Graphic Design, CAPSTONE PROJECTS, PART 1:
"  The Kitchen of Meaning Exhibition Poster"
The Assignment: The Kitchen of Meaning Poster (from “Design for Communication” by Elizabeth Resnick, Massachusetts College of Art, Original Project Assignment from Kermit Bailey at North Carolina State University.)

Before Starting: Create a "lastname_kitchen" folder on your Aima GRAPHICS folder. Your work be saved into this folder as you proceed with the project.

Overview: The project allows the student to design a Poster for a fictious exhibit called "The Kitchen of Meaning."  Students will be assigned a word to illustrate in their Poster, as well as announcing the other exhibitors in the show and the date, time and place of the exhibit.  For this project, students will not only be using graphics from the Internet, but will also need to create some of their own graphics or images using whatever resources they wish.

Objectives: 

  • To develop ciritcal thinking skills as a means of analysis, talking about, and making design.
  • To understand the relationship of audience, design choices, and communication goals.
  • To understand meaning in context (cultural, social, technical, temporal, etc.)
  • To expand design vocabulary.
  • To design in a large-scale format, considering how a poster functions in the public domain.

Selection of Terms:  Mr. B. will help students willto randomly select one of the following 24 words to be the centerpiece definiation in their poster:

1- bricolage: Lane

2- portmanteau

3- mnemonics

4- denotation

5- kitsch

6- morphology

7- zeitgeist

8- periphrasis: Sam

9- nascent:

10- dissonance

11- melange

12- chronemics

13- hyperbole

14- consonance

15- panache: Alejandro

16- parataxis

17- pastiche- Carissa

18- polysemy

19- simulacrum

20- tautology

21- vernacular
22- euphemism- Kaelynn
23- malapropism
24- synecdoche

Once the student has decided on their word, they will need to do research into the actual meaning of the word, how it might be used in the framework of communication and how it might be illustrated as the focal point of a poster.  As a starting place, I might recommend the following websites:

http://www.merriam-webster.com

http://dictionary.reference.com/

http://www.thefreedictionary.com/

However, I feel that you might have to do further research to more completely understand your term in all of its facets.  I would recommend Googling your term, checking it on Wikipedia.org and even asking teachers for assistance as to how they feel they might illustrate your term.  MR. B. WILL NOT ASSIST IN YOUR RESEARCH IN ANY WAY! 

To facilitate your research, students will complete the "Kitchen of Meaning Research Worksheet".Completion of this sheet is worth 50 points of the final grade on this assignment, so please take it seriously and complete all sections thoroughly!

Specifications:  To start, create your blank canvas for your poster in ILLUSTRATOR that is 11" x 17" (or 17" x 11", if you wish to create a Landscape Poster)  inches in size.  You MUST include the following information on your poster:

  • The Title of the Exhibit:  "The Kitchen of Meaning." and "A Poster Exhibit."
  • The Place, Time and Date of the Exhibit:  "Highland High School Media Center, 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m., May 17-20, 2021."
  • The Exhibitors:  The names of the exhibitors from your class and their subjects (the other students in the class, see above.)
  • Text:  Text information of relevancy and meaning (added value that intensifies the word or context of the included images.)  The added text or information may be words, text phrases, ideas, teasers, and so on.
  • Imagery:  Imagery that reinforces the term being defined.

Your Target Audience:  Your poster should be aimed at a target audience of Teenagers/High School Students.  Make sure that your visuals and your use of terms will be understandable and applicable to this target audience!

Your Visual Theme

  • Your poster will need to Emphasize the meaning of your word/concept as a primary focus.  The title of the exhibit ("The Kitchen of Meaning") is secondary in importance but is still the thematic umbrella for all of the word-image definition posters in the Exhibit.
  • You should include AT LEAST THREE (hopefully more) visual interpretations of the term being defined in your poster.  There should be a multi-layer effect of visuals reinforcing the meaning of your term.
  • Your poster will give equal attention to TYPOGRAPHY and IMAGE as methods of conveying information.
  • Your poster will use words effectively to intensify the image and message in addition to conveying information.  Your TYPOGRAPHY should be part of the design (woven into the imagery and having levels of spatial depth.)

To help in the understanding of the idea of VISUAL THEME for your posters, please consider the following student sample from Kermit Bailey's Graphic Design class at North Carolina State University, which includes his comments regarding the project as well as his instructor comments:

Student Statement regarding the "Dialectics" Poster (above):  "To illustrate the idea of dialectics, I chose to focus on the most simple and powerful dialectics:  those of my childhood.  The design process allowed me to understand myself by seeing and understanding through the innocence of objects.  I created all of the photography, painting and illustrations used in the poster."

Comments from Kermit Bailey, the original instructor for this project at North Carolina State University:  "In a broad sense, the term 'dialectics' may be an idea or event that generates its opposite, leading to a resolution of opposites.  For the purpose of this poster study, Emmet has effectively visualized this principle of logic as both a visual and a verbal phenomenon in communication, and a personal narrative based upon his childhood.  His design positions elements of opposition or contrasts from childhood, such as ketchup/mustard, teepee/igloo, Velcro/laces, cowboys/indians, etc.

The poster is particularly effective in articulating the intended hierarchy of primary conceptual idea (the term 'dialectics') first and various required components (title of exhibition, student participants, etc.) second.  He uses color effectively and has a good sensitivity to scale in his typographic choices.  The integrity of the information is not compromised on any level. Emmets's formal decisions embody the spirit of play, perhaps consistent with the theme of a childhood narrative.  His surface treatment of the compositional area is both full and open, creating a well-balanced, interesting arrangement.

Emmet's poster solution invites multiple layers of understanding and he effectively uses wordplay and image play as visual and verbal codes to be deciphered and discovered.  The poster reads at multiple viewing distances, reinforcing further ideas of how the dialectical might function as a communication principle."

The Problem of SIZE:  Remember, these are Posters!  They are meant to be large and visually interesting so as to capture the eye of the viewer in a public place.   Make sure that your text is easily legible and that your design elements are balanced throughout your work.  Consider using colors, shapes and imagery to excite the viewer!

A Word About Resolution:  If you need to import any images from the Internet for this project, most images that you will get from the Internet will NOT BE large enough in resolution to fit on your canvas.  They may appear tiny on the screen when you are working on your canvas.  To remedy this, try opening the image in Photoshop and then use following menus and settings:

 

Techniques to be used:  It is not only encouraged, but almost necessary, to use any and all of the Photoshop and Illustrator techniques that we have learned this year, such as Masking, Drawing, etc. Please use UNALTERED images and graphics in your work and provide your own graphic visual effects using Photoshop or Illustrator. 

The NON-INTERNET, NON-COMPUTER GENERATED RESOURCE REQUIREMENTS of this project:  To increase the difficulty and the "multi-media" aspect of this project, I am REQUIRING that each student use AT LEAST TWO NON-INTERNET, NON-COMPUTER GENERATED images for their work.  This means that the student will need to be using the classroom cameras, hand drawing, painting, cutting images from magazines, etc. to generate the images that you need for your work!  I have cameras and a scanner which can be used by students to complete this part of the project, if they wish.

A Gallery of Kitchen of Meaning Sample Posters and A Word of Warning about Plagiarism:  This assignment has been used in numerous college level graphic design programs around the country.  I have put together a Gallery of Examples of "The Kitchen of Meaning" Posters that were posted on the websites and online portfolios of graphic designers from the Internet and some NEW Kitchen of Meaning Posters found online in recently.  You are permitted to research your term and the assignment in any way that you wish and use these posters as inspiration, however, if you choose to COPY or PLAGIARIZE the work of any other source for this project, I WILL KNOW ABOUT IT and you will receive a zero for this part of your Final Examination! 

PLEASE NOTE: The requirements for this project ARE DIFFERENT than those of the samples above!  Make sure that you include all required elements in your work!

Submitting Your Work: When you have completed your final canvas with your Poster, save your file as a .JPG File. EMAIL IT TO MR. B. at pburkhard@weldre9.org for grading.

Grading: This assignment will be worth 400 points total:

  • Completion of the "Kitchen of Meaning" Research Worksheet:  50 points!
  • Inclusion of the word/concept definition in the poster in an attractive, eye-catching and interesting manner= 50 points
  • Visual communication of the word/concept in an attractive, eye-catching and interesting manner= 50 points.
  • Inclusion of event information, including Exhibit Title, Place, Date and Time in an eye-catching and legible manner= 50 points.
  • Inclusion of at least two NON-INTERNET graphic resources= 50 points.
  • Inclusion of the listing of the Poster Exhibitors (other students in the class and their poster subjects)= 50 points
  • Aesthetic qualities of the final Poster= 100 points.