John Lloyd (graphic designer)

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John David Lloyd (born 1944) is a British graphic designer who in 1975 co-founded the international design consultancy, Lloyd Northover. He has worked in all fields of graphic design but has specialised in corporate identity.

Summary

Lloyd started his design career in 1960, as an apprentice lithographic artist in the printing industry. He began full-time study in 1964, first at South West Essex School of Art, and in 1965 at the London College of Printing. On graduating in 1968, he joined Allied International Designers in London, leaving in 1975 to co-found Lloyd Northover with designer, Jim Northover. He has been a teacher and examiner at the London College of Printing (now the London College of Communication), an examiner at Nottingham Trent University, and a D&AD jury member.[1] He was Chairman of the British Design Export Group from 1983–85. With Jim Northover, he has received the Grand Prix in the International Design Effectiveness Awards,[2] and the International Gold Award at the New York Art Directors Club.[3] He has spoken at conferences in Europe, North America and Asia. Lloyd is currently an independent consultant, artist, and writer.

Selected major projects

Selected corporate identity programmes completed at Allied International Designers:

  • Meneba, The Netherlands 1968
  • Nicholas International, UK 1969
  • Euromast, The Netherlands 1969
  • Priba Supermarkets, Belgium 1973 (Designed in collaboration with Geoff Gibbons)
  • ABN Bank, The Netherlands 1970s

Selected corporate identity programmes completed at Lloyd Northover:

Other graphic design projects completed for:

  • American Express, Arts Council of Great Britain, BP Chemicals, English Tourist Board, IBM, Letraset, Millennium Commission, National Trust, Reuters, Royal Shakespeare Company, Sainsbury’s

Lloyd Northover

Origins
The Lloyd/Northover creative partnership has been enduring.[4] John Lloyd met Jim Northover in 1965 at the London College of Printing. They soon began to work together and their earliest collaborative work – posters for the LCP Film Society, Whitechapel Gallery and University of London Arts Festival – were designed at the LCP in the 1960s.
Early years 1975 -1980
The Lloyd Northover design consultancy (Lloyd Northover Limited) was formally launched in 1975. Early clients included the English Tourist Board, Royal Shakespeare Company, Arts Council, American Express, and IBM. In 1981 the Design Council invited Lloyd Northover to mount an exhibition of their work at the Design Centre in London and the Scottish Design Centre in Glasgow.[5]
Steady growth 1981 -1990
By the mid 1980s, the emphasis of the consultancy’s work had shifted from print design to the design and implementation of substantial corporate identity programmes.[6] Key projects from those years are BAA (British Airports), John Lewis Partnership, and Courtaulds, which broke new ground and was awarded the Grand Prix in the first Design Effectiveness Awards in 1989.[7]
International expansion 1991 – 2000
Asia Pacific
In 1993 Lloyd Northover won a commission to create an identity for Hong Kong's Airport Express. The consultancy provided naming, and the design of graphics, liveries, interiors, signage, and passenger information. Lloyd Northover's Hong Kong office went on to serve the wider transport sector in the Asia Pacific region.
Europe and the Middle East
During this period, the London office grew substantially whilst in Continental Europe corporate identity assignments were tackled in Finland, Sweden, Germany, Belgium and Switzerland; an office was also opened in Dubai. Lloyd Northover joined the Citigate Communications Group in 1993, which later became part of Incepta Group plc, an international marketing and services group.
USA
Shortly after the death of the eminent American graphic designer, Saul Bass, in 1996, Lloyd and Northover, who were long-term admirers of his work, were offered, and accepted, the opportunity to merge their consultancy with Bass Yager, the surviving practice of Saul Bass in Los Angeles. The studio of Saul Bass on Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood became Lloyd Northover's base on the West Coast of America.
2000 – present
Lloyd withdrew from Lloyd Northover in 2004. In 2013 the firm merged with branding consultancy, Holmes & Marchant, and traded under the Holmes & Marchant name until April 2016 when Lloyd Northover was relaunched as as stand alone specialist corporate branding consultancy. Lloyd Northover continues to provide brand strategy, corporate design, and implementation under the Lloyd Northover name.

Education

  • Apprentice Lithographic Artist, Edwin Jones & Sons (Printers), London 1960–64
  • South West Essex School of Art 1964–65
  • London College of Printing (LCP) 1965–68, Diploma in Art and Design (DipAD), First Class Honours

At the LCP, Lloyd's tutors included Tom Eckersley (Head of the Design Department), Walter Jungkind, Stephen Dwoskin, and George Adams, previously named Georg Teltscher, a former Bauhaus student.

Career

  • Currently: Independent consultant, artist, and writer.
  • 2004–2006: Consultant, Lloyd Northover.
  • 1993–2004: Creative Director and Consultant, Citigate Lloyd Northover.
  • 1997: Merged Citigate Lloyd Northover with Bass Yager, the design consultancy founded by Saul Bass in Los Angeles, to create an international design consultancy with offices in Europe, USA and Asia.
  • 1993: Merged Lloyd Northover with Citigate Design to form Citigate Lloyd Northover.
  • 1975: Founded Lloyd Northover Ltd with Jim Northover, Joint Creative Director.
  • 1968–1975: Senior Designer, Allied International Designers, Joint Head of Graphic design 1972–1975.
  • 1960–1964: Apprentice Lithographic Artist: Edwin Jones & Sons (Printers).

Exhibitions/Collections

  • Making History: LCC and the School of Graphic Design, London College of Communication, Autumn 2005.
  • Lloyd Northover: Partners in Design, Retrospective at London College of Communication, February–March 2005.
  • Lloyd Northover: Perception, Aspiration, Reality, Paperpoint Gallery, London 1989.
  • Lloyd Northover at the Design Centre, London and Scottish Design Centres, 1980–1981.
  • Work accepted for exhibition by Designers and Art Directors Association (D&AD) and New York Art Directors Club.
  • Poster designs in permanent collections of the Royal Shakespeare Company,[8] and Victoria and Albert Museum.[9]

Selected awards

International Design Effectiveness Awards:

  • Winner, National Savings and Investments, Digital Media 2005.
  • Winner, JMC, Digital Media 2001.
  • Winner, Partek, Corporate Identity 1998.
  • Winner, Amtico, Office and Commercial Interiors 1992.
  • Grand Prix, Courtaulds, Corporate Identity 1989.

New York Art Directors Club:

  • International Gold Award for Packaging Design 1989.

Memberships

Writing

References and sources

References
  1. D&AD Annual, 1984, p.272. UK
  2. Courtaulds' image gains top award. The Times. 31 May 1989. UK
  3. Art Directors Annual, volume 68 (1989). ADC Publications. USA
  4. Martinez-Lopez, Carmen, "Partners in Design". The Designer, Journal of the Chartered Society of Designers. Issue 23. p.5. (2005)
  5. Lloyd Northover Design Council exhibition 1980–81. VADS Online Resource for Visual Arts. http://www.vads.ac.uk/large.php?uid=53104
  6. Lubliner, Murray J, Global Corporate Identity, The Cross-Border Marketing Challenge. p.127. 1994. Rockport publishers. USA. ISBN 1-56496-110-9
  7. Marketing Magazine, Design Effectiveness Awards Supplement. 1 June 1989.
  8. RSC Archive, Stratford-upon-Avon, UK
  9. V&A Collections, UK http://images.vam.ac.uk/name/lloyd-northover-ltd/55323/
Sources

External links