The Disturbed

Sean and or Adlai Stevenson, United Nations, 1962

My grandmother had a true talent for interesting stories about people in her family. They first came to Virginia in 1607 and, according to Grandma, did wonderful and horrible things. She inherited and added to several family books with handwritten notes in the margins. When she passed away, I inherited them. The books were, at best, dense. Multiple indentations, codes, and incredibly tight leading made them less than useful for easy information. So, as a designer, I attempted to make sense of it with a diagram. It quickly became a tangle of fishing lines as the Virginia branch enjoyed marrying other family members. This was clearly the influence in John Huston’s film Chinatown:

Evelyn: “She’s my daughter.”
Gittes: “I said I want the truth!”
Evelyn: “She’s my sister. . . .”
Evelyn: “She’s my daughter. . . .”
Evelyn: “My sister, my daughter.”
Gittes: “I said I want the truth!”
Evelyn: “She’s my sister AND my daughter!”

In one of the boxes of images, I found an image of President Chester Arthur's wife, Ellen Lewis Herndon Arthur. She had an amazing resemblance to my mother, 100 years later. I found the same bizarre genetic duplication with an image of my great-grandfather when he was eighteen and myself at the same age. I compared the images in Photoshop to determine if the facial structure was similar, or I was completely imagining things. This led to a disturbing project of replacing a relative with me. I can’t explain the psychosis here. There is something connected to family, history, responsibility, agency, identity, shame, pride, and all the contradictory feelings inherent with a history inexorably interwoven with the nation’s history. A better option would have been therapy, but that would involve introspection. So that was, obviously, out.

Eventually, I will sort out the issues and make a wonderful, albeit disturbing, book.

 

Section of the 9 foot diagram

Detail

 

Below: The disturbing photo project

Below: the book version yet to be run through my psychological issues

Sean Adams

Sean Adams is the Dean of Visual Art and Communication at ArtCenter, founder of Burning Settlers Cabin studio, and on-screen author for LinkedIn Learning/Lynda.com He is the only two term AIGA national president in AIGA’s 100 year history. In 2014, Adams was awarded the AIGA Medal, the highest honor in the profession. He is an AIGA Fellow, and Aspen Design Fellow. He has been recognized by every major competition and publication including; How, Print, Step, Communication Arts, Graphis, AIGA, The Type Directors Club, The British Art Director’s Club, and the Art Director’s Club. Adams has been exhibited often, including a solo exhibition at The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

Adams is an author of multiple magazine columns, and several best-selling books. He has been cited as one of the forty most important people shaping design internationally, and one of the top ten influential designers in the United States. Previously, Adams was a founding partner at AdamsMorioka, whose clients included The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Disney, Mohawk Fine Papers, The Metropolitan Opera, Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History, Richard Meier & Partners, Sundance, and the University of Southern California.

www.burningsettlerscabin.com
Previous
Previous

Twelve Inches of Pleasure

Next
Next

The Odd and the Ugly