Martin Majoor

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Martin Majoor in 2010

Martin Majoor (Baarn, 14 October 1960)[1] is a Dutch type designer and graphic designer.

Biography

Martin Majoor has been designing type since the mid-1980s. During his study at the Academy of Fine Arts in Arnhem (1980–1986), he shortly worked in a student placement at URW in Hamburg.[2] It was there that he was able to work with the first digital typedesign system Ikarus. Serré from 1984 – his first digital font – was the result, but it was never released. In 1986 he started as a typographic designer in the Research & Development Department at Océ-Netherlands, where he carried out research into screenfonts. For the production of digital typefaces for laser printers he followed a short education at Bitstream in Boston.

After working at Vredenburg Music Centre in Utrecht, Majoor started as independent typedesigner and book typographer. Since then he designed a few big type families and numerous books and book covers. Several of his book designs where awarded a Best Books prize. He wrote articles for magazines like Items, Eye magazine, 2+3D and tpG tipoGráfica.

From 1990 until 1995 Majoor taught typography at the Schools of Fine Arts in Arnhem and in Breda. He gave lectures at ATypI/Typelab conferences in Budapest, Antwerp, Paris, San Francisco, Barcelona, The Hague and Prague, at TypoBerlin (2002 and 2005), and during other type events in Lure-en-Provence (Rencontres internationales de Lure 1996), Leipzig (TypoTage 2004), Warsaw, Katowice, Stockholm, Hamburg, Caen, Vienna and Dortmund. He gave workshops in Amsterdam (Gerrit Rietveld Academie), Stuttgart (Merz Akademie) and Warsaw. His type designs were exhibited in Amsterdam, Rotterdam, New York (Cooper Union), Paris, London, Manchester, Berlin, Helsinki and Barcelona. Since 1997 Majoor works as a graphic designer and type designer in both The Netherlands (Arnhem) and Poland (Warsaw).[3]

Type design

FFScalaSpecimenAIB.svg
Category Serif
Classification Humanist
Designer(s) Martin Majoor
Foundry FontFont
FFScalaSansAIB.svg
Category Sans-serif
Classification Humanist
Designer(s) Martin Majoor
Foundry FontFont

In his writing, Majoor has described his work as being strongly influenced by his work as a book and graphic designer, including designing complex documents like classical music concert programmes. His three commercially released font families, Scala, Seria and Nexus, are all superfamilies of serif and humanist sans-serif designs intended to have the same character shapes and blend together well. Majoor's goals were to create digital fonts with many features of traditional printing, such as non-lining figures, true small caps and ligatures even in sans-serif versions, giving designers a comprehensive range of choices without having to use a mixture of fonts.

FF Scala and FF Scala Sans

In 1988 Majoor started working as a graphic designer for the Vredenburg Music Centre in Utrecht. The design département of this concert hall was one of the first in the Netherlands to use an Apple Macintosh computer for its printed matter. The fact that there were only 16 typefaces available, none with features like old style figures, small caps and ligatures, made Majoor decide to make his own typeface. The result was Scala, one of the first Macintosh fonts with all these missing features.

In 1991 he was asked by Erik Spiekermann of FontShop International in Berlin to release FF Scala as its first serious text face in the FontFont Library. In 1993 FF Scala was augmented with a sans-serif version, FF Scala Sans. The sans and the serif versions complement each other, they follow the same principle of form but are two distinct designs. Both FF Scala and FF Scala Sans have become successful throughout the world.

In 1996 Majoor designed FF Scala Jewels, a quartet of classic decorative typefaces based on the capitals of FF Scala Bold. In 1998 the Scala family was augmented with 13 new versions, such as Scala Sans Light, Scala Sans Black and several condensed versions. FF Scala Hands contains several printer’s fists or manicules, based upon a design by Bruce Rogers from 1933.

Telefont

In 1994 Martin Majoor and Jan Kees Schelvis were asked to design the new telephone directory for the Dutch PTT (now KPN). Majoor not only designed the inside typography, more importantly he created the new typeface Telefont for it. Fred Smeijers, fellow student, long-time colleague and friend, assisted Majoor in digitizing the characters.

There are two versions of Telefont. Telefont List is a real workhorse, to be used in the automatically generated phonebook listings, while Telefont Text was designed for the custom-made introductory pages using many more typographic refinements such as small caps and lowercase numbers. Majoor: ‘The most used typeface has the least possibilities, the least used typeface has the most possibilities’.[4]

FF Seria

Majoor’s third major typefamily, FF Seria was released in 2000. It consists of serif and sans-serif versions. The first sketches for Seria were made on the train from Berlin to Warsaw in the summer of 1996, using some table napkins from the dining car.

“In its proportions Seria is clearly a book face. The long extenders are remarkable by today’s standards and they immediately brand the type as something that would be used for large amounts of text. Majoor cites Centaur & Trinité as indirect influences on Seria’s proportions, though there aren’t many similarities to those two in the specifics of its construction. As in Scala, the details of Seria’s forms are frequently novel and surprising but the effect at small sizes is harmonious through-and-through. Majoor describes the idea behind Seria’s unconventional curves (e.g. the counter of the ‘o’ or the arch of the ‘n’) as stemming from the principle of being ‘wittingly irregular’ (he attributes this phrase to Trinité’s designer Bram de Does). The classic example of these witting irregularities may be Dwiggins’s work, but Majoor seems to be an expert at executing the concept digitally. And this is one instance when single-master type design actually works out well: the features that ‘you can’t see [at small sizes], but [that] you maybe can feel’ (to quote Majoor) become arresting when the letters scale up.”[5]

In 2001 the FF Seria family was awarded a Certificate of Excellence from the ISTD International TypoGraphic Awards 2001 in London and a Certificate of Excellence in Type Design from the ATypI Type Design Competition ‘Bukva:raz!’ in Moscow.

In 2006/2007 Majoor worked together with Pascal Zoghbi, who designed Sada (the Arabic word for “echo”), a Naskh-style Arabic counterpart for Seria. It was published in the book ‘Typographic Matchmaking’, a project that brought together 5 Arab and 5 Dutch type designers who collaborated on creating good matching Arabic fonts for existing Latin font families. The designers were matched in 5 groups of two: Gerard Unger & Nadine Chahine, Martin Majoor & Pascal Zoghbi, Lucas de Groot & Mounir Al Shaarani, Peter Bilak & Tarek Atrissi, and Fred Smeijers & Lara Assouad Khoury.[6]

In 2009 Pascal Zoghbi designed FF Seria Arabic – an improved version of Sada – to be the first Arabic typeface in the FontFont library, The Regular and Bold are text typefaces, the Light is both display and text type, while the Black is purely a display typeface.

The FF Nexus family

In 2004 the FF Nexus family was released as FontFont’s first textface in the OpenType format. It is a family of three typefaces that are made according to the same form principle. Therefore, the three versions, FF Nexus Serif, FF Nexus Sans, and FF Nexus Mix (a slab serif), are all ‘connected’ (Nexus is the Latin word for connection)

FF Nexus started as an alternative to FF Seria, a typeface Majoor had designed some 5 years earlier. Seria has some strong features like extremely long ascenders and descenders, and an upright italic. Majoor started working on an alternative version of Seria, with shorter ascenders and descenders. But soon this design developed into a new typeface, with numerous changes in proportions and in details and with a redrawn italic. The result was a workhorse typeface like FF Scala with features such as small caps in all weights, four different sorts of numbers and ligatures.

Logically, FF Nexus Sans resulted directly from Nexus Serif, with identical features. But Majoor also developed a new family member: FF Nexus Mix, a slabserif or egyptienne that in its turn was based on Nexus Sans. The addition of the word ‘Mix’ in its name was a result of the idea that a slabserif is a real mixture of a sans and a serif.

In addition to Nexus Serif Italic, two sets of elegantly drawn swash capitals and two sets of swash lowercase endings were designed. Another augmentation was a monospaced or typewriter version in four weights.[7]

In 2006 the FF Nexus family won the first prize at the Creative Review Type Design Awards, in the category Text Families.

Questa

In 2014, Majoor released Questa, a Didone font and sans-serif derivative in collaboration with Jos Buivenga.[8]

Book design

Besides working as a type designer Martin Majoor has always worked as a book typographer and graphic designer. ‘It is my conviction that you cannot be a good type designer if you are not a book typographer.’[9]

He designed several books for Dutch publishers such as Bunge, Nijgh & Van Ditmar, L.J. Veen, Vrij Geestesleven and Elsevier. Three times his book designs were chosen among the Best Dutch Book Designs, especially for its inside book typography, rather than for its covers.

Among these best books was ‘Adieu Aesthetics & Beautiful Pages!’ (Adieu æsthetica & mooie pagina’s!’), published in 1995 as the catalogue for the exhibition ‘The Aesthetic World of Jan van Krimpen, Book Designer and Typographer’ in the Museum of the Book/Museum Meermanno-Westreenianum in The Hague and in the American Institute of Graphic Arts (AIGA) in New York (1995). For this book Majoor was the first to use the digital version of Jan van Krimpen’s typeface Romanée (originally cut in 1928 for the Joh. Enschedé typefoundry), which in 1991 had been digitized by Peter Mattias Noordzij and Fred Smeijers for incorporation into the Enschedé Font Foundry (TEFF).[10]

In 2010, together with the french teacher Sebastien Morlighem, he wrote a book on the works of the french type designer José Mendoza y Almeida.[11]

From 1999 until 2010 Majoor was the graphic designer for the Warsaw Autumn Festival, the largest international Polish festival of contemporary music. The programme books were set in Majoor’s own typeface Seria.

Awards

  • 1993 - Encouragement Prize Graphic Design 1994. Amsterdam Arts Foundation, for the Scala family.
  • 1995 - Award Best Dutch Book Designs 1995 for ‘Adieu Æsthetica & Mooie Pagina’s!’ about the life and work of Jan van Krimpen.
  • 2001 - Award International Typographic Awards in London for the Seria familie.
  • 2001 - Award ATypI Type Design Competition Bukva:raz! in Moscow for the Seria familie.
  • 2006 - Award Creative Review Type Design Award for the Nexus family in the category Text Families.

Bibliography

References

  1. Martin Majoor op myfonts.com
  2. My type design philosophy by Martin Majoor
  3. Macmillan, Neil (2006) An A–Z of Type Designers. Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-11151-7
  4. Hall, Peter (1995). Long Distance Savings. New York: I.D. Magazine
  5. Crewdson, Andy (2002) Seria’s Motives: How Martin Majoor developed his literary typeface. Druk #13-14, FontShop Benelux.
  6. Smitshuijzen AbiFarès, Huda (2007) Typographic Matchmaking - Building cultural bridges with typeface design. Amsterdam: BIS Publishers / Khatt Foundation. ISBN 978-90-6369-124-0.
  7. Majoor, Martin (2007) FontFont Focus Nexus. Berlin: FontShop International.
  8. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  9. Majoor, Martin (2002) My Type Design Philosophy. Published in tipoGrafica (tpG) #53, Buenos Aires, Argentina
  10. Sierman, K. et al.,(1995) Adieu æsthetica & mooie pagina's!: J. van Krimpen en het Schoone Boek. Letterontwerper & Boekverzorger 1852-1958. Amsterdam etc.: De Buitenkant. ISBN 90-70386-73-9
  11. Martin Majoor, Sébastien Morlighem, Jan Middendorp (intr.) (2010) José Mendoza y Almeida. Paris: Ypsilon.éditeur, Bibliothèque Typographique. ISBN 978-2-35654-008-9.

External links