Genderless design is a myth

Genderfluidity as the future of design and culture.

August Tang
UX Collective

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With Eurocentric standards as the norm, our natural instinct may be to fall back on modernism and an Apple-esque aesthetic in pursuit of a gender neutral and universal design style. However, as much as we might like to generalize a style, design can never truly be free of meaning, culture, gender, and bias.

“Genderfluid,” centered and typeset with unusually stretched, bright-blue letters. Overlaid on a gradient pink to white gradient.
The future is genderfluid

Beyond universal design

Universal design was a concept that originated in the context of architecture, asserting the importance of accessible environments for everyone, regardless of ability, age, or status. Within graphic design, universal design has become synonymous with The International Typographic Style—or Swiss Design—due to its emphasis on objective clarity and supposed neutrality. However, in today’s world where we’re building products for multifaceted audiences, universal design and Swiss Design cannot always be a reliable answer. And although the founders might like to believe so, Swiss Design is not free of meaning and bias.

Historically, systems were put in place to serve the privileged (ie white / men / cisgender / heterosexual / wealthy / able-bodied / etc). As time progressed, design has shifted towards the idea that everyone deserves access and that we no longer want to design for solely the privileged class, we want to design for everyone. However, the sentiment of designing for everyone still falls short when serving unique, multifaceted individuals. Instead of designing for the universal, we need to embrace a mindset that no group of people is a monolith. Even communities which we group together have nuances within them. And thus, the idea of designing for the pluriverse was developed. Designing with a pluriversal mindset (versus a universal mindset) means that as designers, we become intimately familiar with the users we’re serving. With sensitivity to race, culture, class, sexuality, gender, ability, and more, we can make design solutions that celebrate and acknowledge user differences, rather than erase them with a single solution.

Diagram of three examples. Far left: Design for the norm, depicting a black circle encompassing a few white circles on the inner boundary and a few circles excluded outside the boundary. Middle: Design for everyone, one large black circle with many circles included within. Right: Design for the pluriverse, collage of four large, overlapping, colorful circles with several small colorful circles floating within.
Designing for the pluriverse diagram, based on a reference by Mauricio Mejía

Genderless design is a myth

The concept of genderless, universal design is an illusion. The reality of Swiss design is that it perpetuates the idea that masculinity is the norm; masculinity equates to neutrality. A parallel example can be seen in the fashion industry. Androgyny in the context of clothing often is synonymous with menswear. Upon googling “gender-neutral fashion,” most of what surfaces are t-shirts, formless sweaters, button-ups, and hoodies. I and Me, a denim and lifestyle brand from London, UK is a prime example, claiming on their website, “The design process is gender neutral, it will always be about fabric and style before ‘his and/or hers’; this is where the story begins with every garment — on a neutral playing field undefined by seasonal trends.”

Two images side by side, left depicting a masculine presenting individual standing—they are wearing a short sleeve brown sweater, black, loose-fitting slacks, and Adidas samba sneakers. Right depicting a feminine presenting individual lounging on a stool—they are wearing a long necklace, baggy white t-shirt with an oversize burnt orange sweater. Additionally, they have on the same black, loose-fitting slacks and Adidas samba sneakers that the left individual has on.
I and Me’s Better With U Collection

As much as designers might want to erase or neutralize gender, attempts to degender a product or space often mean defaulting to a plain style leaning towards masculinity. Even if the original designer claims neutral intention, it’s inevitable and unavoidable that cultural norms will still impose meaning and gender onto objects. Instead of falling back on norms and universal rules, designing for the pluriverse gives us the opportunity to move beyond the gender binary into a more sophisticated space.

How gender presentation shows up in design

Acknowledging the masculine or feminine roots of a design, instead of erasing or ignoring them, unlocks the potential for multifaceted, nonbinary solutions. First, let’s look at a few binary examples of feminine and masculine art directions.

A bold, geometric, black-background design. There is a dominant block of text in bright white text stating, “GENDER STEREOTYPES FIND THEIR WAY INTO DESIGN WHETHER WE LIKE IT OR NOT,” in all caps. Layered behind the text block is a bright blue half circle, bleeding off the edge of the image. Opposing the text is a series of bright red triangles repeated (almost teeth like), jutting out from the right edge of the image, pointing at the text.
Art direction example for masculinity

Eurocentric standards and norms have historically perpetuated the gender binary. Framing women as the opposite of men allowed patriarchy to thrive and defined the dichotomies that define gender stereotypes today. In a patriarchal society, masculinity is synonymous with power, superiority, dominance, and control. Therefore, by opposition, femininity represents weakness, inferiority, submission, and servitude.

A pale pink, minimal image with a decorative, contemporary serif typeface, featuring the statement “Masculinity as default is more widely accepted than femininity as default.” Above this center-aligned statement is a delicate starburst. The entire quote is framed by two thin, light gray hand-drawn lines, one positioned in the upper lefthand corner and the other in the lower righthand corner.
Art direction example for femininity

Gender stereotypes represent themselves in design predictably. Art directions that are bold, blocky, emotionally restrained, and conservative in color are associated with masculinity. Within the construct of the gender binary, femininity in design is the opposite. Expressive typography, delicate forms, and toned color schemes are typically perceived as feminine. The gender binary is harmful in many ways. Not only does it perpetuate a power structure between masculinity and femininity, it also erases the reality that indigenous cultures have been celebrating and accepting of nonbinary genders for centuries. The gender binary is a relatively recent and Eurocentric perspective that oversimplifies reality. Therefore, the future of design is inherently queer. We cannot make design that is devoid of gender. Due to historical contexts and dominant culture, mass-consumed products can rarely ever be free of gendered implications. However, as designers and creatives, what we can do instead of attempting to detach gender from design is engage in what I like to call “gender fuckery.”

How to deconstruct the gender binary in design

Design that acknowledges a genderfluid reality has more potential to be rich with culture, meaning, and purpose. Gender fuckery is the practice of subverting traditional binary gender norms through mixing, blending, and bending gender expressions. By adopting this approach and applying it to a design practice, we not only create more multifaceted solutions, we begin deconstructing the gender binary through our work.

Scan of a colorful book spread. The background is a pastel gradient transitioning from a blue left edge to a purple right edge. The type layout is very dynamic and includes a large featured text block constrained within a distinct column, along with handwritten text that is scattered across the pages and disregards the grid. On the right side of the spread, there is large rainbow text and 3 staggered images of cats, with hand-drawn rainbow overlays of clouds, hearts, sparkles, and flowers.
Sample spread from the book design for Be Gay Do Crime

The image samples of Be Gay Do Crime are an editorial example of how we can begin to introduce genderfluidity into design work. Due to the inherently queer nature of the project, I was highly experimental with the combinations of imagery, illustration, typography, and layout. In combining an expressive serif, monospaced type, and a handwritten font, the typography itself is an uncommon showcase. The type styles, paired with soft, colorful gradient backgrounds, photo collages, and rainbow trackpad illustrations make the book a prime instance of gender fuckery.

Scan of a colorful book spread. The background is a pastel gradient transitioning from a pink left edge to an orange right edge. The type layout is very dynamic and includes four large featured text blocks constrained within a distinct column, along with handwritten text that is scattered across the pages and disregards the grid.
Another sample spread from the book design for Be Gay Do Crime

The concept of mixing, blending, bending gender in design can be pushed to a further extreme than this one example I provided. However, in a corporate setting and non-queer spaces, the application of genderfluidity may face more resistance. I have worked with brands in the past where clients were hesitant to change, in fear of alienating their dominant user group. For example, a stereotypically masculine product, such as a grill, might be marketed with a bold, sporty typeface. We could expect this brand to showcase lots of meat / men in the outdoors / colors like charcoal and orange. However, a few ways to subvert the look and feel of the brand could be to introduce a serif typeface, lighter tones of colors, and rounded edges. When working with an existing brand that is highly polarized and gendered, there are still subtle ways to tweak and evolve. Gender fuckery is always relevant. Being intentional about the femininity and masculinity of design choices is key to arriving at a gender-inclusive solution. In terms of business, genderfluid design avoids alienating the non-dominant gender and instead appeals to a broader spectrum of users and untapped markets.

For reference, here are a few starter areas for intentionality when it comes to design choices:

  • Typography
  • Colors
  • Photography
  • Illustration style
  • Graphic elements

The future of design is genderfluid

The gender binary perpetuates harmful and inaccurate stereotypes, as well as upholds power structures. There have been recent attempts in design and fashion to remove gender from the picture entirely and create universal solutions. However, culture, history, and biases make this an impossible reality—many solutions are inherently gendered. Instead of attempting to erase this reality, we can evolve beyond the gender binary to reach new audiences. Embracing gender fuckery in our practice and moving past a rigid, normative approach is a form of resistance against the patriarchy, challenges stereotypes, and allows design to resonate with more people. The future of design is genderfluid.

Thanks so much for reading! My perspective on this topic is ever-evolving. Feedback, comments, thoughts, and callouts are welcome.

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August (they/them) is a queer, trans, nonbinary leftist and abolitionist. Design Lead at Work & Co.