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In the dim dark early days of the Web a then unknown author combined
personal anecdote, design insights, HTML code, layout tips and website
samples into a unique book that became a bestseller over the course
of two printings.
That book was David Siegel’s Creating
Killer Web Sites, and Hillman Curtis’ MTIV: Process, Inspiration
and Practice for the New Media Designer is an admirable successor
to the first Web bestseller. MTIV does not contain quite the same mix
of stuff as its predecessor, and that’ s a good thing, as the
Web and our understanding of it has changed since Siegel’s time.
Foremost is the fact that Flash has now assumed an importance that plain
vanilla HTML once held.
Curtis the Flasher of Renown.
Hillman Curtis is one of the best and most famous Flashers on the planet.
He is the Flash designer who first started using the term motion graphics
for what he was doing in the early days of Flash, and he is the first
Flash author I’ve read who emphasizes story, story, story as the
motivation and prime mover of what he does. In fact he is possibly the
first well-known and well-respected designer who has had the guts to
come out and say such a thing.
In a rerun of the legend of the blind men and the
elephant, people have perceived the Web as they want to, based on personal
interests. Hence technologists seeing it as a technology problem, IT
(IS, for North American readers) specialists perceiving it as an IT
solution, programmers assuming it is a programming exercise, traditional
graphic designers understanding websites as a collection of pages like
those in a book, and corporate marketing communications types regarding
websites as online brochures.
They are all partially right, and wrong. Websites
can be some or all of these things, but the Web itself is about communication
and storytelling. In its short history few people have perceived this
fact, and even fewer have pointed it out in public. Bravo Hillman.
Putting It Into Perspective.
Put it all into perspective, place the web and the Internet up there
alongside all the other new communications technologies that came before
them, consider what they’ re all there for and it becomes dead
obvious—storytelling. Myths, legends, cave paintings, the written
word, telegraph, telephone, radio and TV, and the digital media—they
exist for the transmission of tales.
MTIV reminds us of that fact and more.
Its subtitle is Process, Inspiration and Practice. In the
Inspiration section Curtis shares some of the works by artists
works in non-digital media that inspire him, and in Process he explains
the practices that have made his firm such a success—Listen,
Unite, Theme, Concept, Eat The Audience
(you have to read to understand it), Filter and Justify.
What he shares in Process is enough to justify the cost of
the book.
In Practice Curtis hands the story over
to some guest experts for the telling, and they include Steve Krug on
usability, Jeff Southard on XML, The Rooster Design Group (the book’s
designers) on print, Leatrice Eiseman on color, and Ellen Shapiro on
grids. All good stuff and worthy, but I have more of the same in many
other books.
Let’s Improve The Naming Of The Parts.
I like that Curtis calls himself a New Media Designer and to what he
does as New Media Design. Paradoxically, although New Media Designer
is as ambiguous as competing terms like Multimedia Designer, Interactive
Designer, or plain old Digital Designer, the former is more open and
allows for endless possibilities.
The Web itself keeps changing. Digital technology
continues to evolve. The roles that New Media Designers take on will
continue to mutate. Hillman Curtis himself has designed for other media
including print, directed and designed video projects, and created all
kinds of marketing and advertising products, as well as the things you’d
expect an innovative Flash expert to have done, all under the name New
Media Designer.
I think we should all follow Curtis’ lead,
and be done with inventing new titles for what we do. New Media Designer
is good enough for me. So are Hillman Curtis’ processes as a designer,
and I will be adding his personal inspirations to my own.
The Book:
- Title: MTIV: Process, Inspiration and Practice for
the New Media Designer
- Author:
Hillman Curtis
- Publisher:
New Riders
- Published: 2002
- Pages: 240
- Illustrations: Colour
- CD-ROM: No
- ISBN: 0735711658
- Rating: 4
The Chapters:
- Introduction
- Process
- Listen
- Unite
- Theme
- Concept
- Eat the Audience
- Filter
- Justify
- Inspiration
- Practice
- Grids
- Color
- Type
- Web
- Layout
- Web
- Languages XML
- Usability
- Broadcast
- Print
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