Publications & Interviews
Interviews and Articles (most recent first)
Interview with Dan Shields of CKCU-FM, 8 April 2008 [MP3, 60000KB]
Feature
about David in Computer Arts Magazine from China (Chinese)
[366KB]
Coverage
of David speaking in Beijing, China (Chinese) HTML
"Why Should They Do Business With You?" by Daniel Saintjean and Laurel R. Simmons was recently published and significantly quotes David and his ideas.
"GDC
Member Elected to Icograda Board" and "Canada Commended for
Contributions to Icograda" from the GDC National Newsletter Fall/Winter
2005 (English)
[178KB]
Financial
Post Interview with David Berman: "Don't scrimp on company's e-presence"
(English)
[308KB]
ArabAd
Magazine: "Bahrain's Creative Nights" (English)
[966KB]
ArabAd
Magazine: "Seven Habits of Highly Effective Web Sites" by David
Berman (English)
[78KB]
Culture.ca
interview with David Berman (English)
HTML
[111KB]
Culture.ca
interview with David Berman (French) HTML
[112KB]
"Mass
Deception" by Birgitte Kleis in ARKITEKTEN Magazine (Danish)
[754KB]
"Identity
Crisis" by Karen Mahony (English) HTML
[492KB]
Media Marketing
(Bosnia) "I Want To Tell You The Truth: article about David Berman
(Bosnian)
[870KB]
Klik
Magazine (Slovenia) "Everything is in Values": Interview with
David Berman on the European Magdalena Festival and social responsibility
(English)
[360KB]
Elevating the Profession (Interview with David Berman by Margaret Ann Varner)
Interview
with David Berman on the Magdalena Festival (Slovenia) and social responsibility
(by Helena Šuštar) (Slovenian)
[860KB]
Ona
Magazine clip: Magdalena festival (Slovenian) JPG
Masterfile's
Open online magazine (USA): interview with David Berman (English)
HTML
[134KB]
I
Have An Idea online magazine (Canada): interview with David Berman
(English) HTML
[116KB]
Comma
magazine (Lebanon): article about David Berman, 2003 (English)
[2450KB]
Applied
Arts magazine (Canada): interview with David Berman, April 2003 (English)
[140KB]
Applied
Arts magazine (Canada): editorial on Brno Conference and social responsibility
(by Sara Curtis) (English) JPG
Applied
Arts magazine (Canada): article on Brno Icograda conference and social
responsibility (by Sara Curtis) (English) JPG
Marketing
Magazine column (in Delo, Slovenia's largest daily newspaper): article
about David Berman (Slovenian) JPG
Seven
Habits of Highly Effective Web Sites article by David Berman (English)
[85KB]
Seven
Habits of Highly Effective Web Sites flyer (which
you are free to reproduce and distribute at will)
(English)
[50KB]
Papers
Quantifying
the Audience for Ones and Zeroes Analysis of Digital Art Audiences: Literature
Review and Methodology (© Copyright Canadian Heritage Information
Network 2005)
[266KB]
A
New Format For Canadian Legislation: White paper by David Berman,
commissioned by Government of Canada on plain design's role in republishing
the laws of Canada under a more accessible format.
[700KB]
"Elevating the profession of graphic design"
Interview with David Berman by Margaret Ann Varner
"Society makes decisions about what is acceptable based on experts."
What about the power centers? The presidents and chief executive officers
who control the budgets and hire the graphic designers. How can a graphic
designer apply the principles he believes in when he is hired and directed
by the person who writes the check?
The first step is for designers and visual communicators to recognize
where they have specific power in a society. For designers, it's basically
in three areas. One is in how people are visually and texturally portrayed.
How we talk about people and how we present them has an effect on how
people are viewed. For instance, if you're dealing with issues of sexism,
if someone throughout their life is constantly getting a barrage of images
that portray women in certain ways, whether they are objectified, or certain
body images are presented as what you ought to look like, and in order
to achieve that you have to buy certain things, smell a certain way, etc.
That's one area where designers have a certain power.
The second area where graphic designers have a huge impact is the amount
of forest products that are expended in print publishing. Whether it's
a matter of being cautious about how much paper is used up, or what kinds
of papers are used in terms of recycled fibers, designers are the ones
often around the table to help make the decisions as to what gets used.
The third area where designers and visual communicators have a specific
power, is simply, what messages are sent out there and how truthful they
are. While it's true that the person bankrolling the sending of the message
is a president, CEO, or assistant deputy minister, the reality is that
these people rely on professionals to craft those messages and to send
them. If everyone would say 'no we're not willing to send a message that
is just plain wrong,' then eventually the power centres would run out
of people to hire to do it. Of course, there's always that concern, 'well
if I don't do it, then the next guy will.' On the other hand there are
a lot of ethical issues where you can just say, 'well I was just following
orders' kind of thinking. But what really shifts things, is while a CEO
may be completely profit oriented, eventually profit orientation includes
taking into account-public opinion. Practitioners are in a position where
they can help shift public opinion as to what is and is not acceptable
and what is reasonable. I'm not talking about doing specific public relations
campaigns, but society makes decisions about what is acceptable based
on experts.
So if, visual communicators can elevate their profession to a level in
which they are perceived as experts, in let's say, the same way an architect
is perceived. For example if you want to know if a building is safe, or
is about to crumble, what would you do? You would consult with experts,
say architects. If the architects say that the building is OK, then we
trust that the building is safe because we trust architects. On the flip
side, if the architects say that the building isn't safe, 'we wouldn't
go into it ourselves,' you'd probably trust that opinion over say that
of politicians. If we want to know if a specific product is safe or not,
or if we should eat a certain type of food, or take a drug, we talk to
doctors.
But visual communication is a young profession, so we're just at the beginning
of defining our role in society and having society recognizing our importance.
I don't expect society to be as mature when it comes to visual literacy.
Certainly, in our society, we tend to be very literate in terms of words,
but we're not as literate in terms of visuals. Or we don't recognize it
as such, quite yet.
We have a society that's based on word-based legal systems. For instance,
if I put up a billboard that lies, just out and out lies using words-we
can look at that and recognize it-and it's not allowed. But if you juxtapose
certain visual items, you create a visual sentence. And if the visual
sentence lies, we're not as quick to say that it's a lie, or if it's just
misleading. We're much less critical about visual lies, we allow it.
But this is changing. The good news is that society is becoming much more
visually literate and more media aware. Year by year, you can see the
shift. There are a number of indicators that demonstrate that visual literacy
is on the rise. Society's knowledge of who visual communicators are and
their role in society is leaping forward every five years. People didn't
even know what a graphic designer was ten or fifteen years ago. Now most
people know what the profession is.




