Tag: Johnson Banks

  • Kyoorius unveils its jury, Karen Welman to be foreman

    Kyoorius unveils its jury, Karen Welman to be foreman

    MUMBAI: The jury for the fifth edition of the Kyoorius Design has been unveiled. The jury sessions will take place on 15 and 16 September, 2017 at the Ecole Intuit Lab in Mumbai. The Kyoorius Design Awards is the foremost awards for design and visual communication in India. All design work commercially released between 1 January 2016 and 31 March 2017 are eligible to be entered.

    The Kyoorius Design Awards have a wide-ranging list of categories, planned to identify individual components as well as entire projects/campaigns that exist on various platforms and channels and aims to highlight, advertise and advocate good design, designers and design oriented companies in India. Kyoorius Design Awards receives entries from design studios, advertising agencies, freelance designers, brand consultancies as well as corporates from across India.

    A specialist jury has been carefully selected comprising of the top designers from India and across the world. They will gather to review, debate and elect the best of the best over two intensive days. The jury will be chaired by award winning graphic designer and founding creative partner at Pearlfisher (London), Karen Welman along with some of the leading names in the advertising and design space.

    The other jury members for Kyoorius Design Awards 2017 are:
    • Leanne Kitchen, Designer – Johnson Banks
    • Darshan Gandhi, Head Design – Godrej Consumer Products Limited
    • Scott Lambert, Design Director – The Partners | Founder – The Typefaces
    • Ambrish Arora, Founding Principal – Studio Lotus
    • Jay Dutta, SVP of UX Design – MMYT | Advisor – SAIF Partners
    • Neha Tulsia, Founder & Creative Director – NH1 Design

    Kyoorius CEO Rajesh Kejriwal said: “These awards are an initiative to acknowledge and reward the true talent in the field of creativity, innovation and design. It’s an honour to have such highly acclaimed jury on board this year. Our jury members represent the best talent in the industry, across a range of creative disciplines to recognise exceptional work in the design industry.”

    The Kyoorius Design Awards night will be the culmination of Kyoorius Designyatra and will be held on 14 October, 2017, at the Grand Hyatt, Goa, India. The Awards night will have a gathering of over 1500 people from the design, advertising and marketing community.

    Important dates

    Submission deadline: 30 August, 2017
    Deadline for postal entries: 4 September, 2017
    Judging: September 15 & 16 in Mumbai
    Awards Night: 14 October at Grand Hyatt, Goa

  • Indian design should have its own identity: Michael Johnson at KDY 2016

    Indian design should have its own identity: Michael Johnson at KDY 2016

    JAIPUR: After building a functional formula or template, creative minds often challenge themselves by breaking out of the same mould. Michael Johnson, who set up the London-based design consultancy Johnson Banks, is a follower of this school of thought, because ‘why not?’

    After giving a good 10 years to designing for big name brands, Johnson had taken on the lack of proper branding in non-for-profit sector, and asked himself if design solutions can actually make a tangible difference in the field.

    Addressing a room full of graphic designers, artistes and branding professions at day one of Kyoorius Design Yatra 2016, Johnson asked if designs can really make a difference or it is a self satisfying and misplaced expectation.

    Johnson then went on to answer the question with a glimpse of his team’s works since they started off.

    The problem, Johnson said, lay in how graphic designers and advertising agencies handle non-for-profit work. “They treat it the same way old Catholic churches would treat indulgences: a little act of good will for their smooth sailing to heaven, or to pacify their conscience. They don’t do it to actually make it work.”

    After familiarising the audience with the idea of design solutions for non-for-profit organisations that actually helped them raise significant funds, Johnson titillated them with the idea of open source rebranding – to the point of sharing their design’s first draft in a public domain to be criticised by the world at large.

    For those who don’t know Johnson and his team at Johnson Banks has been invading many trade publishers’ headlines for its partnership with Mozilla to rebrand the company’s identity on a public domain.

    Later, speaking to indiantelevision.com, Johnson shared he had great expectation from the Indian design community to carve a unique identity; and a part of it brings him back to Kyoorius Design Yatra.

    Having participated in Kyoorius Designyatra first in its 9th edition, Johnson feels it has grown a great deal over the years “A proper design conference was very much a new concept in India back then. It was more of ‘famous designers presenting their works and the Indian counter parts lauding. It was obviously very appreciated but there was very little interaction, and engagement from the audience. And here we are, almost 10 years later and the property has grown so much. It has a clear theme that resonates very well with me. Instead of ‘here’s what I do’ presentation, speakers can talk about why they do what they do,” Johnson shared, adding that from his last year’s experience as a judge of Kyoorius Design Awards 2015, he could gauge that the design industry is being seriously taken in the country.

    But it’s not quite there yet, Johnson admitted.

    “It’s hard to track Indian designs in other markets. You hear big names from India in thr advertising circle but it gets a little tricky from design perspective,” he said.

    “I have often questioned why Indian design should be reflective of western works. Why can’t they do their own unique branding when India has such a vibrant culture to draw inspiration from? There is no need to copy the trends that the UK and the USA have been doing for the past 50 years,” he simply stated. Giving Indian designers the benefit of doubt he added that it could be the result of western works dominating the design industry for years and becoming a benchmark for the young Indian professionals joining in now.

    “I strongly believe that Indian design should have its own identity, much like the Japanese who have made a staunch distinction in their work that is world apart. I have started to see someone of that since the last time I was here, thus looking forward to the winning entries of this year’s Kyoorius Design Awards,” Johnson added in parted.

  • Indian design should have its own identity: Michael Johnson at KDY 2016

    Indian design should have its own identity: Michael Johnson at KDY 2016

    JAIPUR: After building a functional formula or template, creative minds often challenge themselves by breaking out of the same mould. Michael Johnson, who set up the London-based design consultancy Johnson Banks, is a follower of this school of thought, because ‘why not?’

    After giving a good 10 years to designing for big name brands, Johnson had taken on the lack of proper branding in non-for-profit sector, and asked himself if design solutions can actually make a tangible difference in the field.

    Addressing a room full of graphic designers, artistes and branding professions at day one of Kyoorius Design Yatra 2016, Johnson asked if designs can really make a difference or it is a self satisfying and misplaced expectation.

    Johnson then went on to answer the question with a glimpse of his team’s works since they started off.

    The problem, Johnson said, lay in how graphic designers and advertising agencies handle non-for-profit work. “They treat it the same way old Catholic churches would treat indulgences: a little act of good will for their smooth sailing to heaven, or to pacify their conscience. They don’t do it to actually make it work.”

    After familiarising the audience with the idea of design solutions for non-for-profit organisations that actually helped them raise significant funds, Johnson titillated them with the idea of open source rebranding – to the point of sharing their design’s first draft in a public domain to be criticised by the world at large.

    For those who don’t know Johnson and his team at Johnson Banks has been invading many trade publishers’ headlines for its partnership with Mozilla to rebrand the company’s identity on a public domain.

    Later, speaking to indiantelevision.com, Johnson shared he had great expectation from the Indian design community to carve a unique identity; and a part of it brings him back to Kyoorius Design Yatra.

    Having participated in Kyoorius Designyatra first in its 9th edition, Johnson feels it has grown a great deal over the years “A proper design conference was very much a new concept in India back then. It was more of ‘famous designers presenting their works and the Indian counter parts lauding. It was obviously very appreciated but there was very little interaction, and engagement from the audience. And here we are, almost 10 years later and the property has grown so much. It has a clear theme that resonates very well with me. Instead of ‘here’s what I do’ presentation, speakers can talk about why they do what they do,” Johnson shared, adding that from his last year’s experience as a judge of Kyoorius Design Awards 2015, he could gauge that the design industry is being seriously taken in the country.

    But it’s not quite there yet, Johnson admitted.

    “It’s hard to track Indian designs in other markets. You hear big names from India in thr advertising circle but it gets a little tricky from design perspective,” he said.

    “I have often questioned why Indian design should be reflective of western works. Why can’t they do their own unique branding when India has such a vibrant culture to draw inspiration from? There is no need to copy the trends that the UK and the USA have been doing for the past 50 years,” he simply stated. Giving Indian designers the benefit of doubt he added that it could be the result of western works dominating the design industry for years and becoming a benchmark for the young Indian professionals joining in now.

    “I strongly believe that Indian design should have its own identity, much like the Japanese who have made a staunch distinction in their work that is world apart. I have started to see someone of that since the last time I was here, thus looking forward to the winning entries of this year’s Kyoorius Design Awards,” Johnson added in parted.

  • Kyoorius unveils its jury for the design awards 2014

    Kyoorius unveils its jury for the design awards 2014

    MUMBAI: Kyoorius, in association with D&AD, completed the judging process for its design awards. 468 entries judged across nine categories, ranging from branding & identity, design for communication, packaging, space, books to writing and editorial were evaluated.

     

    The Kyoorius design awards offer a diverse range of categories that recognise both comprehensive design projects as well as individual components. To this end, the design craft jury is dedicated to illustration, typography, graphic design and photography.

     

    The design for good jury reflects design’s ability to build awareness, promote a good cause or social welfare. Works must demonstrate positive social impact, the capacity to change behaviour and sensitivity to sustainability issues.

     

    It can be noted, Kyoorius awards have no winning tier structure – no gold, silver or bronze, and it is the jury’s prerogative to award one or multiple Blue Elephants in one category, whereas none in another, if entries are not up to the mark.

     

    A mix of the top international, regional, and Indian creative minds have been selected to ensure that work is compared against industry best practices, while keeping the Indian context in mind.

     

    The Kyoorius design awards jury includes jury Johnson Banks creative director & principal Foreman Michael Johnson, Anonymous creative director Felix Ng, Alok Nanda & Company founder & CEO Alok Nanda, Lopez Design CEO & principal Anthony Lopez, and Trapeze co-founder Ram Sinam.

     

    Kyoorius founder CEO Rajesh Kejriwal said, “Design is at the root of creativity. Over the last 5 yeats we have seen the role of design change in India – from being a non-essential to a critical tool for business development and growth. We’ve seen significant growth in participation both at the awards and at designyatra not only from designer and studios but from clients themselves.”

     

    Kyoorius and D&AD aim to create a truly neutral and ethical platform that recognises the best of Indian creativity. Kyoorius will once again open its doors to the public as it had done for the advertising awards jury sessions in Mumbai. All voting is private, never by a show of hands.

     

    The last day of judging, 25 June will be open to press, professionals and students from Pune’s creative community. Visitors will have the opportunity to view the best in Indian design, understand the judging process and watch jury members debate entries.

     

    Winners of Blue and Black Elephants will be awarded at Kyoorius Designyatra, the annual creativity and innovation conference held in Goa from 11 to 13 September 2014. In-book winners, also considered nominees for Blue Elephants, will be announced in August. Alongside winners, nominees will be featured in the Kyoorius design awards annual, an annual publication that is distributed to over 5000 corporates in India.

    Funds raised from the Kyoorius Awards are funneled back in to the Indian creative industry through programmes such as FYIdays. In conjunction with the jury sessions, Kyoorius will host a FYIday with branding guru Michael Johnson on 24th June in Pune at Sumant Moolgaokar Auditorium, and on 26 June in Mumbai at ISDI Parsons Mumbai.