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Harmen Liemburg

Harmen Liemburg
Harmen Liemburg, What Design Can Do, 2012.jpg
Harmen Liemburg in 2012
Born (1966-07-01) 1 July 1966 (age 50)
Lisse, Netherlands
Nationality Dutch
Occupation graphic designer, screen printer

Harmen Liemburg (born 1 July 1966) is a Dutch graphic artist, designer and screen printer. His work includes posters, publications and record sleeves, and is also applied in architecture.

From 1985 to 1992, Liemburg studied social geography and cartography at Utrecht University. Working with cartographic materials, putting up posters for pop venue Tivoli, working for graphic design agency Dietwee and a love for band design fueled his interest in graphic design and screen printing. This prompted him to enroll in the part-time graphic design program of the Gerrit Rietveld Academie. Since his graduation in 1998, Liemburg has been working as an independent graphic designer. He worked with Richard Niessen under the moniker Golden Masters until 2003. Together, they organized Jack (connecting plug): a series of events in Amsterdam in which they sought connections between artists and designers from different disciplines.

In addition to creating personal work for solo exhibitions, Liemburg also works as a commissioned designer. Clients include the Royal Palace of Amsterdam, the city of Amsterdam, the city of Utrecht, the Dutch Government Building Department, PostNL, Utrecht's Fletiomare swimming pool, the Amsterdam Noord subway station of the Amsterdam Noord/Zuidlijn. Liemburg's design for the Noord subway station (under construction) consists of a line drawing of nature scenes with birds using to the Amsterdam area or visiting it, inlaid in the platform floor.

From 2010 to 2015 Liemburg worked as the supervisor of the screen printing workshop of the Gerrit Rietveld Academy. He frequently lectures and conducts workshops in the Netherlands and abroad, especially in the United States and Canada. From 2004 to 2012, Liemburg wrote articles about graphic design and visual culture for Items magazine.

Liemburg collects visual materials, found online and photographed offline, to create his designs. He transforms these materials (historical and other illustrations, mundane traffic signs, logos, and other forms of packaging) into vector drawings, and uses collage techniques to assemble them. Interweaving positive and negative space plays an important role in this process. Multiple layered elements are merged and take on a new meaning in the context of Liemburg's design.


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