Founded in 1876,
OCAD University is Canada’s largest art and design institution, located in Toronto, Ontario. Formerly known as Ontario College of Art and Design, the school changed its name in 2007 to OCAD University when it received degree-granting status. Despite the “C” in the name still standing for “College” the acronym was kept as it had substantial equity and recognition. In 2004, OCAD University moved into its new campus, a radical structure designed by Alsop Architects that looks like a cross between a crossword puzzle and those super tall robots from
War of the Worlds, with some color sprinkled for good measure. It may sound like a jab at the building, but the thing is truly jaw-dropping when you are standing below it. Anyway. Last night, at the 96th Annual Graduate Exhibition, the school unveiled a new identity, created by Toronto-based
Bruce Mau Design (BMD), as well as another slight name change, to OCAD U.
OCAD U’s building, designed by Alsop.
The old logo wasn’t anything too exciting, just the name of the institution set in Jonathan Barnbrook’s Priori inside a rectangle with the letters cropped off on both sides. Decent. But lame. And it could have any name, of any school, from anywhere in the world. The new logo draws its basic structure from the black and white square pattern on the building, giving it a delightful relevance and reason for being. The big square acts as a “window”, a concept that gets thrown around a lot and hard to improve upon but I think this identity is able to offer a slight variation on the theme by not just populating the inside of the square but having some fun with it and letting the odd “things” come in front, behind, and all around the main square. It’s almost like a cross between the visual diversity of the Aol. work and National Geographic’s and Time’s idea of the color frame capturing a moment in time. The idea of putting student work in there is the exact kind of conceptual move that makes the difference between students and alumni hating a redesign of their beloved educational institution or loving it. I bet we won’t be seeing any petitions to get rid of this logo.
The logo and identity are set in Gotham but strangely enough it doesn’t feel too Gotham-ey, perhaps because there are no “a”s, “R”s, or “M”s which are the most telling characters of Gotham. The logo also does a nice job in acknowledging that this is still OCAD but that it happens to now be a U (for Univesity)… the counter argument is that it encourages people to keep calling it “OCAD” not “OCAD U” as is the new intention. The applications are really great and demonstrate the versatility that this identity will have. It has a very good combination of serious starkness with creative whimsiness.
Fonte: http://www.underconsideration.com/brandnew/archives/ocad_u_all_new.php#.VD5cxtTF-xU
A key frame from the animation above, showing that the logo comes from the pattern on the building.
Alternate lock-ups.
Logo with student’s work.
Groovy paper cups, above, and stationery, below.