The Terminological Development of Graphic Design: Between Office Art and Social Purpose
Main Article Content
Abstract
The origins of the term graphic design are typically framed through reductive, canonical narratives that trace its emergence to a singular event. This paper challenges such accounts by tracing a more complex and layered trajectory. Focusing on the neglected yet significant 476-page handbook Graphic Design by W. G. Raffé—the first book to feature the term in its title—it situates this text within a broader history of Anglophone design discourse. A close reading of this 1927 work reveals three key insights. First, Raffé conceived of graphic design as a socially engaged practice with a civic mission, foregrounding its communicative role in mobilizing the public—this orientation contrasts sharply with dominant, aesthetically driven definitions. Second, he articulated print reproduction as the essential enabling technology that distinguished graphic design from fine art and empowered visual communication to reach the masses at an accelerating speed and scale. Third, he attempted to codify graphic design as a professional discipline, using diagrams and schemas to reify the practice and articulate its principles. This was an important intervention prior to more formal attempts to professionalize graphic design in postwar Anglophone contexts. By recovering this overlooked text and locating it within a longer-term trajectory of development, the paper argues that the term graphic design did not emerge from a single moment or figure but evolved through decades of dispersed adoption. Revisiting Raffé’s foundational work offers valuable historical perspective on ongoing debates about the discipline’s identity and purpose in the post-digital era.