifting into a deeper realm that examines form,
composition, light, shadow, texture, and rhythm. Hand
drawings show a designer’s personality, unlike the hard line
of the computer where each person’s drawings look
identical. The goal is not to create a “picture
perfect” image but to create more of an emotion, for a
designer or architect its aim is to give the viewer the feeling of
being in a space. This creative process is more than a tool for the
designer to complete a project; it is a tool to expand creativity in
general and awaken all one’s senses. This workshop
will help to develop the skills to see an object in a new way and show
the diversity in each participant’s approach.
Typical elements that go unnoticed will be discovered when you use
drawing as a tool to see. See Stephanie Travis previously
listed.
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BREAKOUT SESSIONS (select one of three)
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2:40pm – 3:30pm
Packaging:
Visual & Structural Branding
Martha Seidner, Vice President, Smith Design
Designing for packaged goods brands
requires a team of talent to be successful.
It’s super fast paced, exciting, time intensive and extremely
challenging work. It demands conceptual thinkers, creativity, an eye
for fine artistic detail, a strong understanding of strategy, marketing
and a keen intuition of the perceptions that verbal and visual cues can
evoke.
Learn what it takes to be successful in this highly competitive area of
design (and still have fun!) For over 30 years, Smith Design has been
collaborating to create award winning designs for brands such as
Breyers, Popsicle, MegaBrands, Rubbermaid among others. Martha Seidner,
first a client of Smith Design, who joined the firm 17 years
ago and is currently VP will touch upon: working with clients
and brands who expect and deserve the very best; getting consumers to
react and what happens when they don’t; staying inspired and
ahead of trends to create what’s new and next!
SMITH DESIGN IS A SUPPORTER OF THINKING CREATIVELY
Martha Seidner has spent over 20 years
managing the strategic design process, developing brand identity and
package design systems for leading packaged goods brands in many
categories. As VP at Smith Design, Martha plays a primary role in
business development, account management and design strategy through a
project’s completion. Her experience on consumer brands
include Skippy Peanut Butter, Unilever Ice Cream, Snapple, Health
Valley, Kellogg's, Motts, Pepperidge Farm, among others. Martha has
spoken at several brand marketing conferences, including International
Dairy Foods: Smart Marketing, Kid Power Food and Beverage and others.
She has been quoted in The Washington Post, Package Design Magazine,
Dairy Foods, Brand Packaging Magazines and other publications where
Smith Design’s work has been featured.
Smith Design is a brand identity and package design firm specializing
in strategy based visual solutions for leading consumer brands. With
offices based in Glen Ridge, NJ and Carmel, California they have been
creating proven design solutions for brands and companies for over 30
years. www.smithdesign.com
Smith Design
205 Thomas Street, P.O. Box 8278
Glen Ridge, NJ 07028
NJ (973) 429-2177 ext. 127
FAX (973) 429-7119
martha@smithdesign.com
www.smithdesign.com
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2:40pm – 3:30pm
DESIGN
IN THE 22ND CENTURY: A Backward / Forward Review
Shashi Caan, Principal, Shashi Caan Collective
President elect, International Federation of Interior
Architects/Designers
(Interiors) Design in the 22nd C: A
Backward / Forward Review explores
design ramifications on the growth of a city, country and its impact
across
the globe. This presentation assumes the setting to be current time in
the
22nd Century and by exploring a yet unwritten history, questions the
influences, choices, decisions and their physical manifestations
impacting
human development as it shapes our environment and built world.
With a depth of professional practice
experience working with major American architecture firms in New York
City, in 2002 Shashi Caan co-founded the award winning Shashi Caan
Collective, a new and innovatively structured design practice that is a
creative response to today’s challenging cultural needs. She
continues to bridge the professional practice and academia, whilst
conducting independent and applied research and is deeply involved with
the architecture and interior design community in the North Americas. www.sccollective.com
Shashi Caan brings a unique
perspective to the field of Interior Design. A talented,
multi-disciplinary designer and educator, she practices a human
centered design approach with a sharp focus on the future of the
habitable environment. With a depth of expertise and experience in the
design and education of innovative environments and products, her work,
at first glance, appears to be quiet and understated but unfolds to
delight the senses while re-thinking the ordinary and the mundane.
Shashi is committed to research and fresh insight in the integration,
understanding and new impetus specifically for Interior
Design.
Born in India and with her
undergraduate education from Edinburgh, Scotland, Shashi moved to New
York City 20 years ago. Intensely interested in Internationalism and in
bringing people together to optimize the human potential through
design, her first board service (for ten years) was on the Board of
Directors for the United Nations Association. Continuously involved
with service back to community and Design, she consequently obtained
two masters degrees, Industrial Design and Architecture, while
simultaneously developing a strong career in architectural design and
its education.
Coro, Leadership New York (intensive
training for civic leadership though nomination and competitive
selection), New York, NY, USA (1999)
Master of Architecture, Pratt Institute, New York, NY, USA (1992)
Master of Industrial Design, Pratt Institute, New York, NY, USA (1986)
BFA (Honors) in Interior Design and Textiles, Edinburgh College of Art
/ Herriot Watt University, Scotland (1983)
With a depth of professional practice
experience working with major American architecture firms in New York
City, in 2002 she co-founded the award winning Shashi Caan Collective,
a new and innovatively structured design practice that is a creative
response to today’s challenging cultural needs. She continues
to bridge the professional practice and academia, whilst conducting
independent and applied research and is deeply involved with the
architecture and interior design community in the North Americas.
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2:40pm – 3:30pm
BRAND
INTIMACY: Feeling the Connection
Screenwriters use it. Musicians, too. Especially
comedians.
I'm using it right now. Get me?
Tom Clark, Senior Vice President, Creative Director, Copy, Trio
When it comes to advertising, the best
way to make that emotional connection between brand and customer is
through Brand Intimacy. For more than 2 decades,
it’s been putting better ideas in my brands communications.
Greater trust in my brands promises. And bigger numbers in my brands
sales charts. See Brand Intimacy in action. Learn how to put
it in your advertising campaigns. And let it fuel your most powerful
and persuasive brand communications.
Tom is the Creative Director of Copy
at Trio, a subsidiary of ICC in Parsippany, New Jersey. He is also an
adjunct professor of advertising here at Kean University.
While he has a healthy consumer book and reel,
Tom’s heart belongs to pharmaceutical advertising. In fact,
he's built a 23-year body of work in healthcare communications,
creating campaigns for medical brands that help doctors treat diseases
in every organ system. Sound easy?
"Well, it's not rocket
science... it's life science. Every day, you try and get the
most highly-educated customers on earth to make informed healthcare
decisions. To do that, you need equal parts pathos & p-values.
But you aim for intimacy, because it helps you sell the brand."
Tom has built brand intimacy for
Novartis, Pfizer, Ortho McNeil, Bristol-Myers Squibb, and Ferring
Pharmaceuticals, as well as Andrew Jergens, Blue Cross/Blue Shield,
Radisson Hotels, The New Jersey Lottery, and NFL Films.
With a blend of real-world examples,
thought-provoking claim support, and comedic delivery, BRAND INTIMACY
is one presentation you don t want to miss. In fact, if you
only go to one presentation during the entire conference...that would
be a damn shame...go to as many as you can. But come to this one. You
ll be glad you did.
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BREAKOUT SESSIONS (select one of three)
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3:40pm – 4:30pm
Give Clients What They Really
Want—And That Is…?
Terri Edelman, President, The Edelman Group
You work hard to give your clients
great service, award-winning creative, cutting-edge
solutions—but is that what they really want? Learn how to
decipher what clients want, how to truly please them and garner more
business in the process.
Terri Edelman is the principal and
founder of The Edelman Group (TEG), an award-winning, full-service
marketing communications firm located in New York City’s
Financial District. A cum laude graduate from Cornell University, with
an independent major in graphic design, Terri worked at several major
New York City design studios and agencies before she founded Terri
Edelman Graphic Design. Her company grew steadily for nearly 10 years
and in 1992, its name was changed to The Edelman Group to reflect its
creative evolution and expanding array of services.
Today, the firm’s client
list includes such notable names as: American Express, JPMorgan Chase,
Pitney Bowes, MetLife, Morgan Stanley and many other blue chip
companies. The core ingredient in this recipe for success has been the
principal’s dedication and passion for graphic design and the
communications business. TEG’s approach is rooted in a
hands-on account management model: a system in which the client
receives personal attention from the principals of the firm through
every step of the process. Since the firm’s inception over 25
years ago, Ms. Edelman has directed the company’s entire
sales effort and is also involved in every project, providing
one-one-one client consultation, creative direction, media planning,
design recommendations and strategic-marketing counsel.
The Edelman Group continues to
maintain a young, fresh, and creative environment, where industry
veterans and enthusiastic novices collaborate on projects and ideas
with equal vigor. Along with recognition from prominent business
publications such as Crain’s New York Business, HOW Magazine
and The Wall Street Journal, her innovative thinking has earned the
firm numerous accolades from the American Graphic Design Awards,
Service Industry Advertising Awards, ACE Awards, the Art Directors
Club, the American Advertising Federation, the Printing Industries of
America, International Association of Business Communicators and Art
Direction Magazine. Terri was selected by Graphic Design USA as a
“Person to Watch” in 2005.
Ms. Edelman has continuously used her
success and know-how to motivate others in the industry. She has shared
her knowledge as a speaker for numerous conferences and events,
including the prestigious New York Times Small Business Summit. In
addition, Ms. Edelman established the Richard Edelman Memorial
Scholarship, in her father’s honor, to financially assist
students at Mount Vernon High School, Terri’s alma mater, who
have chosen to pursue advertising and design after graduation. To
further foster and encourage new talent, Terri has developed a
successful mentoring program in which she guides students through all
aspects of the business. She has expanded the conventional internship
boundaries and has broadened responsibilities to allow her apprentices
a hands-on experience.
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3:40pm – 4:30pm
Branding
on Principle Alone (well, almost)
Peter Leeds, Global Head of Creative Services, Reuters
More than most brands, Reuters is
based on a foundation of trust. Literally.
Its Trust Principles are, in fact, at the core of the company's global
news and information business.
Peter Leeds, Reuters Global Head of
Creative Services, will explain the meaning behind those principles and
how they factor into the work his team does in managing the corporate
identity across the four distinct business divisions of this
18,000-person multinational corporation. Their experience and
accomplishments as an in-house agency provide unique insights into the
role of creatives in the commercial marketplace.
Peter Leeds has been working with and
leading creative teams for almost twenty years. In online and offline
spaces, on the agency and, most recently, the client side, he's known
for coming up with innovative, customer-centric solutions that deliver
against business objectives. In his current role as Global Head of
Creative Services for Reuters, the news and information company, he is
responsible for ensuring the creative quality and brand integrity of
all of the company's marketing communications.
As Global Head of Creative Services,
Peter is responsible for creating consistency, impact and inspiration
across all marketing communications for Reuters, the world's leading
provider of news and financial information. He works closely with
internal clients across four business divisions, sales and services
teams, as well as Reuters corporate functions to turn out compelling
executions that get results. In addition to managing a major refresh of
the corporate identity and establishing a guidelines site for its
effective implementation, Peter has overseen the development of a range
of materials across all media channels intended to build the business
and raise the profile of the Reuters brand.
Prior to joining Reuters, Peter served
as Vice-President, Creative Director with Modem Media, a pioneering
agency in the world of interactive marketing communications. In just
over six years with Modem, he led the creative strategy and
implementation efforts on behalf of several world-class brands. Most
notably, he oversaw the consolidation and alignment of IBM Global
Services Web sites, led the interactive team that successfully launched
Delta Air Lines' low fare subsidiary, Song, and helped win more than
$4MM of new business.
Prior to his work in the online space,
Peter held creative management positions in traditional agencies,
including divisions of the InterPublic Group, Grey Advertising and
Bates Worldwide. He developed advertising, direct response and
promotional marketing pieces for both business and consumer audiences.
Peter has a deep understanding of the
role that marketing communications play in solving business problems
and building brand equity. To those ends, he builds teams that approach
work strategically, think conceptually and execute brilliantly.
Peter holds a Bachelor of Arts from
the University of Chicago, lives in Stamford, Connecticut, with his
wife and three children, and tries daily to keep his penchant for
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3:40pm – 4:30pm
Clearview.
Type System or Lifestyle?
James Montalbano, Typographer & Designer
The presentation, in gory detail, of
the research, design, research, redesign, analysis, redesign,
re-construction,research, redesign, research, presentation,
begging, pleading, writing, proposing and cajoling that was
(and is) the development of ClearviewHwy®. A typeface
design that research has shown to be 20% more legible than
current highway lettering, and how that affected the development of the
ClearviewText and ClearviewADA type systems.
THIS PRESENTATION IS SUPPORTED BY
THE KEAN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
James Montalbano is principal of
Terminal Design, Inc. a type design and lettering studio he
opened in 1990, located on the terminal moraine in Brooklyn NY.
The firm specializes in typeface
design, font development and digital lettering. It has designed custom
fonts and lettering for editorial, corporate, government, and
publishing clients including: Vanity Fair, Vogue, Mens Vogue,
Glamour, Brides, Fortune, and Money magazines; Little Brown
& Co. Inc., Scribner, JC Penny, Miller Brewing,
AT&T, The American Medical Association and The U.S
National Park Service.
Over the last 12 years Montalbano has
been working on the Clearview type system for text, display,
roadway and interior guide signage. His work has been featured in the
"New York Times", "Print" "Creative Review" "ID", "Wired",
and most recently in the "New York Times Sunday Magazine". He
is a past president of the Type Directors Club
(TDC), and teaches digital lettering and typeface design at Parsons The
New School for Design.
Montalbano's professional career began
as a public school graphic arts teacher, trying to get his
young students interested in letterpress, offset and silk screen
printing. When told he would also have to teach wood shop, he quit and
went to graduate school. After receiving an M.Ed in Technology
Education, he studied lettering with Ed Benguiat, began
drawing type and working in the wild world of New York City
type shops and magazine art departments. His career continued as a
magazine art director, moving on to become a design director
responsible for 20 trade magazines whose subject matter no one should
be required to remember. He was talked into designing
pharmaceutical packaging, but that only made him ill. When his nausea
subsided, he started Terminal Design, Inc. and hasn't been sick since.
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4:30pm – 5:30pm
PROFESSIONAL NETWORKING HOUR
Sponsored by Smith Design (www.smithdesign.com)
Kean Hall, room 127
Enjoy refreshments and conversation with conference speakers and attendees. Smith
Design’s James Smith, Laraine Blauvelt, Martha Seidner,and Jenna Smith welcome
you during this informal hour of socializing and networking. Please join us for a drink.
4:30pm – 5:30pm
Kean University Alumni Association
Networking Event
Kean Hall reception atrium
You are invited to attend a Kean University Alumni Association networking reception
that is designed to help our alums establish and nurture professional connections.
Come meet and network with fellow visual communications alumni who are working
for a range of well-known companies and firms, or who have started their own highly
successful agencies.
Many of our alumni design or direct the creation and production of promotional design,
advertising, typography, animation, new media, publications, photography, illustration or
broadcast media locally and overseas. In recognition of their creative achievements many
of them have received prestigious awards.You can find out more information about the
Kean Career Network at www.keanalumni.org/career.
All are invited to the main-stage presentation following the networking break.
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5:30pm – 6:30pm
Main-Stage
WILDE THINKING
Richard
Wilde, The Guru of Graphic Design Thinking
Kean Hall, room 127
(A personal process of awakening oneself)
Thinking is automatic.
Conceptual thinking is always a struggle. This presentation and
talk will deal with the fundamental ideas and conditions that lead to
one’s creative potential. Discovering new ways to grapple
directly with oneself in developing concepts that go beyond one’s
initial understanding will be discussed and most importantly, the
movement toward a personal process as a way of being original will be
examined. Hundreds of images will be shown to help in augmenting
the ideas that are presented.
“HOW MANY HATS DOES IT TAKE TO COVER RICHARD WILDE’S HEAD?”
Well, he started with one. A Dodgers cap. The first love of
this Brooklyn boy. But when the Dodgers skipped town, Richard
Wilde was forced to change hats. Vowing never to focus his
energies on just one thing, he decided to focus on everything.
And it’s this decision that propelled Richard Wilde from fan to
role model.
Today Richard has many hats. But he
doesn’t just wear them. He fills them. Currently, his
hat rack boasts positions like chair of the Graphic Design and
Advertising departments and teacher at the School of Visual Arts, a
principal of Wilde Design, the creator of Experimental Creativity
workshops and an international lecturer.
But none of these achievements have gotten
in the way of his other important roles. For Richard is also a
loving husband, father, brother, son and according to Critique
magazine, “The Guru of Graphic Design Thinking”.
But whether he’s an author or art
director, instructor or illustrator, Dodgers’ fan or family
man, the hat fits, so Richard Wilde wears it.
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BREAKFAST
NETWORKING HOUR
9:00 am – 10am
Sponsored by The Design Center at Kean University
Special Louise Fili book giveaway to the first 20 attendees to arrive
MORNING MAIN STAGE
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10:00am – 10:50am
Louise
Fili, President, Louise Fili Ltd.
Design Reincarnation
How I made a 360-degree turn from book jackets to restaurants and food
packaging.
Louise
Fili is president of Louise Fili Ltd, founded in 1989, which
specializes in food package design and restaurant identities. Formerly
senior designer for Herb Lubalin, Louise Fili was art director of
Pantheon Books from 1978 to 1989, where she designed over 2000 book
jackets. She has received awards from every major design competition,
including Gold and Silver Medals from the New York Art Directors Club
and The Society of Illustrators,the Premio Grafico from the Bologna
Book Fair, and three James Beard award nominations. Fili has taught and
lectured on graphic design and typography and her work is in the
permanent collections of the Library of Congress, the Cooper Hewitt
Museum, the Bibliotheque Nationale and the Musée des Arts
Decoratifs. She was the recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts
design grant to study the work of W.A. Dwiggins, and is co-author, with
Steven Heller, of Italian Art Deco, Dutch Moderne, Streamline, Cover
Story, British Modern, Deco Espana, German Modern, Deco Type, French
Modern, Design Connoisseur, Counter Culture, and Typology, and on her
own, The Civilized Shopper’s Guide to Florence. In 2004 she
was inducted into the Art Directors Hall of Fame. |
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BREAKOUT SESSIONS (select one of three)
11:00am – 11:50am
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Accessible,
Inclusive, and Sustainable Graphic Design
Roger Whitehouse, FSEGD, RIBA, AA Dipl., Partner, Whitehouse & Company
As
designers, are we aware of how our work can either make things worse,
sustain the status quo (which adds up to the same thing), or make
things better? Originally a keynote presentation at the Universal
Design Conference in Kyoto, Japan last year, this talk explores how our
work can change things for the better by making information accessible
to those who need it, to make sure that those without sophisticated
language or cognitive skills are not excluded from mainstream society
because of this, and how to do all this without trashing the planet.
Roger Whitehouse was trained as an architect
in England before coming to the United States in 1967 to teach design
at Columbia University School of Architecture. He is a past director
and is a Fellow of the Society for Environmental Graphic Design and has
been a Director and Vice-President of the American Institute of Graphic
Arts. After practicing as an architect he formed Whitehouse &
Company in 1976, a multi-diciplinary design company where he has
completed branding, print, new media, and environmental graphic design
projects for such clients as the High Museum in Atlanta, Lincoln Center
and The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Conde Nast and
Reuters buildings, and the Flagship Subway entrance on 42nd
Street, all in Times Square. His pioneering work for the Lighthouse in
New York on wayfinding for individuals with vision impairment has
formed the basis for the graphics components of the latesty revisions
to the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). His current studio is
located in Union Square, New York where he works with a staff of five,
and partner and son, Ben Whitehouse.
Roger Whitehouse is author of New York:
Sunshine and Shadow, published by Harper and Row, A London Album.
Published by Secker and Warburg, The Uniqueness of Individual
Perception published in Information Design, by MIT Press, The Code of
Ethics and Professional Practice published by the American Institute of
Graphic Arts, The Code of Ethics and Professional Practice published by
the Society for Environmental Graphic Design, and Accessible Text
Guidelines, published by SEGD for the US Access Board, and the SEGD
White Paper on the Americans with Disabilities Ac . He is a regular
contributor to Communication Arts Magazine. In 2000, his Universal
Design work was exhibited at the Smithsonian Institute‚
Cooper-Hewitt Design Museum in New York.
His graphic design work has been recognized
in many books and magazines, and by many institutions, including the
Municipal Art Society of New York, the Urban Design Awards Program, the
New York State Association of Architects, the American Institute of
Graphic Arts, the Society for Environmental Graphic Design, the
National Endowment for the Arts, and the Universal Design Excellence
Program. In 2001, the US Access Board recognized him for,
“dedicated leadership and service in making America
more accessible for all people.” www.wandco.com |
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11:00am – 11:50am
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Uncovering
the "A ha!" moments on your Website
Barbara Pagano, Senior Vice President, HealthEd Interactive
Sharing
information is the first step in creating an educational, useful, and
motivating website. However, if not handled properly, information can
often turn into information overload. On many Web sites, it's hard to
know where to look, what to read, and how to find the key points. The
information is overwhelming and therefore, the educational opportunity
is lost. In this presentation, we will explore how to share and present
information so that it is truly educational. Using a case study
approach, we will cover the following:
- How to use interactivity and multimedia
effectively
- Ways to improve usability and
comprehension
- Techniques to make the information stick
As Senior Vice President of HealthEd
Interactive, Barbara Pagano has led and expanded the agency’s
digital capabilities in addition to playing a senior account management
role. She oversees the integration of the skills of designers,
animators, writers, Web site programmers, and project managers to
develop easy-to-understand content with compelling graphics.
She has led the development of large interactive and CRM initiatives
for leading pharmaceutical companies such as Eli Lilly
& Co (Cialis, Cymbalta, Strattera), TAP (Prevacid), and Amylin
(Symlin), Novartis (Exelon).
Her work has resulted in numerous awards
including 2007 Webby Award, 2007 Best Interactive Consumer Campaign
PhAME Award, and Gold for Best Pharmaceutical Web Site in 2006 World
Wide Web Health Awards.
Barbara started her interactive career in
1998 at 415 Productions, a Web development company in San Francisco
whose clients included Sony, Levi Strauss & Company, Apple
Computer, Robert Mondavi Wineries, and Fairmont Hotels. She
moved up the ranks quickly from Senior Producer to Managing Director.
She grew the business from 5 to more than 100 employees by maintaining
the right synergy between the technical and creative teams and
delivering effective, award-winning solutions for the clients.
Barbara graduated Summa Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Science degree
from Cornell University. |
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11:00am – 11:50am
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Illustrating
the Fabric of Life
Margaret Cusack, Illustrator, Designer, and Folk Artist
“Illustrating
the Fabric of Life” is a visual overview of the many and
varied assignments over the course of Cusack’s career, as
well as a “how-to” series that leads them through
an actual assignment from the initial concept sketches through to the
finished artwork. Included are images from her book, Picture Your World
in Applique, published by Watson-Guptill Publications.
Margaret Cusack is an illustrator, graphic
designer and folk artist — all in one. Her “Norman
Rockwell realism, made with stitchery and fabric” is rich
with texture and steeped in nostalgia, satire and Americana charm.
Since 1972, Cusack has created stitched illustrations for greeting
cards, decorative plates, children's books, ads, posters, editorial
illustrations, billboards, and postage stamps. Her work also includes
architectural-scale hangings, soft sculpture, portraits, and props.
Both Cusack's intriguing career and her business-of-art presentations
have inspired audiences throughout the United States.
A retrospective exhibition of her career of more than thirty
years premiered at the Museum of American Illustration in October 2005.
As an illustrator, she’s completed assignments ranging from a
Time Magazine cover, to a Broadway show poster and a stitched postage
stamp for the United States Postal Service. Her commissions also
include portraits for private clients and corporations plus large-scale
hangings for architects and corporations such as architect, George
Nelson and The Culinary Institute of America.
Cusack's technique is to apply graphic
design techniques to create stitched images that are geared to the
fast-paced demands of advertising, corporate and editorial art. Clients
include: The United States Postal Service, American Express,
AT&T, Dell, Forbes Magazine, The Franklin Mint, UNICEF,
Macmillan, The New York Times, Reader's
Digest, Seagram’s, Sony Music, Texaco,
Time Magazine, Yankee Magazine, Lord & Taylor, Maxwell House
Coffee, The Wall Street Journal and Vanity Fair Magazine.
Terrence Brown, Director of The Museum of
American Illustration:
“Margaret Cusack is that rare illustrator who took an unusual
medium, the stitch, and made it uniquely and confidently her own.She
has served diverse clients from publishing to advertising in her
signature style for decades. This collection of her work is to be
appreciated anew for its beauty and creativity, having already been
appreciated by the clients whose messages she has so excellently
communicated.” |
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QUICK BREAK (refreshments provided)
MID-DAY MAIN STAGE (select one of two)

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12:10pm — 1:00pm
Anatomy
of Design
Steven Heller and Mirko Ilic´
We will dissect various pieces of
contemporary graphic design to determine their underlying structure
through an examination of their respective DNA.
Steven Heller is the co-chair (with Lita
Talarico) of the MFA Designer as Author Program and
co-founder (with Alice Twemlow) of the MFA in Design
Criticism at the School of Visual Arts. He was a senior art
director of the New York Times for 33 years and currently
writes the VISUALS column in the Book Review Section. He is
the author or co- author of over 100 books on design and popular
culture. His website
is http://www.hellerbooks.com
Mirko Ilic´ was born in Bosnia. While practicing design in Europe, he illustrated and art directed posters record covers and comics. He arrived in U.S. in 1986 and was commissioned as illustrator for many of the major magazines and newspapers. In 1991, Ilic´ became Art Director at Time Magazine, in charge of International edition and in 1992 became Art Director of New York Times Op-Ed pages. In 1995, established Mirko Ilic´ Corp. was established as a graphic design and 3-D computer graphics and motion picture title studio. He is co-author of numerous books on design including Anatomy of Design with Steven Heller. http://www.mirkoilic.com |
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12:10pm — 1:00pm
Deconstruction of YouTube: Design of Social Networking in Web 2.0 Michael Searson, Executive Director, Center for External Education and Development
Sometimes referred to as the “Read-Write” Internet, Web 2.0 represents a complex collaborative environment, where participants can interact socially in increasingly diverse ways. YouTube incorporates many of these interactive tools in its “video-posting” medium; yet, its design is more complex and serves as a good model to illustrate a Web 2.0 environment. By deconstructing the collaborative tools embedded within YouTube we can get a better sense of the potentials of (and problems within) Web 2.0. We will also review other Web 2.0 tools and consider their implications.
Searson is an Apple Distinguished Educator; a Vice-President of the Society for Information Technology & Teacher Education; founding chairperson of the SITE SIG on Games & Simulations; liaison to the National Technology Leaders Summit, held each fall in Washington, DC; member of the Governor’s Broadband Summit, Education Sector.
Dr. Searson holds a Ph.D. and M.A. in Cognitive Psychology and Child Development from Rutgers University, and an M.S. in Early Childhood and Elementary Education from the City College of New York. During his 25 years at Kean, he has acted as the chairperson of the Early Childhood department, Executive Assistant to the President, and Acting Dean of the College of Education.
He has directed a number of grant-supported projects, including a four-year, U.S. $1.1 million Preparing Tomorrow's Teachers Using Technology through the U.S. Department of Education.
In his current role, he serves as Executive Director of the Center for Innovative Education, and is responsible for nurturing partnerships with organizations such as NJN Public Television and Radio, Apple Computers, the Buck Institute for Education, and the Society for Information Technology and Teacher Education (SITE), for which he serves as a vice president. In addition, Dr. Searson supervises the Center for International Studies, through which he has facilitated the development of academic partnerships with institutions in China, Japan, France, Spain, and the Cayman Islands. Dr. Searson presents annually at the NECC and SITE conferences, as well as at national-caliber workshops offered through Kean University's Center for Innovative Education. |
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SPECIAL LUNCH TIME
CREATIVITY &
TECHNOLOGY WORKSHOPS
(Select one of three. You are welcome to bring lunch. Please arrive promptly.)
1:15pm – 2:30pm
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Pulp
Fiction
Thomas McVey, CEO, CMYK PRINTING, Inc.
Everything you need to know about Green Papers & Printing,
Sustainability, Carbon Footprints, Greenwashing and Corporate Social
Responsibility.
CMYK PRINTING IS A SUPPORTER OF THINKING CREATIVELY
A respected graphic communications industry leader and expert in the field of printing, Tom McVey has over 16 years experience helping business owners implement successful design strategies and other strategic manufacturing initiatives. As C.E.O. McVey works with client companies and directs CMYK staff and associate designers in helping owners and managers achieve their business objectives.
Tom currently serves as President and founder of Half 2 Charity, Inc. (A commercial printing company that gives half of its profits to legitimate 501 c 3 charities.) Tom previously served as President of The Parker Group Printing Company. Tom sits on the Board of Directors of several non-profits including a term as Executive Director of The Tree of Life and Hope, a 501 c 3 charity that donates all of its resources to needy members of the New Jersey Community. In 1999 Tom launched Community Service Magazine in Passaic County and was the former President of The Suburban Essex Magazine with a circulation of over 50,000.
In 2007 Tom became a charter member of The New Jersey Green Printers Council as well as the lead organizer of The Eco-Friendly Printers Union. CMYK would like to revolutionize the printing industry by providing environmentally responsible products and services while maintaining industry best practices for sustainability. Tom lives in Greenpond, New Jersey with his wife Denise, daughter Murphy, son Brennan and cat Fritzi. |
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1:15pm – 2:30pm
Curing
Your Appetite for Destruction:
Deconstructing Non-Destructive Editing in Photoshop
Mike Tubbert, Content Project Manager, Delmar Cengage Learning
Addled by Adjustments? Lost over Layers?
Meek about Masks? If these, or other symptoms, cause you to make
permanent changes to your images in Photoshop, then this workshop is
for you. With just the right dose of the basic information, you can
easily overcome your fear of adjustment layers, layer masks, paths,
layer comps, blending options and more. Fortified with this knowledge,
you will be editing your images in a way that allows you to rapidly
tweak your work and quickly compare it to previous efforts without
permanently altering your original image or losing your previous
efforts. Never again will you have to "start over from scratch." Free
yourself from the fear of experimentation! WARNING: Side effects may
include unleashed creativity, euphoria, and a rekindled love-affair
with Photoshop.
NOTE: Attendees are strongly encouraged to
bring laptops with Photoshop (CS, CS2 or CS3) installed to this
workshop. The session is designed so that you may follow along in real
time. However, hand-outs will be provided, detailing the steps
demonstrated during the workshop.
During his ten year professional design
career, Mike Tubbert has been as fascinated by the digital tools of the
trade as he is with design itself. This passion for knowledge and
experimentation with today's design software has made Mike the go-to
guy for answers, tips, and tricks by his colleagues. He now brings that
experience, and desire to help educate others, to his new role as a
production coordinator for the Media Arts and Design suite of academic
products licensed by Delmar Cengage Learning, an international
educational publisher (www.delmarlearning.com). |
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1:15pm – 2:30pm
How Images Shake the World
Alan Robbins, Writer and Designer
Professor Alan Robbins, curator of the exhibition Images That Shook the World which is on display at the conference, will conduct an interactive workshop and discussion about the critical and increasing role that images play in our personal and public communications, our cultural assumptions, and even in our basic understanding of the world.
THE DESIGN CENTER IS A SUPPORTER OF THINKING CREATIVELY
Alan Robbins is the Janet Estabrook Rogers Professor of Visual and Performing Arts at Kean University in New Jersey. He teaches courses in visual communications and is the founding director of The Design Center, which produces exhibitions, publications, and products in the various fields of design and which has won numerous design awards.
Professor Robbins is also an award-winning writer and the author of 19 books in the areas of mystery science fiction, puzzles, and humor. His cartoons, illustrations, graphics, and games have appeared in dozens of publications and exhibitions and his unique series of mystery jigsaw puzzles has millions of fans around the world.
His work can be seen at www.alanrobbins.com |
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BREAKOUT SESSIONS (select one of
three)
 |
2:40pm – 3:30pm
Brand
Evolution
Brian Ganton Jr. President of Brian J. Ganton & Associates
(BGA).
Brian Ganton, Jr. is President of Brian J. Ganton & Associates.
Brian J. Ganton & Associates (BGA) is a multi-disciplinary branding
and advertising firm founded by Brian Ganton, Sr. in New York City in 1972.
BGA has over 36 years of experience with household consumer brands like GE,
Skoal and Reader’s Digest and leading building product brands including Pergo,
Rubbermaid and DuPont.
BRIAN J. GANTON & ASSOCIATES IS A SUPPORTER OF THINKING CREATIVELY
Brian’s
passion for greatness is contagious and he doesn’t understand
the concept of good enough. Brian’s persuasive abilities are
among those that clients value most about him. In fact, he once
convinced a Bishop from the Archdiocese of New York to lend him a rare
chalice from the early Christian era; and created an ad campaign which
placed an infamous Caribbean dictator smack in the middle of a 40
million dollar overnight marketing success. A true renaissance person,
Brian has over twenty five years of experience creating strategic
marketing initiatives as well as, creative advertising and brand
development campaigns for such notables as: Pergo Flooring, Skoal,
Copenhagen, Astral Cigars, Lightolier, Contel, Simon &
Schuster, Reader’s Digest, Rubbermaid, Oldcastle and many
others.
Brian has won hundreds of national and
international awards, as well as several gold medals for creativity and
effectiveness including: ADDY, Creativity Gold, Print’s Best
and Print Editor’s Choice, HOW, Graphic Design USA, NJAD Club
Best of Show, New Jersey Art Director’s Club Best of Show,
Graphis and the McGraw Hill Advertising Role Model Award. His work has
also appeared in editorial features in Communication Arts (CA),
Creativity, Print and Step-By-Step Graphics as well as Minimal Graphics
and the Big Book of Color.
Brian is a frequent speaker on issues
related to marketing and branding. He has appeared before numerous
industry groups, seminars and corporate convocations.
Brian attended Seton Hall University where
he majored in Philosophy
and the School of Visual Arts where he studied under renowned designer
Milton Glaser.
Contact Information:
Phone: 973-857-5099
email: brianjr@ganton.com
www.ganton.com |
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2:40pm – 3:30pm
Purveyors
of Gloom and Doom: Poster design by Scorsone/Drueding.
Joe Scorsone and Alice Drueding will talk about their 20+
year design collaboration, focusing on the evolution of their identity
as poster designers.
Joe
Scorsone and Alice Drueding (Scorsone/Drueding aka: sdposters.com) have
been designing posters together since 1986. They are also faculty
members in the Graphic and Interactive Design program at Tyler School
of Art of Temple University. Their work has appeared in many
international publications and exhibitions, has received numerous
awards, and is in permanent collections around the world. |
 |
2:40pm – 3:30pm
Type Design: Then and Now
Ray Cruz / Janet Slowik, Typeface Designer / Senior Art Director, Pearson Education
In
1987 Ray Cruz and Janet Slowik designed 12 promotional cards
commemorating monthly holidays from January to December. Each month was
represented by a customized typographic design originated by one
typestyle‚ Novarese. This would have been an easy task, but
the art and mechanicals had to be produced without a computer. It was
all done traditionally using photo-text, photo-headlines, pen and ink,
and photographic darkroom techniques. The message to potential clients
was carefully crafted to promote custom creative services and darkroom
techniques. Their goal was accomplished by generating new business with
this promotion. Sometime later, they found out that a talented designer
in Brazil was so inspired by their work that he took his designs to the
next level.
Ray Cruz is a graphic artist
specializing in custom lettering and typeface design. For over three
decades his diversified skills have been utilized by advertising
agencies, publishers, package design firms, branding firms, and
corporate clients. He enjoys designing new and custom typefaces. His
typeface design, based on the Xerox logo, has been intensively used by
Y&R on the Xerox Phaser Printer Campaign for the past five
years.
Ray and Janet have received numerous graphic
and type design awards from TDC, AIGA, ADC, and other art associations.
Currently, Ray is an adjunct instructor at Kean University and Parsons
School of Design, teaching type design and digital drawing. Janet is a
senior art director at Pearson Education and an adjunct instructor at
Kean University teaching Editorial Design. |
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MAIN STAGE ENDNOTE
3:40pm – 4:30pm
THE
CREATIVE REVOLUTION
Kevin Swanepoel, President, The One Club
The
Creative Revolution is not about the death of old media but rather
about the birth of new media, the interactive media. It’s
about reinventing and reenergizing traditional advertising creatives
career paths. It’s about Pop Culture, it’s about
client’s needs and consumer’s desires. It's about
community and collaboration on a scale never seen before.
Kevin Swanepoel has twenty-three years
experience in traditional advertising. He has held the position of
chief creative officer in two advertising agencies as well as being the
founder of Creative & Strategic Advertising.
He spent two years at Apple Computer (1996
– 1997) where he was the “PEN Manager”
Publishing Entertainment and New Media manager, closely working with
agencies and developers on the fledgling “World Wide
Web”.
In 1997 realizing the global branding
potential and the developments in new media, Kevin accepted an
appointment as Interactive Director at The One Club in New York.
In the ten years that he has been at the One
Club he has built One Show Interactive into the top International
Interactive Award Show worldwide “This was an independent
study by Ad Age and IDEA, International Digital Excellence
Association.“
Kevin is the author of nine books and
CD-ROM’s featuring “Advertising’s Best
Interactive and New Media”. His advertising and publishing
background was invaluable in launching these annuals, which have become
the standard reference book for the new media industry.
Kevin has been instrumental in extending the
global brand of the One Club by organizing and speaking at
international events promoting the One Show. In 2005 Kevin set up an
office for The One Club in China to further The One Club’s
educational initiative.
Kevin has appeared on FOX and NBC as an
authority on current advertising trends and has been published in
AdWeek, Advertising Age, Creativity, AdHoc, Advertising and Design,
Campaign Brief and Propaganda and Marketing.
Kevin has recently co-curated an advertising
exhibition in the New York Public Library. This exhibition features a
selection of notable advertising drawn from The One Club archives, the
exhibition explores creative print, radio, television and new media
from the 18th Century to today.
Currently Kevin teaches an
“Interactive Advertising” online course for the
Academy of Art University in San Francisco. |
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SPONSORS
Kean University
The Design Center
Art Directors Club of New Jersey
SUPPORTERS
CMYK Printing
The Creative Group
Rizco Design
Smith Design
Brian Ganton & Associates (BGA)
Imaging Group
Prestige Graphics
Essex Computers
Veer
Mohawk
Create Magazine
Kean University Alumni Association
New Jersey Creatives Network
Center for Innovative Education at Kean University
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