Nov 17, 2020 | Art and Design, xArt and Design News, xCVPA, xFeatured
It is the year 1998, and NIU visual communication student David Spoehr is passionately cheering on the Huskies football team (who were on a significant losing streak) while decked out in full face and chest paint at Huskie Stadium.
He is there with his best friends—friends he has met on campus and friends he will keep the rest of his life.
Fast-forward two decades and Spoehr, ’02, is a well-respected co-founder of Monroestar, a Chicago-based design agency that specializes in website design and development. He leads the design and project management side of the business, which he founded with fellow alumnus Vinay Mullick, ’00. In his role, Spoehr takes projects from concept to deployment, and so much of his success over the last two decades can be tied back to the connections he made at NIU and his love for sports.
“I transferred to NIU after spending my first year in Colorado,” he recalled. “NIU was and still is one of the area’s leading design schools. The professors and curriculum at NIU set me up to succeed in my career after graduation, both with design theory and real-life applications.”
Spoehr worked several jobs on campus during his time at NIU, including for the athletic marketing department and at the Northern Star.
After college, when Monroestar was in its infancy, Spoehr and Mullick took on a special web project as a way to give back to the University.
“We had immense pride in what running back Michael Turner was doing in 2003 for NIU and for the Mid-American Conference,” Spoehr said. “We made a Heisman website for ‘Turner the Burner,’ and it was a great opportunity to show off his talents and get him in the Heisman conversation, along with the other talented athletes.”
At the time, there was no social media to help athletes campaign for the Heisman Memorial Trophy, which is awarded annually to the most outstanding player in NCAA Division I football. Instead, they had to rely solely on national television and the early infancy of the web.
“Taking that into consideration, looking back on the site, it holds up pretty well,” Spoehr said. “While the site might be dated in terms of technology and design it doesn’t seem that out of place when compared to current sites.”
In July 2020, ESPN named Monroestar’s 17-year-old Heisman website for Turner the Burner one of the best of its kind of the 2000s. And while this is a small feather in the cap of a company who has gone on to do websites for Dick’s Sporting Goods, GEICO and Kehoe Designs, to name a few, Spoehr never forgets where it all started.
“I always knew I wanted to do something creative, but I wasn’t always exactly sure what that would be,” he said. “As I navigated my early years at NIU, it was clear that the path to a lasting career was through design, or what NIU calls ‘visual communication.’ Website design was just taking off when I was at NIU and it was very exciting to me.”
Today, Monroestar is a small firm so Spoehr wears many hats, and every day is not like the last, as he is presented with new and exciting challenges to overcome.
“Web design and development is constantly changing, so the learning never stops,” he said. “No project is the same, there is always something to learn and expand upon.”
Spoehr learned a lot during his time on campus, relentlessly keeping the faith with his favorite football team, and finding his own creative life path.
“Huskies embody what it is to be a hard worker and have positive attitude,” he said. “Huskies like me are trying to take that spirit and applying it in every aspect of our lives and careers.”
This article originally appeared on the Alumni Association website.
Aug 24, 2020 | Art and Design, xArt and Design News, xFeatured
The nationally renowned School of Art and Design at NIU has earned a pair of new top five rankings.
Animation Career Review has announced their 2020 Graphic Design School Rankings. More than 700 schools with graphic design programs across the nation were evaluated and NIU has placed a pair of programs in the top five.
This is the second year that Animation Career Review has ranked illustration programs, and NIU’s is ranked third in the state.
For the sixth year in a row, Animation Career Review has ranked graphic design programs and NIU’s visual communication program is ranked fifth in the state.
The School of Art and Design is no stranger to recognition. US News and World Report has ranked the illustration program in the top 20 nationally, and ranks the school’s Master in Fine Arts program in the top 125 in the nation. and the American Association of State Colleges and Universities ranks the school 35th in the nation.
Jun 12, 2020 | Art and Design, xArt and Design News, xCVPA, xFeatured, xGrad Profiles
The School of Art and Design is spotlighting recently graduated students and their work on Facebook, and we’ll be sharing them here on the blog, as well.
Shannon Perkinson, BFA in Visual Communications
Perkinsondesign.com
“Graphic design and art has been a part of my life as long as I can remember. I have grown in my art but also as a person these past three years in the VisCom program at NIU. My other passions are crafting, nature, photography, traditional arts, and paper making. I hope in moving forward that I will continue to grow in my work and be a part of the larger conversation that art and design brings to our world.”
May 1, 2020 | NIU Artists. Never. Quit., xArt and Design News, xCVPA, xFeatured
As NIU and the world around us deals with a global pandemic, artists continue to find ways to express themselves. In the College of Visual and Performing arts the learning and teaching hasn’t stopped, it’s simply evolved to meet the needs and limitations of the situation. Over the coming days, we’ll be featuring how NIU students, alumni and faculty in the arts are continuing to do what they love.
Patrick Gallagher
Major: Visual Communication
Year: 1979
Hometown: Freeport, Ill., currently resides in Bethesda, Maryland
Over the past 30 years, Patrick has built a strong reputation globally as a leader in the field of Museum Planning and Design. He has worked with every kind of collection from microscopic stardust, to hundreds of vintage military tanks and aircraft, in institutions ranging from cultural history and natural science to sports, music and the arts. A graduate of Northern Illinois University, Patrick is a past president of the SEGD and has served on the board of numerous professional design organizations.
Gallagher & Associates (G&A) is an internationally recognized interdisciplinary design studio with offices in Washington, D.C., New York, Portland and Singapore. For over 20 years, we bring transformative experiences to life.
“Being the principal of a design firm whose focus is Museum Planning and Design, I am busy spending my days supporting my now 132 tiny offices (designers homes) around the country and around the world,” Patrick said. “Working with clients to establish new protocols for input and review of the creative process but all also managing construction on four major new museum buildings when you cannot physically go to the site.
“We are also working with our team that does financial feasibility planning, operational planning and business modeling for none profits and they are assisting museums in thinking about re-opening, new staffing models and new operational modeling. It will be a different world for museums when this is over.
“Lastly, we are beginning to work with many museums on their virtual presence. Not their web site but their virtual museums so that visitors can stay more engaged and connected without actually being in the museum itself. In the future museums will count visitors not just who pass through the doors but who enter their virtual gateways.”