Muriel Cooper.

Page 1

Interview by Dante Carlos

Turning into Space

Muriel Cooper


Muriel Cooper

When talking about pioneers of the electronic communication, one of the most unremembered persons is Muriel Cooper, maybe the first graphic designer in applying her abilities into the computer screen. Born in 1925, she graduated from the Massachusetts College of Art in 1952. She discovered computers by accident in 1967 while attending a MIT summer course taught by Nicholas Negroponte, when she was working as graphic designer for the publications office of the MIT. She

Teacher

left the class dumbstruck when, while observing the codified data of Fortran in the screen exclaimed: “it doesn’t make any goddamned sense to me!�. Nevertheless, after the initial impact she left convinced of the huge creative potential of the tool and five years later, in 1973, founded the Visible Language Workshop in the MIT Media Lab together

Communicator

with Ron MacNeil, with the goal to encourage the students to use the graphic design tools to translate the dull data from the computers in something easier to understand, using text and images. As software design becomes less enigmatic, more will be discovered about its history, and Muriel Cooper

Graphic Designer

will finally be given the recognition she deserves.


Turning Time into Space Muriel Cooper in conversation with unidentified males at MIT, 1970s BY DANTE CARLOS

“She often wandered around barefoot… and climbed up on tables when she was excited about a project… Muriel was clearly in her element, making trouble,” recounted MIT Press editors Larry Cohen and Roger Conover. Muriel Cooper, who was best known for articulating the graphic language of MIT for more than 40 years, also challenged the limitations of contemporary communication. As a troublemaker, she principles of design into new strategies for visualizing information. And her enthusiasm for shaking things up was matched by her eagerness for working with Muriel Cooper with David Small, Suguru Ishizaki and Lisa Strauseld, still from Information Landscapes, 1994

emerging technologies, a precursor to our increasingly seamless relationship with information and tech. All while barefoot.

Muriel Cooper 4

conceptually (and literally) transformed conventional


Muriel Cooper toward the end of a photo shoot in 1988

Captured through memories, ephemera, video clips, publications, and other works, Cooper is the focus of the exhibition Messages and Means: Muriel Cooper at MIT, currently on view at the Arthur Ross Architecture Gallery at Columbia in New York City. I recently had a chance to catch up with co-curators David Reinfurt and Robert Wiesenberger to talk about this project. Muriel Cooper, Poster to promote The Bauhaus, 1969

Hello David and Rob.

understood, and these

the Office of Publications.

Can you tell us a little

can be set in art contexts

By the mid-60s she was

about yourselves?

as often as not. Much

the first Design Director

Robert Wiesenberger:

of my work is together

at the MIT Press, where

Hi Dante. I’m a PhD

with Stuart Bailey under

she rationalized their

candidate in art history

the name Dexter Sinister.

production system

at Columbia. Officially,

I also work with Stuart

and designed classic

I study 20th-century

and Angie Keefer on The

books like The Bauhaus

architecture, though I also

Serving Library, an online

(1969) and Learning

tend to focus a lot on

and printed publishing

from Las Vegas (1972),

design, variously defined.

project. I also teach at

along with about 500

This fall I began teaching

Princeton University and

others. In the mid-70s

a seminar on graphic

this feeds my practice.

she founded the Visible

design history in the

Finally, I also do projects

Language Workshop

MFA program at the Yale

on my own or with other

in MIT’s Department of

School of Art.

people, such as this one

Architecture, where she

with Rob.

taught experimental

Muriel Cooper 5

David Reinfurt:

printing and hands-on

I am a graphic designer

Who was Muriel Cooper?

production. And by

in a fairly expanded

RW: Muriel Cooper

the mid-80s, she was a

sense. I am often working

(1925–1994) was a graphic

founding member of the

on projects which

designer who spent the

MIT Media Lab, designing

aren’t strictly graphic

bulk of her career working

early computer interfaces.

design, or not in the

at MIT. In the mid-50s, she

way it is conventionally

started as a designer in


Why were you interested

DR: I first bumped into

in collaborating on an

Muriel’s work shortly after

exhibition about her

she delivered a talk at

work?

the fifth TED Conference in Monterey, California in 1994. She presented radical new work in computer interface design, showing a constellation of three-dimensional typographic interfaces developed with her students and colleagues at the Visible Language Workshop in the MIT Media Lab. I had just started a job in the brandnew area of “interaction design” at IDEO in San Francisco, working for a former student of Muriel’s. At this point, her work was everywhere —the cover of ID Magazine for example. And it was the model for what we were trying to do there. She passed

Installation view of Messages and Means: Muriel Cooper at MIT; Photo: James Ewing Photography

away unexpectedly soon after the TED talk and I had often been surprised (dismayed) that the provocations she offered were not taken up more

MIT Media Lab promotional Laser Disc, jacket by Betsy Hacker, MIT Design Services, video text produced at the Visible Language Workshop, 1986

“We hope to make the tools and to use them.”

Muriel Cooper 8

fully in the following years.


RW: My first exposure

The three panels broadly

to Muriel was on my

—over-simplistically—

bookshelf, looking at her

reflect the three

designs for classics of art

overlapping phases of her

and architectural history

career: As a designer (for

in the ’60s and ’70s, and

the Office of Publications

her seven-bar colophon

and MIT Press), as a

that still appears on the

teacher (for the Visible

spine of every MIT Press

Language Workshop),

Book. The story only got

and as a researcher. The

better when I learned

chronology is loose, but

about her work with

generally follows these

interfaces.

three successive phases.

RW: We included a

For example, Nicholas

Still, we don’t want

handful of Muriel’s key

Negroponte’s The

Could you walk us

to suggest a lockstep

books on art, design,

Architecture Machine

through the exhibition?

teleology toward new

and architecture in

(1970) is interesting both

What can we expect to

media, that all Muriel’s

the show. She also

as a design object and

see?

work culminated in the

produced beautiful

as an insight into the

RW: This show brings

digital. We think her

books on chemistry and

AI (artificial intelligence

together Muriel’s

concerns with production

geophysics, but she was

systems) being developed

photos, sketches, prints,

and rapid feedback

really involved with the

at MIT at the time — for

mechanicals, books, and

were quite consistent

debates on architecture,

him about architecture,

videos. In many ways,

throughout, that the

design, cybernetics,

for her about graphic

preparing it was a media

tools (many of which she

artificial intelligence, and

design. Muriel worked

archaeology of the very

made or modified) finally

so on; this environment

with Negroponte and

recent past: We salvaged

caught up with her.

at MIT and in Cambridge

his Architecture Machine

more broadly, full

Group, which evolved into

Muriel Cooper 9

some incredible materials,

“Messages and Means was design and communication for print that integrated the reproduction tools as part of the thinking process and reduced the gap between process and product.”

from a variety of sources,

DR: Central to our

of Bauhäusler and

the MIT Media Lab, where

and in an amazing range

approach is Muriel’s idea

remarkable researchers,

Cooper taught. The idea

of formats (slides, digital

of responsive graphic

both shaped her, and

with these books is that,

and audio cassettes, laser

systems and design

was shaped by her. These

given the premium on

discs, etc.).

processes that embed an

few, full books in the

“visual communication,”

explicit feedback loop.

show (we show many

you really can pick them

The GSAPP exhibitions

Describing Messages and

other book covers) form

up in the gallery and get

team did a smart job

Means, the course she

a kind of spine for an

a good sense of what

creating a custom steel

taught at MIT and which

intellectual history that

they’re about.

structure that suspends

gives our exhibition its

runs through it. They’re

three long walls in the

name, she said:

overdetermined, in terms

gallery, two of them angled.

of both form and content.

Muriel Cooper, mechanical artwork for the MIT Press colophon, 1963–4

Muriel Cooper, Visible Language Workshop letterhead, c.1979 Letter from Muriel Cooper to Jeffery Cruikshank on the Visible Language Workshop letterhead. Excerpt from the exhibition booklet, with extended captions keyed by panel number


What was the exhibition

remained consistent, but

process like?

neither the media nor

DR: We spent a ton of

the situations stayed still.

time in archives, making

So it was challenging to

some kind of order, and

pick what to show. Plus

trying to understand

it was the first time a

various artefacts — what

show like this has been

were they, who made

organized since Muriel

them, how were they

died in ’94. (Though there

intended? Talking to

was a small exhibition

Muriel’s many, still-active

convened in that year, at

colleagues and students

MIT, by Cooper’s friend,

was crucial to figuring

Tom Wong, who also

out what was what.

consolidated her papers

The selection process

at MassArt.)

was frankly quite tricky: Selecting a small group of difficult as her interests Muriel Cooper, Sketch for the MIT Press colophon, 1963–1964

Muriel Cooper and MIT Press Design Department for Donis A. Dondis, A Primer of Visual Literacy (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1973).

Muriel Cooper and Ron MacNeil, Messages and Means course poster, designed and printed at the Visible Language Workshop, MIT, c. 1974

Muriel Cooper 12

outstanding objects was


“it is not hard to imagine Moholy using a computer”

What was the MIT’s

he later recommended

relationship to design

her to work for the MIT

at the time she began

Press). It’s not really

working there?

representative of her later

RW: MIT was doing

work, which is rougher,

serviceable design work

and more about process

when Muriel began there.

and dynamism, but does

Gyorgy Kepes, a former

suggest her formation,

colleague of Moholy-

and a point of departure.

Nagy’s, and since 1947 a teacher at MIT, thought

Cooper claims that the

MIT’s design presence

Office of Publications

could be much stronger

— renamed “Design

and suggested that

Services” under her

they hire a dedicated

tenure — was the first

designer for their Office

dedicated design

of Publications. Both

program at an American

there and at the MIT Press

university. We couldn’t

Muriel created systems

confirm that, but it

to standardize formats

certainly was one of

and production and

the first. Likewise, no

give a consistent look to

academic publisher had

publications.

the kind of dedicated

Muriel Cooper 13

design department that And her earliest work

she established at the

at MIT — which we

MIT Press, and nobody

debated whether or not

else’s typography was

to include — is in fact

as modern. Clearly

quite “pretty” in a mid-

Cambridge was an

century way that Paul

exciting place for design.

Rand would be proud of

When Cooper started

(and indeed was proud

at MIT, Gyorgy Kepes

of; Cooper met Rand

was teaching there, and

during a brief stint at ad

Walter Gropius was the

agencies in New York, and

head of the Harvard GSD.

Muriel Cooper, self-portrait with Polaroid SX-70, video imaged and printed at the Visible Language Workshop, MIT, c. 1982


Some of the main graphic design works published by the MIT. Lightworks Academi Honesty Give blood MIT7Red Cross Blood Drive March 2-11, 1983 Student Center For further information Call x3-7911

“…make more intelligible the highly complex language of science… and articulate in symbolic, graphic form the order and beauty inherent in the scientist’s abstract vision.”

Were there other

Brockmann also came

DR: Muriel was frustrated

information based on the

designers at the time

through the office. So

with the limitations of the

reader/user’s interest, was

who were exploring

Muriel imbibed a lot

printed page, and always

her goal. The computer

themes Cooper was also

of this “International

interested in quicker

screen offered more

interested in?

Style” typography from

feedback, non-linear

depth, and information

RW: Definitely. Muriel

her colleagues, and no

experiences and the

environments — real

doubt from what she

layering of information.

or simulated — offered

was reading. It’s not

She used an offset

more possibilities for

something she, or anyone

printing press, as she

orientation within this

else at the time, would’ve

said, as “an interactive

space. It was crucial to

gotten from an American

medium.” So when

her that information

design program. It’s

she first encountered

be usable. She saw the

a visual language she

computers, it was clear

designer’s job as creating

used, but also reworked

that these would present

dynamic environments

significantly.

even greater possibilities.

through which

hired her college classmate Jacqueline Casey to work at Design Services. She would soon head the office until her retirement in 1989. Casey, Ralph Coburn and Dietmar Winkler were the core of that Muriel Cooper 15

office, and they also had

“Experiment and play as a part of professional discipline is difficult at best. This is not only true of an offset press but of all activities where machines are between the concept and the product.”

information would stream,

guest designers, one of

What do you think

whom, from Basel, pretty

was her interest in

RW: Integrating word

much got them on their

transitioning between

and image on screen

Helvetica kick.

spaces, from print to

(“Typographics”), in a

They recall that people

digital, or from flat to

way that filtered and

like Gerstner and Müller-

dimensional?

communicated

rather than designing unique and static objects.


pretty and intuitive — but at their inflexibility, their resistance to being hacked, or to using them to make new things. I think she would also be deeply troubled by their Muriel Cooper with David Small, Suguru Ishizaki and Lisa Strauseld, still from Information Landscapes, 1994

intrusiveness, and current questions of privacy and mass surveillance. As she noted in an essay for the Walker’s Design Quarterly in 1989 (one of the few

Do you think she was

that she would publish),

aware of how deep

artificial intelligence in

our contemporary

computers presents

relationship would be

important ethical

with technology and

questions for the designer

interfaces?

of these systems. Coupled

RW: Muriel seems to

with her awareness of the

have always had the

corporate and defense

newest gizmo, whether

sponsorship model for

it was a special digital

the MIT Media Lab, which

watch or the highest-

was indispensable for her

resolution computer

research, the question

displays available outside

of the ends to which

NASA — and whether

her research might be

or not she always knew

put was not far from

exactly how to use them

her mind. In addition to

(she was a bit of a klutz).

being a technologist, she

It also seems that she

was, I think, always also a

predicted so much of our

humanist.

Financial Viewpoints, by Lisa Strausfeld

connection to interfaces and the need for them Muriel Cooper 17

to be intuitive and anticipatory. Yet even she may have been surprised at the extent of it. And very likely frustrated. Not so much at their usability — so many products are

“Some people believe that the computer will eventually think for itself. If so, it is crucial that designers and others with humane intentions involved in the way it develops.”

Financial Viewpoints, by Lisa Strausfeld


Does the exhibition

RW: There’s so much

addresses any

work to do in studying

contemporary issues

and presenting graphic

in design around

design to a broader

communication and

public. We hope this show

information?

generates interest in

DR: We don’t make the

Cooper, and in the field —

connections explicit,

but as the kind of inter- or

but we think they’re

anti-disciplinary one she

absolutely present at

envisioned. At one point,

every turn. Muriel’s words,

in our earlier descriptions,

in some of the documents

we called the exhibition

we show, are incredibly

both an archival project

prophetic, and her

and a manifesto for future

process is no less relevant

production.

today than it was then.

As curators of the exhibition, has this project influenced your own thoughts about your relationship with design? DR: We had an idea that this exhibition would document her work, her persistent concerns, and her generous spirit while also serving as a charge or challenge to those thinking about these things today to pick up these ideas and develop

“Graphics and New Technology.” Slide talk by Muriel Cooper at MIT’s Visible Language Workshop, 1981. Download this podcast via iTunes or iTunes for iPhone/iPad, or view in the iTunes store. for iPhone/iPad, or view in the iTunes store.

“This stands as a sketch for the futur”

Muriel Cooper 20

them.


Carlos Dante

De esta edición: Walker Art Center, The Gradient, Interview: Muriel Cooper: Turning into Space

April 9, 2014 hhtp:/ blogs.walkerart.org/ design/2014/04/09/murielcooper-turning-time-into-space

Diseño

cubierta,

maquetación

edición: Isabel García. L

Printed in Spain: Impreso en

y


Interview by Dante Carlos


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