Design Observer: Kenneth Fitzgerald:
"I Believe in Design"

The Chesapeake Van, March 2009, photo by Kenneth FitzGerald
This is a link to a great article about the evangelical vans that every city has. Here in Denver, we have a few of these, as well as a couple of houses that espouse their beliefs via crowded, hand-lettered signs.
I find this particularly as a Christian, and the dialogue about faith and design is spoken about eloquently in this article by Kenneth Fitzgerald.
Says Fitzgerald:
It’s because of my devotion to graphic design that I’ve always enjoyed encountering these vehicles. They’ve also been a constant of sorts as I’ve bounced around the country. Each is a refreshing, individualized visual delight roaming the streets. Just a bit of typographic whimsy amongst a flat-hued and airbrush-detailed monotony of cars. They’re folk art on wheels!
(Via Design Observer.)
In my experience, graphic design is a largely secular enterprise. My problem is that there is a lot of bad art (that is, music, design, literature, visual arts, etc.) coming out of Christendom right now. And I think this is too bad. Unless you're into crappy new age music or trite, poorly written pop, there's not a whole lot for you in the world of Christian art.
I've viewed this as a problem since becoming a Christian, and feel no particular need to revere a painting just because it portrays the cross if I don't find it visually appealing. (Now, I often agree with the theology behind something of this ilk, but that's another matter entirely.)
This is often why Christians are viewed as an artistically challenged bunch, which I think is too bad, and which is why I have such great respect for the likes of
Sufjan Stevens and
Pedro The Lion, who show us that their art is not just some Christianese put to a couple of open chords on a guitar. It's well thought out, well written music.
We need more of this in design.
I've been thinking about this and have been flirting with doing some experimental typesetting of different books of the Bible;
Pocket Canons, selected books of the Bible whose sound design is featured in
Making and Breaking the Grid.
Seen any good Christian design lately? Sound off in the comments. (Feel free to hold off if you've seen some particularly bad Christian design--let's not inundate the comments.)