Definition of Graphic Design
Miscellanea / / November 13, 2021
By Victoria Bembibre, in Dec. 2008
Graphic design is a discipline and profession that has the purpose of devising and projecting messages through the image.
Graphic design is also called "of visual communication" and this is so since it involves an intimate relationship with communication as a theoretical science and discipline graph.
Graphic design is understood to be the practice of developing and executing visual messages that contemplate informational, stylistic, and identity, persuasion, technological, productive and innovation.
Starting from a common theoretical base, graphic design can be found in various fields. There is, for example, advertising design (which involves the creation of graphic and audiovisual notices for the sale of products), editorial design (for magazines and graphic publications such as books), design from corporate identity (development of an identity through the image for a brand or company, for example, with the creation of an isologotype), multimedia and web design (or design through the
computing and Internet), packaging design (creation of container pieces for commercial products), typographic design (linked to the writing), signage and signage (design for internal and external spaces that require notices or informative signs) and others.The history of graphic design is difficult to determine, since it is possible to speak of design whenever a graphic manifestation of various kinds is found. However, certain theorists understand that for graphic design to exist there must in turn exist a determined application of an industrial model that responds to a productive, informative, symbolic need, etc. Some consider that this practice had its origin with the cave paintings created in the Paleolithic and others believe that it began with the birth of written language. The interpretation of graphic design in modernity is for many linked to the interwar period in the 20th century.
Graphic design products are also multiple and among them we can count labels (of safety, envelopes, hanging, decorative, identifying), containers (rigid, flexible, plastic, glass or aluminum), editorial (posters, flyers or brochures, books, newspapers, magazines, catalogs), signage (traffic and danger signs, transport and in public and private spaces), posters (informative or advertising), corporate (brands, logo, stationery, accessories and clothing), brochures (diptychs, triptychs, advertising, tourism, educational), typographic (in fonts with serif or sans serif, gothic, fancy, formal or informal, educational or playful), instruments (gadgets and devices technological), infographics (organization of information with graphics for maps, forms and others).
In turn, graphic design contemporary uses different computer software to execute its products. The best known are Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator, and also Indiesign and Dreamweaver, Corel Draw, QuarkXPress and many more. These programs allow the creation and modification of images in virtual form that can then be taken to print or multimedia.
Topics in Graphic Design