

Rolf Harder
Charlie Harris (Hon. Fellow)
Paul Haslip
Bardolf Paul
Ernst Roch (d. 2003)
Denise Saulnier
Gregory Silver
Jorge Frascara
Jorge Frascara was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, in 1939. The son of a journalist and a poet/painter, he studied Fine Arts and Art Education in Buenos Aires and began his professional career as an illustrator and film animator in the early ‘60s. Broad interests in culture, art, design, education, psychology and communication, led him in different directions of enquiry during his 20s and early 30s. After almost a year of work in Guatemala in 1973, he spent the academic year 1973/74 in London—with a small grant from The British Council—doing research on graphic design education. Amongst the many people he met, two meetings were of fundamental importance: one with Herbert Spencer, that prompted Frascara to adapt Spencer’s methods for field research in legibility to other areas of communication design; and another with Patrick Burke (then editor of Icographic magazine) and Marijke Singer (then Secretary General of Icograda), that led to a long relation with the International Council of Graphic Design Associations.
Upon his return to Buenos Aires, Frascara organized a meeting with other colleagues and founded the first Society of Graphic Designers of Argentina. In 1974 he coordinated the public information symbols test station in Buenos Aires at the invitation of the ISO, and began to do field research in communication design. Notable was a study on children’s preferences for illustration styles, presented at the Edugraphic conference in Edmonton in July 1975, which was subsequently published in Icographic (#13, 1979, pp. 2–5) and in Reading Improvement (C.J. Ladan and J. Frascara, “Three Variables Influencing the Picture Preferences of South and North American Boys and Girls,” (Reading Improvement, 14/2, 1977, pp. 120–28).
In 1976 he moved to Canada, accepting a one year contract with the University of Alberta, where in 1977 he became continuing academic staff. He was elected member of the National Council of the Society of Graphic Designers of Canada (1979–81), and was member of the Advisory Committee on Graphic Symbols for the Canadian Standards Council from 1979 to 1990. From 1981 to 1986 he was Chairman of the Department of Art and Design. Around the same time (1979–1983) he was convener of an ISO Working Group on Graphic Symbols for Public Information (ISO TC 145 SC1 WG2). In that capacity he led the development of the ISO Technical Report 7239, “Visual Design Criteria for Public Information Symbols,” that for the first time established frames of reference for the sizing and placing of graphic symbols for public information in public spaces. He also served as Vice President of Icograda from 1979 to 1981, and became President Elect in Dublin, in 1983, serving as President between 1985 and 1987, and serving on the Board until 1989. He was Associate Editor of Icographic Magazine (1981–84) and fostered the development of the discourse on design education as Icograda Chairman in the area, culminating his mandate two years after chairing a meeting in Punta del Este, Uruguay, at the Icograda 1997 Congress.
As conference organizer his first credit is shared with Peter Kneebone and Amrik Kalsi for the Icograda/Unesco conference Design for Development, held in Nairobi, Kenya in 1987. Due to his involvement in communications for traffic safety, he then went on to be co-organizer of the Novice Driver Education Working Conference (Edmonton, 1993), and of Traffic Safety in Alberta (Edmonton, 1998). He was also Co-Chairman of Edmonton ‘95, Charting the Future of Graphic Design Education (Edmonton, 1995, for the Graphic Design Education Association); Chairman of Design and the Social Sciences: Making Connections (Edmonton, 1999), and Chairman of Creating Communicational Spaces a conference to be held in Edmonton in May 2003.
He is a member of the Editorial Boards of Design Issues (Carnegie Mellon University/MIT), Information Design Journal (John Benjamins), and Tipográfica (Buenos Aires, Argentina); he is International Fellow of the Society for the Science of Design (Japan). He has also organized several international design education projects, has been advisor and reviewer of several design education programs and has lectured and made presentations in twenty five countries.
He has published several monographs and articles on design and art and design education—fundamentally in Design Issues, the Information Design Journal, and Visible Language—and is the author of several books in English and Spanish: Diseño Gráfico y Comunicación (Infinito, Argentina, 1988), Diseño Gráfico para la Gente: Comunicaciones Masivas y Cambio Social, (Infinito, Argentina, 1997), and User Centred Graphic Design, Mass Communication and Social Change (Taylor & Francis, London and Washington, 1997). He is the editor for Graphic Design, World Views, 25 years of Icograda (Kodansha, Japan, 1990), and of Design and the Social Sciences, Making Connections (Taylor & Francis, in press). He has also produced three major research reports as principal investigator: Research and Development of Safety Symbols (for the Standards Council of Canada, 1986), Traffic Safety in Alberta (for the Alberta Solicitor General and the Alberta Motor Association, 1992), and Profiling the Alberta Driver (Traffic Safety Summit/ Mission Possible, 1998).
He has juried many design exhibitions and competitions and has conducted research with the support of various Canadian organizations. His professional experience includes illustration, film animation, advertising and graphic design, and now concentrates on research and development of visual communications for safety and other social concerns.
Rolf Harder
Rolf Harder was born in Hamburg, Germany in 1929. He studied at the Hamburg Academy of Fine Arts and spent most of the 1950s working as a designer and art director in both German and Canadian ad agencies and design firms. He moved to Montreal in 1959 and opened his own firm, Rolf Harder Design. Six years later he founded Design Collaborative—a graphic and industrial design company with offices in Toronto and Montreal—with three other partners: Ernst Roch, Anthony Mann and Al Faux. In 1972, he was a founding member of Editions Signum and Signum Press, publishers of limited editions of original graphics and books. In 1978, he formed Rolf Harder & Assoc. Inc. in Montreal, and spent the next 20 years working in virtually all facets of graphic design, most notably corporate identities, posters, books and annual reports.
Harder has had long-term relationships with clients in government (including Design Canada, Canadian Wildlife Service, Health and Welfare Canada, and Canada Post—he has designed more than 60 postage stamps); with cultural institutions including The National Arts Centre, The National Gallery of Canada, The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts and The Montreal Symphony Orchestra; and with a slew of corporations, from The Royal Bank and Consolidated-Bathurst to Northern Telecom and Hoffmann-La Roche.
He has won more than 100 national and international design awards and prizes. He was one of two Canadian designers represented at the 36th Venice Biennale; one of two Canadian winners of the World Logo Design Award (International Trade Mark Centre, Belgium, 1998). His work has been published in magazines and presented in exhibitions throughout Canada and the U.S., Australia, South America, Europe, Russia, Japan and Korea.
Rolf’s work is included in the following permanent exhibitions in Canada: National Archives of Canada; Musée du Québec; Université du Québec à Montréal. In the US: The Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.; The Museum of Modern Art, N.Y.; Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco; University of New York College at Fredonia, N.Y. In Germany: AGI Archives, Poster Museum, Essen; German Design Council, Frankfurt/M; Die Neue Sammlung, Staatliches Museum fuer Angewandte Kunst, Munich; Museum for Arts and Crafts, Hamburg. In Austria: Design Austria, Vienna. In France: Musée de la publicité, Palais du louvre, Paris. And in Great Britain at The University of Reading, Reading.
“The aim has always been to convey a message clearly, concisely and with originality,” Harder says. “Beyond serving his client's needs, if a designer is to play his part in society, his work should be esthetically satisfying, intellectually stimulating and imaginative—in short, in harmony with human needs. This may be considered his modest contribution toward a more livable and less visually polluted and confusing environment.” He is now semi-retired, and spends much of his time pursuing his second love—painting—in his home in Beaconsfield, Quebec.
Charlie Harris
Bio to come.
Paul Haslip
Born in Hamilton in 1953, Paul has been a prominent member of the graphic design community in Toronto for over 20 years. He received his Fine Arts degree from York University in 1976 and subsequently studied for 2 years at St. Martin’s College of Art in London, England on a Design Canada Scholarship.
Before founding HM&E in 1991, he was senior designer at Elias Marketing & Communications Inc., design director at The Saturday Night Group and associate partner of Hynes, Haslip & Partners.
Paul is actively involved in the design community through his work with the Society of Graphic Designers of Canada. He is past president of the Ontario chapter. He was instrumental in organizing the 25th Anniversary Show for the GDC in 1982 and in 1985 chaired The Best of the 80’s, a national retrospective of design in Canada. In 1985 he was awarded a Fellowship Honour by the Society for his contribution to graphic design in Canada.
As an educator, he has served on the Faculty of Fine Arts at York University and has lectured at the Ontario College of Art, Sheridan College and The University of Toronto.
Paul’s work has won him international recognition, including awards from The Advertising and Design Club of Canada, the Art Directors Club of New York, AIGA, American Center for Design, the Type Directors Club and the Society of Graphic Designers of Canada. His work has appeared in the international design publications Applied Arts Magazine, Communication Arts, Graphis, How, and Idea Magazine. The work of HM&E was profiled in Applied Arts Magazine (May/June 2000).
Bardolf Paul
Bio to come.
Ernst Roch (1928–2003)
Ernst Roch was born in Yugoslavia in 1928 and arrived in Canada in 1953. But it was the years in Graz, Austria, which so influenced his thinking and his work. In addition to receiving an excellent education in graphic design at the Staatliche Scüle fur angewandte Kunst, the rich cultural environment of Europe instilled in him the highest aesthetic standards and the constant striving for perfection which are the hallmark of his work. This training was based on functionalism, where a design challenge was first seen as a problem-solving process emphasizing rational thinking and formal clarity. It was this “international” and “new” graphic design, as it came to be known, which he pioneered in Canada.
Ernst worked for three design firms before opening his own office in 1960, and was the principal and founding member of Design Collaborative in 1965. In 1972 he was a founding member of Editions Signum, a publishing company specializing in limited editions of original graphics, and in 1973 became founding member and president of Signum Press, a book publishing company. The founding of Roch Design occurred in 1978.
His impressive output ranges from trademarks, symbols, posters, and annual reports to complete visual identity programs, from architectural signage systems to thematic exhibitions, from postage stamps and official documents to book design and publishing.
Ernst has been a visiting lecturer at several universities during the last three decades, including the Art and Design School of the Montréal Museum of Fine Arts, Concordia, McGill, and Ohio State Universities, as well as the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design.
To his rational approach, he brings intuition and imagination, and a third dimension, that witty aspect of his design, which makes his best work unique and memorable. The German design publication Novum Gebrauchsgraphik has described his work as “clear, sober, and sensitive.” Prominent Swiss graphic designer and art critic Hans Neuberg has said that in his best work “the definite form consists of a blend of joyful graphic experimenting and intellectual discipline.”
Graphic design is not merely the visualization of information. It is a complex art form where, as Roch says, designers have a social responsibility “to inform rather than mislead, to enlighten rather than frustrate the individual in his daily life.” In his acceptance speech for his honorary Doctorate in Fine Arts in 1988, he pointed out that “the designer has an acute ability to communicate order out of chaos aesthetically, with intellect and wit, and sometimes brilliantly while investing the problem with personality.”
Among his best known accomplishments are the hexagonal symbol and the identity program for the National Arts Centre (Ottawa), the Queen Elizabeth II definitive issue postage stamps (1962–1963), the paper folding kit “Paper Zoo” (1974), the official poster for the Montréal Olympic Games (1976), and the commemorative postage stamps of early Canadian locomotives (1983–1986). He has also organized exhibitions, most notably “The visual Image of the Munich Olympic Games” in Montréal and Toronto (1972), and the “AGI Posters” (Alliance Graphique Internationale) in Montréal (1982).
His designs have received numerous national and international awards and prizes. They have been exhibited and published extensively in Canada, the United States, Europe, and Japan, and are in permanent collections in the National Library (Ottawa), the Museum of Modern Art (New York), the Library of Congress (Washington DC), and the National Poster Museum (Warsaw).
Ernst was a member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts and the Alliance Graphique Internationale, the AIGA and the International Centre for Typographic Arts. In 1988, he was the first ever graphic designer to be awarded an honorary Doctorate in Fine Arts from the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design in recognition of his professional and artistic integrity and humanism, of his considerable contribution to Canada’s prestige in the field of graphic design, and of his drive and energy in bringing its achievements to international attention.
— article by Michael Maynard from GDC Journal 1, 1993
Ernst Roch passed away on February 21, 2003. With his passing, Canada, and our profession in general, loses one its finest graphic designers. — from a tribute by Rolf Harder in gdc.net.2003
Denise Saulnier
Bio to come.
Gregory Silver
Bio to come.

- Susan Colberg
- Stuart Ash Fritz Gottschalk Cynthia Hoffos Hélène L'Heureux
- Jim Rimmer Dale Simonson
- Peggy Cady Catherine Garden
- Georges Haroutiun (Hon. Fellow)
- Matthew Warburton
- Carole Charette Linda Coe Annie Re
- David Coates Elaine Prodor
- Michael Marshall Steven Rosenberg
- David Berman Paul-Michael Brunelle Helen Mah
- Mary Ann Maruska Friedrich Peter Robert L. Peters
- Paul Arthur (d. 2001) Frances E.M. Johnson (Hon. Fellow, d. 1998) Albert Ng
- Don Dickson Michael Maynard
- Frank Davies Horst Deppe Judith Gregory Frank Newfeld
- John Gibson Tiit Telmet
- Jorge Frascara Rolf Harder Charlie Harris (Hon. Fellow) Paul Haslip Bardolf Paul Ernst Roch (d. 2003) Denise Saulnier Gregory Silver
- Peter Bartl Eiko Emori Walter Jungkind Jan van Kampen (d.2008) Jules LaPorte (Hon. Fellow) Anthony Mann Neville Smith Ulrich Wodicka Chris Yaneff (d. 2004)
- Giles Talbot Kelly (d.2006)
- Carl Brett (d.2009) Theo Dimson Gerhard Doerrié (d.1984) Peter Dorn Burton Kramer Laurie Lewis
- Carl Dair (d. 1967) Allan Fleming (d. 1977) H.L. Rous (Hon. Fellow, d. 1964) Leslie Smart (d. 1998)





