
great meme this one: google 241543903 and then select image search… see also here and if you want to know what a meme is or see more visit a round up of the phenomenon here

…nor should it ever be a question of attempting to “bend clients” to one’s will, and I would like to be clear that, though I used this phrase ironically in my essay to evoke the mystery of Dutch design when seen from afar, I have never advocated such arrogant and most likely counterproductive tactics. I have been a client of designers many times myself and if anyone were to try this approach with me, I would have no wish to work with them. I do, however, respect the validity and indeed necessity of a designer’s principles and personal position and hope to work with designers where there is a creative correspondence of views. Isn’t this the most that anyone who is sensitive to design, on either side of the meeting-room table, can wish for?…
the ongoing discussion sparked by writer rick poynor, with an interesting reaction in the comments from amsterdam resident ‘florian pfeffer’:
…we do not need to adapt to the market. We need to adapt the market. And this can be done only by being part of it – and not by standing next to it. This is what concerns me about many (not all) expressions of “political design” from today and from earlier times – a lack of real engagement and true risk taking. Making political posters or simply making a “logo” for Wikileaks is not taking risks – it is to reassure oneself about ones own moral integrity (and in how far is this an answer to complex societal needs?). These things make me wonder: “Is that all there is” for design to make a contribution?…

an overview of the entries for the annual first vpro magazine cover design competition, the overall level is pretty amateurish to be honest… the theme was ‘an ode to paper’ but they seem to have missed some of the better ones in judging

an updated ipad friendly new website from pentagram, a fairly typical example of the ‘new simplicity’ on the web

the dutch fair very well in this annual overview of the best photobooks of 2010, from the likes of ‘martin parr’ and ‘willem van zoetendaal’ (congrats to my friends andré thijssen and of course designer ‘sybren kuiper’ too, who has several of his designs amongst the list)
although it’s a shame that the translation of some of the english text appears to have been done by google translate on a bad day (see ‘van zoetendaal’ for example) oops…