GRAU
by PORTO ROCHA
Just as GRAU designs lighting that is stripped back to its essential form, we developed an elemental visual identity that becomes activated by its contents. The result is far from bare: visceral, sensorial imagery breathes life into an understated graphic system while capturing the emotional and spiritual qualities of light. Never minimal for its own sake, the brand was designed to be a carrier of meaning.
We constructed a logo with open geometric forms, engineered to take on new meanings over time. Across physical and digital applications, the mark becomes an iconic signature for GRAU products and art practice. To complement it: Antarctica, a sans serif typeface from Newglyph that is equally utilitarian and conversational. As an exercise in reduction, the color palette relies on a neutral foundation of black and off-white; accents of red and blue nod to the visible light spectrum’s expressions of warm and cool. Ample negative space, a keystone of digital and analog compositions, becomes its own brand gesture by making room for other elements to artfully coexist.
In GRAU products, cutting-edge digital technology meets the user in responsive, tactile interfaces. We mirrored that approach in the brand’s expression on web, including only the essential while allowing digital experiences to come alive through human interaction.
‘Activation’ is realized through figurative and abstract imagery, too. The photographic approach developed with the GRAU team shows how light activates different human emotions, actions, and spaces; ambient blurs (often in motion) suggest the sensorial qualities of light. Rounding out brand imagery are artist collaborations — living proof of a collective ethos. The resulting visual landscape oscillates between crisp and atmospheric, conceptual and familiar.
Woven through the brand world is an illuminating verbal identity that acts as a guiding light. Inspired by artistic and theoretical inquiry, GRAU voice often poses questions and speaks to fundamental truths to unearth the root of our humanity. At other times, it leans into clear, vivid detail, communicating the benefits of technology with practical precision. This tension between theory and utility is the point. As Melchior Grau posed in an interview with PIN-UP, “Why can’t a brand produce art? And why can we not also, as artists, bring out products that people can use?”
Credits. Created in Partnership with GRAU. Web Development: We Make Websites.
Related projects
We use cookies to enhance your browsing experience. By continuing to use this website, you consent to the use of cookies in accordance with our Cookie Policy. For more information, please read our Privacy Policy.