Will Clempson

Will Clempson

Graphic DesignerLondon, United Kingdom
+ Info

50

Connections
Pip Jamieson
THE MASONS
Camilla Mathis
Will Clempson

Will Clempson

Graphic DesignerLondon, United Kingdom
Projects
  • The Library Book
    The Library BookIn this collaborative project, we wanted to create a portrait of the movement of books around an area in one day. Rather than create a print or digitally based outcome, we went analogue. We created four books that when fanned, created a clock. Each page is a minute in the day, each coloured page is a book taken in or out and by what degree course; A book of books. The book was designed as a permanent installation in the Arts University Bournemouth library.
  • xSubs
    xSubs10% of television viewers in the UK use subtitles on a daily basis. That’s people in over 3 million households that need regular visual assistance when watching TV. However, standardised subtitles can often create distance between the viewer and the content they are watching. Subtitles cannot convey tone, expression or emotion, doing both the viewer and the content a disservice. xSubs uses real-time sound visualisation to analyze tone, frequency and expression, creating shapes that match the activity of the content. xSubs also uses colour theory to match the tone of the content to it’s associated colour, helping people with hearing impairments experience entertainment to its' fullest extent.
  • The Cloud
    The CloudDigitial security is still a new concept to comprehend. How can we every really be private in a world that is seemingly becoming more open? In a collaborative project between myself and Matt Jefferies (matthewjefferies.com), we aimed to shed light on how exposed our personal information can be. Nowadays, when people think of interactivity they immediately think of digital, and so did we. So we decided to subvert the modern stereotype and create a physical representation of something digital. The Cloud was a strictly analogue interactive experiment, in which people of varying ages were asked to write down personal information that is frequently demanded online. They were then asked to input their ‘data’ into the installation. As more data was inputted, the more submerged and inaccessible the information became. The anxiety people felt about placing their data in a physical space was alarming, thus sheding light on the disconnection between physical and digital spaces.
+ Show more
Skills
  • Print Design
  • Art Direction
  • People
  • Design
  • Illustrator
  • Indesign
  • Photoshop
  • Design Thinking
Education
    Graphic Design
     -