CR Blog
Design Awards '09 Category Winners
Books, Graphic Design, Music Video / Film
Posted by Eliza Williams, 23 February 2009, 15:59 Permalink Comments (6)

Italian Vogue - A Black Issue, July 2008, fashion category winner
The winners in each category of the Brit Insurance Design Awards 2009 have been announced, ahead of an overall winner that will be revealed at a gala ceremony at the Design Museum in London on March 18.
The Design Awards have seven categories - architecture, fashion, furniture, graphics, interactive, product and transport. The exhibition of the awards, currently on show at the Design Museum, contains several entries in each category, which have all been nominated by critics, curators and design practitioners. These have been whittled down to a shortlist of seven who are now vying for the top accolade of Brit Insurance Design of the Year.
The panel of judges this year consists of broadcaster Alan Yentob, MoMA curator Paola Antonelli, designer and environmentalist Karen Blincoe, architect Peter Cook, fashion critic Sarah Mower, and last year's winner, designer Yves Béhar.
The judges chose Italian Vogue: A Black Issue, July 2008 (shown top) as their winner in the fashion category. "Deemed a cultural watershed, A Black Issue firmly placed the debate about the lack of black models in the fashion industry to the very forefront of the fashion world's consciousness as well as causing widespread debate outside fashion circles," said the judges of their choice.

Shepard Fairey's Obama poster won in graphics
Shepard Fairey's Barack Obama poster is the winner in the graphics category. The judges commented that "if there ever were to be a 'poster of the year', the Obama poster would be it. The US election was a watershed in contemporary history and this poster demonstrates the power of communicating ideas and aspirations from grass-root level. Just as the presidential candidate's campaign speeches recaptured the lost art of oratory, so this poster breathed new life into a form that had lost its purpose."

Make Magazine was the winner in interactive
Make Magazine is the interactive category winner. "Make Magazine is a website and blog that has created a remarkable resource through which to explore the process of making," say the judges. "It is much more sophisticated than your everyday DIY website; Make Magazine presents you with unusual blueprints in which the users own input and customisation are both of practical and social value."

Magno Wooden Radio won in product
The Magno Wooden Radio, designed by Singgih S Kartono, won in the product category. "The radio reflects a sense of purpose in the wider design context," say the judges. "The designer has brought together local crafts people, teaching them new skills in making and assembling the radio, and by using local wood has brought a positive and sustainable infrastructure to a small community."

Line-J Medellin Metro Cable won in transport
In transport, the Line-J Medellin Metro Cable in Colombia, designed by Poma, took the category prize. "This is a great example of how to re-appropriate an already successful cable car envisaged for ski slopes into a mass transit system for the urban poor," say the judges.

Konstantin Grcic's MYTO Chair was the winner in furniture
In furniture, Konstantin Grcic's MYTO Chair was the winner and is described as a "design classic" by the judges. "It is tough creating a design classic, but the MYTO might just have achieved this through its rigorous experimentation and research, resulting in the technically very difficult outcome of a cantilevered plastic chair," they say.

The New Oslo Opera House by Snøhetta won the architecture category
Finally, in architecture it was the New Oslo Opera House by Snøhetta which won the category award this year. "This is more than a beautifully designed building and an opera house," say the judges, "it's a living part of the city, a place for music, but also an outdoor space, somewhere all kinds of people like to go. Its mix of indoor and outdoor spaces attracts not just opera enthusiasts. It's a building that gives people the chance to roam through, across and on top of it, all the way from sea to roof level."
The Brit Insurance Designs of the Year exhibition will be on show at the Design Museum until June 14. More info is at designmuseum.org.
6 Comments
Please don't misunderstand me, I love Shepard Fairey’s Obama poster.
However, it does seem to me that giving him a prize, at a time where it's fairly obvious that he used someone else work without permission as the basis for the poster, is quite unfair to the designers who have created great poster work without ripping anyone else off.
2009-02-23 17:28:15
@Michael
Are you referring to the photograph the poster is based on? I'm with Matt - who said on the BoingBoing blog,
"There's a reason the poster became an icon but the photo (by itself) didn't. The photo is journalism. The poster is art (propaganda?)."
http://boingboing.net/2009/02/09/milton-glaser-weighs.html
2009-02-24 06:15:48
Should we still be giving design awards to mass-produced products made from plastic? You could argue the Myto is nothing more than an updated Vitra 'Panton' chair, using computer-aided design and new production techniques to reshape and enhance the structure. It's still a plastic chair, and will therefore one day be landfill. Perhaps it's not a discussion to be had particularly on the CR website, but with the likes of Conran and Starck, (yes, he of vibrant green plastic), now claiming designers should be much more environmentally aware, should the Design Awards not take this on board for every category?
And before everyone shouts 'it's recyclable', that's not my point. Each stage of recycling uses more energy to ultimately spit out an inferior grade material, a material which has less and less uses throughout it's cycle. (Read William McDonough's 'Cradle to Cradle' sometime.)
In my opinion, it is the responsibility of the designer to now think about the material first, rather than the product. Just because it's possible, doesn't mean you have to make it.
PS, if anyone wants a Myto, there's stack of them in SCP Hoxton, unsold and on sale.
2009-02-24 11:16:44
Great art breeds imitation, and the Obama poster has a lot of tuts online and more and more online galleries are popping up with lookalikes. It wouldn’t matter what the photo of Obama was, the addition of the word below and the modification of the photo are the art pieces of the design. Many artists imitate past artists, so I don’t see why Fairey shouldn’t get the award – he changed it enough to make it his own.
2009-02-26 23:14:20
ware can i find this magazin in isreal aspasel this on on the top
2009-07-28 19:54:53
great lobby theater, its minimalist and spacious
-joanna april lumbad
2009-10-05 05:41:40
Subject:
Keywords:
Awards, Sea, Design Museum, Designs Of The Year, Museum, Poster
Articles:
- Crit: Freehand Anonymous
- Ones to Watch: Emily Forgot
- Feature: Crispin, Porter + Bogusky: Loved, loathed but never ignored
- Feature: A library full of dead trees
- Feature: Harry Beck: The Paris Connection
- Feature: Self Help Graphics
AWARDS.SEA.DESIGN+MUSEUM.DESIGNS+OF+THE+YEAR.MUSEUM.POSTER
3034
| Pretty Ugly or plain ugly? (30) |
| Olympics ticket designs revealed (26) |
| The story of Pentagram (21) |
| Brand New Debris Quilt (2) |
| CR June 2012 issue (8) |
| Olympics ticket designs revealed |
| Freehand: the software that wouldn't die |
| Lance Wyman in Norwich |
| The story of Pentagram |
| FF Chartwell: a graph-making font |
| Advertising | (1082) | |
| Art | (420) | |
| Books | (268) | |
| Digital | (437) | |
| Graphic Design | (1225) | |
| Illustration | (676) | |
| Magazine / Newspaper | (215) | |
| Music Video / Film | (742) | |
| Photography | (368) | |
| Type / Typography | (268) |
