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Mau has designs on Chicago

R

rdaner

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Mau has designs on Chicago

Mau's impact widespread
Here is a selection of designs from Bruce Mau Design’s portfolio since the firm was established in 1985:

* Art Gallery of Ontario logo.

* The New York Jets football team hired Mau to design the graphics and communications program for a flashy New York Sports and Convention Centre and stadium, working with blue-chip architects Kohn Pedersen Fox.

* Updated signage for the home-grown clothing and leather goods retailer Roots Canada; redesigned its flagship store on Bloor St.

* S,M,L,XL, a sweeping architectural monograph — 1,376 pages with 2,000- plus illustrations — on the studio of Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas and the impact of architecture on contemporary society, sharing authorship with Koolhaas.

* Created the logo, signage and in-store graphics for the Indigo Books & Music chain.

* Seattle Public Library with Rem Koolhaas.

* Signage for the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles and the Museum of Modern Art (MoMa) in New York.

Massive Change was the name of Bruce Mau's controversial museum show about new frontiers in the creative world and how design is shaping human destiny. Now Toronto's design guru is planning a massive change of a more personal nature. He's heading for Chicago, the Star has learned, where his firm Bruce Mau Design will open an office before the end of June.

The reason: greater business opportunities, because the high-end corporate clients Mau attracts are far more likely to be based in the United States than Canada, giving him a chance to spread his gospel that design is not just an add-on but a crucial part of creating identity for a building or an institution. It's thanks to Mau's impact that graphics and logos have climbed to the top of the creative chain.

So what can Chicago offer that Toronto does not?

A presence in the U.S. increases the opportunity, says Mau's business partner, Miles Nadal.

Sources say there are other factors that make Chicago attractive. Increasingly since 9/11 high-end clients and partners prefer not to cross the border for a meeting. And Mau was seduced when Chicago, unlike his hometown, embraced Massive Change during its run at Chicago's Museum of Contemporary Art last year.

"The light went on for both of us when we saw how everyone in Chicago, including the mayor, the artists and senior management teams, embraced Bruce," Nadal recalls. "I don't think Bruce has been given as much recognition in Toronto as he deserves."

Mau first made his mark with cutting-edge designs and memorable logos but he wasn't content to stop there. He has also had a huge impact as a lecturer who writes books, and even mounts museum shows to illustrate his points. Not perhaps since communications oracle Marshall McLuhan has a Torontonian loomed so large in the arena of cultural-theory gurus with an international following.

"We want to be in the place where the greatest talent lives," say Nadal, chief executive officer of MDC Partners, who three years ago bought a controlling interest in Bruce Mau Design.

Still, over the past two decades while working and living in Toronto, Mau has managed to attract top creative collaborators, including two of the world's top architects, Frank Gehry and Rem Koolhaas of the Netherlands. And his list of clients has included Indigo Books & Music, Roots Canada, the Art Gallery of Ontario, movie mogul Barry Diller and the New York Jets football team.

"Our philosophy is to help our partners grow," Nadal said yesterday. "Bruce and his firm are already global leaders. But the opportunity is 20-fold greater if you have a presence in the United States. And U.S. budgets tend to be 10 to 20 times greater than those of comparable Canadian firms."

Mau and his wife, Aiyemobisi Williams, have told friends they are shopping for a house in Chicago and looking for schools for their three children. Williams, though not nearly as well known as her husband, is also well known in Toronto arts circles. She recently joined the board of The Walrus magazine.

Increasingly in recent years, Mau has spent much of his time in airports and on the road meeting clients, mostly in the U.S. This week he was in Michigan and New York City, and unavailable for comment.

According to Joanne Balles Crosbie, president of Bruce Mau Design, the idea of moving his family to Chicago is under consideration but has not been finalized. And the firm will keep its Toronto office (on Spadina near King) open even if Mau does not reside here.

"This is an expansion, not an exodus or a mass exodus," Crosbie says. "Bruce's presence will still be felt here."

Maybe, but the way things are going it seems likely that Bruce Mau's Toronto era is coming to a close, and his Chicago surge is about to unfold.

"Bruce is one of Canada's great treasures," says Heather Reisman, president of Indigo. "He's brilliant, caring, optimistic, visionary and passionate. It seems to ever be the case that Canadians must go abroad before being full appreciated. Fortunately in this case I believe he is moving but not leaving."

Matthew Teitelbaum, president of the Art Gallery of Ontario, is of two minds. "I'm never thrilled when an important cultural leader goes south of the border, because people like Bruce help create the public conversation in Toronto. But the reality is that it is a fluid world with people moving in both directions across the border. And Bruce is responding to a clear opportunity to have a larger presence beyond this city."

It remains to be seen how massive a loss that will represent for Toronto.
 
I'm not surprised he'd open a US office...too bad if he's actually leaving though.

I do agree he's underexposed here though. In the US he might be more of a household name.
 
I'm happy to hear of the success of a Canadian, but frustrated when they feel the need to evacuate. If all the very best we have exported would have stayed here there would be no need to go in the first place!
 
You can't beat warmer weather and the almighty American buck ;)
 
It wish he would just expand an office to Chicago, rather than move his home and creative focus from Toronto. Did someone piss him off here or something?
 
Does this answer your question?
And Mau was seduced when Chicago, unlike his hometown, embraced Massive Change during its run at Chicago's Museum of Contemporary Art last year.

"The light went on for both of us when we saw how everyone in Chicago, including the mayor, the artists and senior management teams, embraced Bruce," Nadal recalls. "I don't think Bruce has been given as much recognition in Toronto as he deserves."
 
From the Post:

Designer's departure no reflection on city
Dave McGinn, National Post
Published: Wednesday, February 07, 2007

One of Toronto's biggest names in design is moving south of the border, but it's not because he hasn't received due recognition here, says his firm.

"Canadians certainly respect and acknowledge the work," Joanne Balles Crosbie, president of Bruce Mau Design, said from Chicago. "We have some terrific Canadian clients and we are very proud of the work we are doing there."

But after more than 20 years in Toronto, the firm is opening up shop in Chicago. The new office is expected to open by July. However, the firm will continue to have a presence in Toronto.

"We're definitely not shutting down Toronto," Ms. Balles Crosbie said.

Since founding Bruce Mau Design in Toronto in 1985, Mr. Mau has racked up a client list that includes Roots Canada, Indigo Books &Music and the New York Jets football team. He has also collaborated with architects Frank Gehry and Rem Koolhaas.

Mr. Mau is also the curator of Massive Change, a museum exhibit that looks at how design shapes modern life. After opening at the Art Gallery of Ontario in 2005, the show moved to Chicago's Museum of Contemporary Art last year, where it was overwhelmingly lauded.

Last week, Miles Nadal, Mr. Mau's business partner, told the Toronto Star the reception the show received in Chicago compared with the one it got here is a main reason for the move.

"I don't think Bruce has been given as much recognition in Toronto as he deserves," Nadal told the newspaper.

Ms. Balles Crosbie says that while Massive Change was very well-received in Chicago, the firm is moving to the Windy City in order to better court U.S. clients, not because of consideration of how much or how little his work is appreciated here.

"We have a lot of clients in this area and in the States," she said. "Massive Change was here [in Chicago] from September through December and it really generated a lot of interesting opportunities for us, so it seemed to make sense as a next step."

As the expansion gets underway, Ms. Balles Crosbie says the firm is cautiously considering other locations for new offices.

"We're still looking at other cities," she said. "We do a lot of work in New York. That could be another spot."

With the firm doing work around the world, new firms may even open in countries as far a field as Egypt.

That means that while Bruce Mau Design will still have a presence in Toronto, the man himself is likely to be one more cultural icon the city has lost.

"For Bruce it's just a matter of going where the work demands," Ms. Balles Crosbie said.

AoD
 
When a few friends and I saw Massive Change at the AGO it struck us more as an exercise in attractive exhibition design - and a calling card / portfolio piece for Mau - than anything else; the message that good-design-can-save-the-world is clearly new to more people in Chicago than here.
 
Ms. Balles Crosbie says that while Massive Change was very well-received in Chicago, the firm is moving to the Windy City in order to better court U.S. clients, not because of consideration of how much or how little his work is appreciated here.

One reason to worry about loosing head offices by takeovers. Fewer corporate clients forces people to move elsewhere.
 
One of Toronto's biggest names in design is moving south of the border, but it's not because he hasn't received due recognition here, says his firm.

"Canadians certainly respect and acknowledge the work," Joanne Balles Crosbie, president of Bruce Mau Design, said from Chicago. "We have some terrific Canadian clients and we are very proud of the work we are doing there."

That doesn't sound very convincing.
 
Agreed. Why not just open up a branch office in Chicago and fly to meet those clients that find it hard-going making the trek all the way up here to Toronto :rolleyes .
 
I think it might actually be a good thing to have Mau away from Toronto so as to give more exposure to other up-and-coming designers.

AoD
 

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