Ed Ruscha at the Joslyn

In regards to the artwork BARNS AND FARMS, what about this piece sparks my interest? My answer is as follows:

You’re telling me about something that you’re not showing me. With two layers presented in a square, a square that would feel very-much-at-home on an Instagram feed, I’m moved by the vibrant colors of a big sky as well as the purity of machined, white type.

The horizon line of blackened land at the base of the work anchors and helps to let me know just how small I am. The golden sunset (or is it a sunrise?) gives me a cue to close up shop for the evening (or to get ready for the day). 

As an advertisement, there’s a cadence I like. Chop-chop, barns and farms. Let’s kick the tires and light the fires. I didn’t live on a farm growing up, but I visited the one where my grandparents lived often. I’ve seen this scene thousands of times driving on the gravel county roads of Nebraska. I didn’t need a message to entice me there, I was there already. 

As a moment in time, with the clouds frozen in place, it causes me to pause and to recall the smell of those massive, wooden structures called barns. The dirt floors, the hay bales, the musty interior of the vehicles parked there. Things stored inside were protected, sort of.  Things stored inside had value, monetarily speaking. The barn was a key part of the working farm operation.

People lived on farms, but they were there to work. Sunrise to sunset, constantly doing some form of labor. Gotta do the chores, grow the crops, and tend to the animals. You eat, sleep, and procreate so you can do those work things better, more efficiently. 

As nostalgia, there’s love in that square. Memories of family. As history, there’s mixed emotions in that square. A country feeding itself and also causing a great big dust bowl. Prosperity and livelihood for the working man and then the corporations squeezing them out with monoculture. The freedom and good nature of rural America now with declining populations, economic insecurity, immigrant tension, drug crisis, and an often referenced part of one side in the country’s deepening divide.

I’m in a car when I’ve seen this scene. I’m moving and feeling the freedom of the open road. But I’m also a little scared. Because I don’t want to stop. I don’t want to break down and have to venture onto a farm for help. There might be a big dog. There might be a suspicious farmer with a gun. It might be where I’m knocked unconscious and wake up in a dark basement. It’s there I’m plumped up over a few weeks and then turned into soup for a very traditionalist family of cannibals. Seen that movie

And I feel anxious. Like I get with most advertisements these days. I like the beautiful presentation of type over image but am also unsettled with the unspoken outcomes that could lie beneath. That’s not Ed’s fault. Na, that’s just advertising.

Framing the Flame: Art that Ignites »

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FORGE: Create

For the last few months, I’ve been saying NO to a lot of stuff. Can’t do that talk, can’t do this review, can’t make it that other thing. But I did say yes to FORGE. A session on how the creative process is a process within a process. Myself, Nicolas Frederickson, and Mike and Patty Malone will offer our insights into creativity in a discussion-heavy format to a group of young design students eager to learn.

Wednesday, March 7, 2018 @ 4:30 pm
Emspace’s Outerspace

Starter Kit: Making This Design Thing Matter

AIGA | UNO is proud to present Starter: Kit Design Talks; a speaker series focused on helping upcoming graphic designers and students learn the processes of graphic design from professionals in our community and outside of it. Our second speaker is independent designer and cofounder of Round And Round, Justin Kemerling.

This Friday: How principles can lead to doing the work you love. A story of pursuit, independence, activism, and keeping it weird from the middle of America. I’ll be talking about design activism, politics, making your community better, self-initiated projects, and what it’s like to run your own independent practice. 

Friday, November 17, 2017 @ 3 pm
Milo Bail Student Center

Omaha Startup Week 2017

It’s Startup Week in Omaha starting today. I’m on a panel in the design track with a few other Omaha designers to share our thoughts on design for good. Here’s the setup:

Today we find ourselves in a rapidly changing global society. Information moves faster than ever and impacts a broader audience. As designers, we have an opportunity to open hearts and minds with our unique ability to solve problems through visual communication and user experience. With this in mind; how do we encourage growth and acceptance through our work and leadership?

Design & Social Consciousness Panel
Tuesday May 2, 2017 // 1–3 PM
The Startup Collaborative
1905 Harney, 7th Floor

2,608 Miles

It’s a long journey from Omaha to Anchorage. Exactly 2,607.99 miles separate the two cities. I just returned back to the OMA from the ANC where I presented to AIGA Alaska. A round table discussion over lunch and an evening lecture about my work and approach. I met some really great people and shared a story of pursuit, independence, activism, and keeping it weird in the middle of America. 

Overall, Alaska is insanely beautiful. It was great to experience its vast landscape of mountain peaks and frozen oceans at the tale end of winter—blinding white snow crunching under foot and a burning bright sun beating down. My wife Katie made the journey too. We were able to connect with our longtime friend, fellow designer, collaborator, and Alaska resident Jontue Hollingsworth who helped show us some sights.

The roundtable discussion was casual. On the topic of going from raising awareness to moving people to action. We talked client relationships, measuring success, scope creep, and communicating to diverse audiences. The evening lecture was in an old theater in downtown Anchorage. It was an intimate setting on a stage furnished with the retro set of its current play. I presented on how principles can lead to doing the work you love, how my graphic design manifests itself along the way, and what five core projects look like at a deeper level. The audience was attentive and the Q&A time was thoughtful and broad. On community, inspiration, process, and politics.

The city and the pace reminded me a little of Lincoln. The designers who attended were young and old. They worked as freelancers, in small agencies, and at nonprofits. At dinner we commiserated about people who don’t quite know where either of our states are. At some point in our lives, we’ve had to explain to folks that no, we don’t all live in igloos or tipis. That Alaska is not an island and Nebraska does not have mountains. Good times all around.

Definitely make the trip to the 49th state in the union at some point in your life. You will not be disappointed. Whether for the sights, winter activities, fine food and drink, or welcoming residents. I’m so glad AIGA Alaska extended the invitation. I enjoyed sharing why I think making this design thing matter is key. Getting to meet another design community with lots of passion and interest in making things better, just one more example of the inherent desire of designers to use our talents for something bigger than ourselves.

Get to know me and my work

Say I’m coming to your city to do a lunch round table and a lecture to your design community. And you need a primer. Things that would be shared on social media and what not. What might that include?

Here’s a good list:

Case Studies: (a couple projects of note)
Pipeline Fighters 
Stand Up For Justice

Medium Stories:
Why Work Here (what makes a creative place great)
Hell With This (here I interview myself)
Design Plus Social Justice (thoughts on design for change)

Videos: (fun to watch)
I Voted Today 
Round and Round Coworking

Cause Posters:
Action Backed on Instagram 
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