Tag

Graphic designer

Browsing

In 2025, as artificial intelligence reshapes image generation and user interaction becomes the central axis of design, the semantic logic and technical pathways of graphic design are undergoing accelerated reconstruction. Design is no longer the terminal expression of visual aesthetics but has transformed into a service-oriented medium with structured systems and responsive mechanisms.

In this industry environment, a new generation of designers equipped with engineering thinking, cross-cultural awareness, and creative expression are emerging. ZHENG Shaoxuan, a rising-star graphic designer, is not only a young practitioner in this period of structural transformation but also an outstanding creative researcher in the new-era graphic design industry.

IMG_256

The Accumulation of Cross-Cultural Education

ZHENG Shaoxuan’s design perspective did not take shape overnight. His early educational experiences spanned an international curriculum system in Qingdao, China, and private secondary education in Massachusetts, USA, providing him with a sensitive cognition of language, images, and symbols in cross-cultural contexts. Currently enrolled at the School of Visual Arts in New York, he specializes in graphic design, where he has extensively engaged with course modules such as photography, typographic systems, exhibition design, and experimental graphics. Through this process, he has gradually developed an expression that organizes “visual content as a systematic language” rather than creating single images.  

The internationalization of design language does not mean the unification of styles, but the construction of a visual lingua franca that can be interpreted in multicultural contexts. In ZHENG Shaoxuan’s learning path, he has continued to explore this issue and gradually established his own expression methodology through visual experimentation, user testing and symbolic system analysis in his academic practice.

A laptop with a keyboard and a stylus resting on a vibrant, multicolored background featuring shades of pink, turquoise, and purple, accompanied by a smartphone and wireless earbuds.

The Path to Constructing a “Graphic System”

Since 2022, ZHENG Shaoxuan has carried out multiple systematic development practices focusing on the process mechanisms and material management of graphic design. The technical development work he promotes is not a partial iteration at the tool level, but an attempt to solve the problems of unclear information deconstruction, strong layer dependency, and low collaboration efficiency in traditional design processes. In multiple development projects, he introduced the concept of a “relational mapping model,” treating graphics as composable structures composed of three parts: semantic nodes, visual logic, and user responses, thereby enabling dynamic invocation and version management of graphic materials. This approach not only optimizes the management of material assets but also makes the production and application of graphic designs more responsive, especially suitable for brand design and product promotion scenarios that require rapid output of multi-version visual solutions.  

Complementing this are his attempts in intelligent resource distribution and design intent recognitionβ€”such attempts do not aim to “replace the designer’s judgment,” but rather assist the human-machine collaboration process through data marking and preference modeling. This R&D philosophy focuses on “structural transparency” and “editing semantics,” which has a stronger foundation for reuse and team collaboration compared to traditional closed-image output processes.

IMG_256

Theoretical Research and Semiotic Approach

At the academic level, ZHENG Shaoxuan published two papers in the first half of 2025, exploring the cultural appropriateness and emotional communication of design language in global communication. One of them, Research on Symbolic Language and Communication Strategies of Graphic Design in Cross-cultural Context, introduces the analytical frameworks of cultural anthropology and communication psychology in an attempt to construct a graphic language system that can be recognized and re-generated in different cultural environments.

Another article, In-depth Analysis and Application Guidelines of Color Psychology in Graphic Design, analyzes the psychological effects of color in behavioral induction, brand cognition and cross-media extensibility, and proposes the design strategy of β€œcolor semantic zoning”. This kind of theoretical research not only enriches his own practice system, but also has been cited as case studies in some design courses, and has become an important entry point for discussing the issues of graphic culture and symbol decoding in the classroom.

A futuristic tunnel with glowing orange lines and a bright blue light at the end, surrounded by dark, textured surfaces.

The Potential Field of Future Design

With the widespread application of generative AI, real-time rendering, and mixed reality technologies, graphic design in the future will be more embedded in dynamic systems and interactive media. ZHENG Shaoxuan’s focus is not merely on creating “aesthetically pleasing designs,” but on constructing “graphic systems that operate efficiently and have clear semantics.” In this technological context, the role of designers will gradually transform into that of “structural designers” and “system schedulers.”

The research and development path he has established has a stable theoretical foundation and practical adaptability in promoting the structural transparency of design language, data-driven resource organization, and responsiveness of visual output. As industry experts have commented on him: “ZHENG Shaoxuan is one of the few young designers who can integrate systematic thinking with creative processes, a capability of great value in the future development context of graphic design.”  

Although many of ZHENG Shaoxuan’s creative research projects are still in the academic research stage, the integrity of his methods and the systematicness of his practice are sufficient to foreshadow a professional model with high extensibility in future digital media environments. And what he currently focuses on isβ€”enabling visual content to operate more rationally within technical systems and express more clearly within cultural structures.  

Armenian graphic designer and artist Nvard YerkanianΒ gives us a look at the modern yet somewhat dystopian Soviet designs of the 60s and 70s. Using a minimal illustration style, we see distinctive architectural forms and shapes, set against bold, colorful gradient backgrounds. Via Inspiration Grid:

There are many of us who have probably never picked up a bible, let alone read the various books within it. But the history and legend of the 66 books contained in the Bible are significant, and Pastor and graphic designer Joseph Novak has taken on the task of visually distilling each chapter into a single, beautiful poster. Pretty cool project, even for the uninitiated.

Via FastCo Design:Β Many of his posters broadly represent plot: theΒ Book of Lamentations, for example, shows the destruction of Jerusalem reflecting in the pupil of an eye.

3027229-slide-01-genesis 3027229-slide-03-leviticus 3027229-slide-06-joshua 3027229-slide-9-samuel-01 3027229-slide-15-ezra 3027229-slide-18-job 3027229-slide-32-jonah 3027229-slide-38-zechariah

oscar_full
Olly Moss is a fabulous illustrator, and his pop-culture and movie referenced artwork has impressed me for years. This year, he was commissioned by The Oscars to create an Oscar statue representing every Best Picture Winner since the awards show began. Here are just a few of the results from the 85th Oscars. If you need a hint on some of them, The official Oscars page has a quiz for you.
Screen-Shot-2013-02-11-at-7.24.49-PM x700-4 x700-3 x700-2 x700-1 x700x700-7 x700-6 x700-5