Moving Dots #2 : Speaking About Dots by Knust Press & Corners

Featuring the first public use of Ok Pasta, in both styles, Al Dente and Al Forno. The accompanying monospaced typeface is Ok Abko.

 

For this second edition of Moving Dots, Speaking About Dots, Knust Press from Nijmegen, the Netherlands, collaborated remotely with Corners Studio in Seoul, Korea, to make a publication featuring artwork by Dutch artist Rogier Arents and Korean artist Kim Seungwhan a.k.a. Bird Pit.

 

Both designers reflect upon the core theme of the project, the dot. The dot metaphor is to be found in many aspects of printmaking. Both literally as the primitive unit from which every image starts, but also technically, referring to the laser head burning dot after dot the image on the master page of stencil duplicators, or the halftone screen. What exactly happens in those dots, points, layers and gradients that are so familiar to us?

 

Bird Pit transformed the dots into characters of his colored pencil illustrations. They are creatures, precious fruits, but also playful tools and shapes that naturally surround us. Arents’s dots reflect the movements of the moon and its trajectory which leaves traces of its passage in the soft gradients.

 

Corners Studio was paired with Rogier Arents while Knust Studio collaborated with Bird Pit. They both worked within a set of basic rules that reflect in the book shape and composition. Being their first time working with stencil printing, the designers were guided through the translation of their artwork, suggesting color combinations and ways of working.