This project — to redesign all the state flags in a single visual language — seems to me to combine rather remarkably the features of today’s techno-liberalism:

An active disdain for historical, cultural, and aesthetic difference: “I was immediately bothered by how discordant they are as a group”;

The easy assumption that unity is best brought about by imposition from On High: “Mitchell’s first move was to strip away ‘everything that reminded me of a divided nation’;

Implicit belief in the titanic suasive power of design;

Wish-fulfillment dreams of artistic power: Give us free rein and we’ll fix things;

An inability to see that the design languages of the moment are unlikely to last longer than, or as long as, the design languages they are replacing: “And I wasn’t surprised to learn they break just about every rule of flag design.”

Flag design has rules, people: created by the International Federation of Vexillological Associations, whom you may defy at your peril. We may but pity those unfortunate enough to live in benighted times when there were no organizations to establish rules for flag design and no designers who believed that those rules, and their own design sensibilities, obviously should overrule the whole of history.

Fie on all of it, I say! Of course I know this isn’t seriously meant, in the sense that Mitchell isn’t planning (as far as I know) to petition his Representative to introduce an amendment to the Constitution empowering the federal government to mandate a unified design language for state flags. But I think it is seriously meant in the senses listed above, and to that I say: Yuck. Give me history with all its messiness, its visible residue of evil acts and its mixed messages; give me aesthetic incoherence, give me people who don’t know the Rules of Flag Design — give me, in short, the flag of Nunavut and, better still, the coat of arms of Nunavut!

Yeah, I know Nunavut isn’t one of the United States, but still.

7 Comments

  1. As far as as the Virginia flag goes, Cuccinelli wins! There's not even a modest woman on the proposed replacement. My father, who was an unwavering Byrd Democrat, told me when I was quite young that the Latin motto on the seal was translated as "Get your foot off my neck.

  2. As poor as many of these designs are, I'd agree that a lot of states are lazy when it comes to flag designs – "Crud we need a flag by next Tuesday! Uh, I know, let's get a blue background and slap the state seal on it. Good enough for government work."

    I mean, what has a more recognizable and memorable flag? New Jersey, or Maryland? Minnesota, or Ohio?

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