Jan V. White

Jan V. White
Born (1928-04-06)April 6, 1928
Prague, Czech Republic
Died December 30, 2014(2014-12-30) (aged 86)
Occupation Publication designer

Jan V. White was a designer, communication design consultant, and graphic design educator and writer.

Czech by birth, he was educated in England at Leighton Park School and holds degrees in architecture from Cornell University[1] and Columbia University School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation.

From 1951 to 1964 he worked on two of TIME's architectural magazines: Architectural Forum (1951–56) as associate art director, and House & Home (1956-1964) as art director. Since 1964 he has worked as a consultant, writer and teacher. He redesigned more than 200 periodical publications on four continents, and influenced many more with his books and articles about design for print.

Initially focused on periodical design, in the mid-1980s White brought his analysis of the visual rhetoric of structure, white space and typographic hierarchy to bear on corporate publishing in a way that shared common ground with information design. As an educator 'his most valued contribution for people trying to learn how to design has been his articulation, in very clear and easy-to-follow language, what publication design is about; and his insistence that it is not a mystery, but a rational activity of manipulating the elements of a publication in order to achieve certain defined communication outcomes.'[2] 'White was an early proponent of the idea of design as being more than "good looks".'[3]

In 2012, he dedicated several of his design books to the public domain.[4]

He was the son of the illustrator and architect Emil Weiss,[5] and the father of the designer, writer and educator Alex W White.[6]

He is survived by his four sons and seven grandchildren.[7]

Published work

As author:

(revised as Editing by Design: For Designers, Art Directors, and Editors--the Classic Guide to Winning Readers, Allworth Press, 2003)
(revised as Graphic Idea Notebook: A Treasury of Solutions to Visual Problems, Allworth Press, 2004)

As designer:

References

  1. http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/EAD/pdf_guides/RMA01416.pdf | Honor designs, 1950-1951, p.115 | accessdate = 2012-02-05
  2. Conrad Taylor, 'Training the design militia: in-service design education for the non-professional practitioner', paper delivered at the Information Design Conference, Cambridge, England, 14–15 July 1997 | http://www.conradiator.com/downloads/pdf/DesignMilitia-IDC1997.pdf | accessdate = 2012-02-08
  3. Beth Mazur, 'Information design in motion', in Michael J. Albers, Beth Mazur (ed.s), Content & complexity: information design in technical communication, Routledge, 2003, p.18
  4. http://www.janvwhite.org/ | accessdate = 2015-01-03
  5. http://www.jewishmuseum.cz/print/atexhibition.htm | accessdate = 2012-02-05
  6. http://alexanderwwhite.wordpress.com/designer/ | accessdate = 2012-02-05
  7. http://www.westportnow.com/index.php?/v2_5/obitjump/jan_v._white_86/ | accessdate = 2015-01-03

External links

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