What does "brutalism" actually mean?
Anyone who visits hip websites and wonders why navigation is made so difficult and big, bold words scream at you doesn't understand what's going on in UI/UX design. Brutalism is what it's called, and what it means is not designing "grad z'leid" websites the way the common user has just learned to do. Gone are the days [...]
The post What does "brutalism" actually mean? appeared first on Advertising week m&k.
Anyone who visits hip websites and wonders why navigation is made so difficult and big, bold words scream at you doesn't understand what's going on in UI/UX design. Brutalism is what it's called, and what it means is not to design "grad z'leid" websites the way the common users have just learned to do.
Gone is the time of horizontal or vertical navigation and also hamburger is something of noughties design. Brutalism or "brutal design" is full of raw interactions, coupled with micro-interactions that deliberately break our viewing habits. So no more user-friendliness! Hello, design courage and resistance against user habits.
* Benno Maggi is co-founder and CEO of Partner & Partner. He has been eavesdropping on the industry for over 30 years, discovering words and terms for us that can either be used for small talk, pomposity, excitement, playing Scrabble, or just because. The post What does "brutalism" actually mean? appeared first on Advertising week m&k.
Design concrete mixers are in demand
In marketing, it used to be "brick & mortar vs. online," i.e., real world vs. digital world, but today it's called omni-channel marketing. The digital and the analog must work together. That's perhaps why the UI/UX community made use of a word that originated in the analog world and is somewhat outdated: brutalism. In architecture, it was once either celebrated as a model of modern architecture or dismissed as a concrete bunker. No wonder, since the term derives from this very building material: "béton brut," or exposed concrete. The pioneer of this style was Le Corbusier, who in 1947, as his late work, permanently changed the cityscape of Marseille with his gray Unité d'Habitation blocks of flats, thereby cementing the way for a new architectural style himself. UI/UX designers, on the other hand, rely on simple navigation in their interpretation of Brutalism and turn hand-coded HTML into digital concrete. Let's hope that the online Le Corbusiers adopt not only his non-conformism and willingness to experiment, but also his ingenuity. Then perhaps the users of such websites will accept the inconveniences involved - with respect for the art.* Benno Maggi is co-founder and CEO of Partner & Partner. He has been eavesdropping on the industry for over 30 years, discovering words and terms for us that can either be used for small talk, pomposity, excitement, playing Scrabble, or just because. The post What does "brutalism" actually mean? appeared first on Advertising week m&k.