Mood Board - The Wild West.

Here is the second mood board in my thematic archetype series—The Wild West. I'm finding that as I do these, some conventions are taking shape. The 'roofline' approach—here with a wooden shed, before with a thatch hut for Tropical Paradise—really serves to frame each piece as an architectural exploration. Also, when all seven of them are completed and displayed together, there will be some visual unity. For this board I drew primarily on Disney's Frontierland vision, Knott's Berry Farm (Buena Park, CA), ghost town attractions of the Southwest, Dollywood (Pigeon Forge, TN), restaurant chains such as the Claim Jumper, and various Las Vegas casinos, some long since demolished—The Frontier, The Westerner, El Rancho, The Silver Slipper, The Pioneer Club, et al.

Besides the main shed roofline at the top, I built in some smaller roof elements—Spanish tile and steel shed—to showcase the diversity of the Western image. In discussing the mood board yesterday with my thesis advisor, we hit upon an interesting observation. More so perhaps than any other archetype, the visual cues for the Wild West are often typographically driven. There is a plethora of signage on this board, owing to the fact that nearly every example I found was replete with mimicked wood typography from the late 19th century. I became fascinated with this style of lettering when I produced a research book on the topic for a typography class in my first year of grad school. What grabbed me is that wood type seems to have left an indelible mark on American culture, far beyond the reaches of just a design audience. Although the layperson would be hard-pressed to identify the distinctions between a transitional and a humanist typeface, you can grab nearly anybody and point to a slab-serif or extended bold clarendon and get “Old West” immediately.

In any case, to theme 'The Old West’ properly requires wood type, and a whole lot of it.

Mood Board – Tropical Paradise.

Part of my visual exploration of theming for this project is a series of mood boards. Many creative professionals—from architects to interior designers to illustrators—use mood boards as an opportunity to brainstorm about the look and feel of a particular subject matter. I have just completed my first mood board study, “Tropical Paradise.”

Mark Gottdiener, in his The Theming of America, identifies several 'thematic archetypes'—that is, themes that recur again and again in our culture. As a designer rather than a social scientist, I am not visually exploring all of Gottdiener's archetypes. Instead I am focusing on those that I think best exemplify the design language of Themerica. These are my archetypes, as modified from Gottdiener:

 

  • TROPICAL PARADISE
    This theme encompasses everything that is ‘exotic’ to a Western audience—from Asia to South America, Africa to the tropics. Common applications evoke the jungle (Rainforest Cafe), exploration and colonialism (Disneyland’s Adventureland, Disney’s Animal Kingdom), the beach and its physical features (Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas, Disney’s Typhoon Lagoon, Hawaiian resorts), and native islander culture (the entire tiki bar phenomenon, including Trader Vic’s).
     
  • THE WILD WEST
    A very powerful theme in American culture, remembering roughly the years from California’s Gold Rush in 1849 to the turn of the twentieth century. The cowboy, the ghost town, the gold mine—all are here. Popular uses include restaurant chains serving ‘western’ style food (the Claim Jumper), replicas of ghost towns and frontier towns (Tombstone, Arizona; Knott’s Berry Farm; Disneyland’s Frontierland), and numerous vegas casinos over the years (the original El Rancho, et al).
     
  • CLASSICAL CIVILIZATION
    Ranging from Greek to Roman, Aztec to Egyptian, this theme embodies the ‘glories of old’ from civilizations that no longer exist. Gottdiener suggests that this theme is in decline, because most American government and institutional architecture is Greco-Roman influenced, thus associating the theme with the state. It remains popular in Las Vegas though (Caesar’s Palace, the Luxor).
     
  • MEDIEVAL & ARABIAN FANTASY
    This theme is about the power of former feudal societies in Europe and the Middle East. Princes and princes, kings and sultans, knights and warriors, wizards and genies, castles and palaces. Gottdiener doesn’t add medieval (only citing arabia), but I feel they go hand-in-hand from a design perspective. Examples range from theme parks (Disney’s Fantasyland, Tivoli Gardens) to restaurant chains (Medieval Times) and casinos (most of the mid-century Vegas casinos: Aladdin, The Dunes, The Sands, The Sahara; the current Excalibur).
     
  • AMERICAN NOSTALGIA
    This is a very wide-reaching and diverse theme; anything American from the turn of the century (when the Wild West theme ends) to about mid-century (where modernism and progress take over) is fair game. Examples are best seen at theme parks (nearly anything Disney touches; Main Street U.S.A., Disney’s Hollywood Studios), in restaurant chains (50s diners such as Ruby’s) and in residential developments and downtown district redesigns (Disney’s Celebration, et al.).
     
  • MODERNISM & PROGRESS
    This theme is also very broad, and is rooted firmly in the twentieth century. Anything evoking either the ‘future as now’ or the ‘cutting edge’—technology, computers, space travel, and modernism in the architectural sense all belong here. Examples range from projections of the future (the World’s Fairs, Disney's Tomorrowland) to contemporary as modern (anything slick or new, or purporting to be slick and new).
     
  • CITYSCAPES (URBANISM)
    This final theme is broad as well. Most Americans now live in the suburbs, and for them visiting an urban environment—with its energy, noise and large spaces of public interaction—can be quite exciting and exotic. Any representation of an urban-like quality—and especially entire replicas of famous cities—qualify. Examples include retail shopping districts (Universal Citywalk, Horton Plaza, The Grove) and of course, many famous casinos (NY,NY; Paris, The Venetian).

As the spring term continues, I will post any new mood boards I create.