Pentagram

Pentagram

The Barnes Foundation

Identity, wayfinding, and website design for The Barnes Foundation.

The identity applied to stationery.
The new Barnes building in Philadelphia designed by Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects.
The name of the Foundation appears in metal lettering pin-mounted to the building at the entrance.
Museum information is posted on large panels at the entrance.
Signage directing visitors through the park to the galleries.
Museum entrance.
A series of processional signs are directed towards traffic on the Parkway.

The identity is based on the forms found within a specific "ensemble." The letters play with positive and negative space, gaining coherence through the act of reading across the ensemble.

Directional wayfinding in the museum.
Donor wall in the Annenberg Court.
A handwritten notation by Dr. Barnes rendered in wrought iron.
A quote from Dr. Barnes frames the edge of a fountain.

There are no texts or labels on the walls of the galleries; visitors use a series of printed guides that correspond to the numbered galleries and identify the objects in each roomʼs ensembles. 

Gallery guides.
Galleries are identified by number.
The Main Room of the Collection Gallery. Photo by Michael Moran.
Cropped images of the ensembles are used on shopping bags.
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Retrospective: London Design Festival

London Design Festival has been an annual celebration of the power of creativity for over 20 years. Since 2008, Pentagram partner Domenic Lippa has served as the LDF’s creative director, responsible every September for the design of a new visual identity. By inventively remixing a few key elements — typography, a signature red (“the colour of London”), and LDF's simple monogram — the program unifies hundreds of events while reaffirming London’s status as a global design capital.
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Retrospective: London Design Festival

London Design Festival has been an annual celebration of the power of creativity for over 20 years. Since 2008, Pentagram partner Domenic Lippa has served as the LDF’s creative director, responsible every September for the design of a new visual identity. By inventively remixing a few key elements — typography, a signature red (“the colour of London”), and LDF's simple monogram — the program unifies hundreds of events while reaffirming London’s status as a global design capital.