March, 2022 | 116 & West
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3.24.22 | read time: 3 min

Design vs. Art: Objectivity & Subjectivity

Kelsey Selis

Design is not just art. To the unfamiliar, the words art and design may seem synonymous. And while they are similar as pure, visual expression, design and art are significantly different. While design and art overlap and intertwine in many ways, there is one thing that separates the two completely: purpose.

The purpose of design is that it has a job. Its entire goal is to visually solve a problem. Although art can do these things, it is not bound to them.

Designers use a multitude of elements in order to accomplish their goal of solving a problem. They implement typography, photography, layout and balance techniques, color theory, and other strategies. Many of these elements have objective power in that there is data and reason behind them.

While artists also use these elements, they aren’t necessarily creating something with an identified goal in mind. Nor are they making decisions based on data or to make their audience feel or do something specific. Designers, on the other hand, must be more objective in their decisions. This is an important point—let’s dive in a little further.

Understanding Objectivity

By definition, objectivity is “not influenced by personal feelings, interpretations, or prejudice.” Objectivity is based on facts and is completely unbiased. In reference to design, we make objective design decisions based on testing, industry prowess, research, data, and factual evidence. Objective design searches for feedback and looks toward best practices, standards, and psychological information for rationale.

Every design choice (yes, even the “pretty” ones) must point back to objectivity and be rationally explained. If a design approach cannot communicate or accomplish its intended job, it is a failure–no matter how pretty, awesome, or cool someone (or the designer themselves) might think it is.

Making objective design choices does not mean that design should be boring or matter-of-fact. In reality, each stylistic choice needs to add to the overall meaning of the work, and some of these choices may be subjective.

Recognizing Subjectivity

Subjectivity is the yin to objectivity’s yang. Being subjective means “placing excessive emphasis on one’s own moods, attitudes, opinions, etc.” Subjectivity doesn’t really take anything other than “I like/don’t like it” into account.

All designers need to use subjectivity in order to achieve the project’s objective goals with grace and originality. For example, a designer must rely on their experience and personal taste in order to ensure subjective aspects of a design operate in harmony with the overall goal and objective design choices. This is no easy task. It requires being both audacious and pragmatic at the same time.

If a design was overwhelmingly subjective, (as in the designer makes decisions based solely on their personal feelings) it would become art. And, as previously discussed, design is not art. Knowing how and when to make subjective decisions will ultimately lead to more refined work.

Good Design Employs Both Objectivity & Subjectivity

Black and white rectangular image. Cartoon illustration of a man looking at a woman. The woman is sitting in front of a computer with her hand on the mouse, there is a coffee mug in front of her, and she is saying "it's cool, bro, you can probably still use your fav color in that logo" to the man.

Designers make a lot of decisions which all need to serve the project’s ultimate goal. Good designers understand when to throw some of their own taste into a design, and when to hold back.  A good designer, for example, knows the importance of brand consistency, but also understands how to play with brand variability. A great designer searches for opportunities to step outside a rigid brand to bring value and further appeal to the audience.

Great designers also understand that even their personal decisions need to have strategic insights to back them. For example, a serif typeface might be more prevalent in a particular industry, but a designer may prefer sans-serif. Using a sans-serif typeface might be unusual, but it may also stand out in the category.

Long Live Good Design

Understanding how subjectivity and objectivity play together takes time and experience. It also requires getting things wrong and taking risks. Gaining experience and insight on the proper mix of the two–depending on the needs and ultimate goals of the project–will lead to better, more successful work.

Our talented designers are here if you ever need help finding that “just right” balance between objectivity and subjectivity in design.

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3.23.22 | read time: 1 min

116 & West | Spokane Helps Ukraine

116 & West

Family gathered wearing "Spokane helps Ukraine" shirts
Sergey’s family

We’ve been working with Sergey Stefoglo on rebranding his company, Elite Construction & Remodeling. Sergey immigrated to Spokane from Ukraine 25 years ago. In a recent meeting with Sergey, he received a phone call from a pastor friend in Kharkiv, Ukraine, updating him on what is going on in the war there. Sergey put the call on speaker and translated for us while we listened to what things are like for the Ukrainian people. Hearing of their hardships, we immediately wanted to help.

With the help of Taylor Klündt, we designed a SPOKANE HELPS UKRAINE logographic, t-shirt, and website. The site was built and published by Greg Naker. The Hamilton Studio joined with us to film an interview with Sergey and his daughters that was posted to https://spokanehelpsukraine.org. The site can receive financial donations and promotes the sale of the t-shirts, with ALL proceeds going directly to feed and provide supplies to the people of Kharkiv, Ukraine. Donate directly by clicking here.

Seregey and his daughters filming

The first 100 t-shirts were printed at Zome Design and sold out in one day. 300 more were printed and are for sale at Cedar Coffee (another Ukrainian-owned business) at 701 N Monroe and at other locations that can be found on the website. The suggested t-shirt donation is a minimum of $30.

Please join 116 & West | Spokane to help the people of Kharkiv, Ukraine. An incredible $46,419 has been donated so far! You are AMAZING, Spokane! Дякую (Thank you!)

Spokane team receiving the t-shirts

3.16.22 | read time: 1 min

Kalispel Tribe of Indians

116 & West

The Kalispel Tribe of Indians owns Northern Quest Resort & Casino in Airway Heights and the Kalispel Casino and Camas Center for Health and Wellness in Cusick and Usk, among many other business, social, natural resources, and health enterprises.

The Tribe has a long history of helping others and is a strong supporter of the Spokane community. We helped the Tribe through branding, print collateral, advertising, Tribal communication and promotional design and writing.

Our work with the Kalispel Tribe includes brochures, pull-up banners, websites, print advertising, and the Kalispel Tribe Investment Report. We designed and wrote the annual Kalispel Tribe membership calendar for over 10 years, which is given to tribal members and shared with friends and partners to recognize the Tribe’s culture, history, and accomplishments. We even paddled 55-miles and camped along the Pend Oreille River on a three-day journey with the Kalispel Canoe Family while photographing, illustrating, and writing their “Remember the Water” journal.

It’s an honor to serve the Kalispel Tribe through the development of these branding and promotional materials. Lem-lmtsh, Ql̓ispé.

 

3.16.22 | read time: 1 min

SARA: Even AI Products Need Branding & Marketing

116 & West

Enabling budget-challenged human services agencies to serve more clients and serve them better is the job of SARA, an artificial intelligence-driven SaaS product developed by The Career Index Corporation. This digital assistant helps federal agencies, workforce programs, vocational rehabilitation, nonprofits, health organizations, welfare/TANF departments, and other groups better communicate with and manage their caseloads.

The founder of SARA, KD Nygaard, was referred to us to help brand and promote the product. We conducted user interviews, developed a new brand image, compiled research, created audience personas, wrote key market messaging, and developed a website that informs interested parties about the benefits of implementing SARA into their human service systems. Their logo conveys SARA’s seamless integration and data sharing, while the website delivers product details, case studies, testimonials, news, details on corporate leadership, and customer login.

SARA helps front-line workers better engage and track their client’s progress. We are proud to help introduce SARA to these critical human service agencies.