|
Every Stanford dorm seems to have that creative, go-to
person. The felt-pen caricaturist who embellishes the
hallway white board . . . the infuriatingly smart kid
who cuts class to make posters for Big Game and still
aces the midterm . . . the only one you’d trust to
design the T-shirt.
“I was that guy,” Dennis Hwang, ’01,
says with a grin. And in a near-perfect—not to
mention lucrative—pairing of right and left brain
(he graduated with a degree in art and a minor in computer
science), Hwang is still that guy. Webmaster manager
for the search engine powerhouse Google, Hwang is the
“Google doodler”—the cartoonist who
embellishes the firm’s wide-eyed typographic logo.
With tens of millions of people viewing Google’s
home page daily, the guy who used to design Burbank
and Cardenal’s dorm shirts is, in CNN ’s
words, “the most famous unknown artist in the
world.”
Hwang, 28, manages a team of 23 people charged with
keeping Google’s heavily visited pages technically
fit, fast and sleek, but he also has charge of the whimsical
drawings that adorn the Google logo on holidays such
as Valentine’s Day, special occasions such as
the Olympics, and offbeat little commemorations such
as artist Edvard Munch’s birthdate. Hwang is modest
about his celebrity, but admits he gets hundreds of
fan e-mails every time a new doodle posts, sometimes
thousands if he’s done something “particularly
surprising,” he says.
As we sit in one of high-flying Google’s posh,
free-to-employees cafeterias (fennel crème fraîche,
anyone?), it’s a tad ironic when Hwang explains
that he came to Stanford with “every intention
of becoming a starving artist.” Hwang was born
in Knoxville, Tenn., but he grew up in Korea, where
his father was a professor of environmental geography
at the University of Seoul. From his earliest years,
Hwang was consumed by art, although frustrated by how
it was taught in Korea. “They have a very methodical
way of teaching. When you’re doing a still life,
they expect you to accurately measure the dimensions
so that, in the ideal situation, everyone’s work
looks identical.”
His family moved back to Knoxville when he was in middle
school. Hwang found himself speaking no English and
“in a vegetative state trying to comprehend what
was going on.” It didn’t take long for him
to catch up academically. When it was time for college,
he thought he wanted a pure art school, “but when
I visited them, none felt like home,” he recalls.
“The first place I went at Stanford was the art
department and it just clicked. It’s a very free
environment. The professors are almost like colleagues.”
Hwang immersed himself in fine art, but an introductory
programming class taught by Robert Plummer soon worked
its magic on him: “It’s designed to pull
you in and make it fascinating,” says Hwang. He
also was captivated by Professor Marc Levoy’s
freshman seminar Science of Art. Levoy recalls two aspects
of Hwang that still ring true: “He smiled a lot
and he has a childlike exuberance.” Levoy still
shows his students a short video every year that Hwang
made for his class: a three-dimensional rendering of
the precise perspective used in Renaissance painter
Masaccio’s Trinity fresco. “It was really
a tour de force,” says Levoy, because in 1998,
creating a digital movie was not the snap it is now
for the YouTube generation. “For a freshman to
do that was quite extraordinary.”
 |
In the summer after his junior year, Hwang’s
former resident adviser in Cardenal, an early Google
employee, convinced Hwang to take an internship as an
assistant webmaster. His life has barely slowed since.
“My senior year was basically devoted to Google.
I was working 40 hours a week and going to school—an
extremely chaotic time I would not like to repeat.”
At the time, Google, the brainchild of Stanford computer
science graduate students Sergey Brin, MS ’95,
and Larry Page, MS ’98, had fewer than 100 employees.
Its home page featured stark and clean-lined, albeit
colorful, graphics that stood out in a web world jammed
with clutter, animations and annoying
pop-ups. From the beginning, though, Google had a sense
of humor. The first Google doodle appeared in 1998,
when Brin and Page decided to leave the company untended
for a couple of days while they attended the Burning
Man festival in the Nevada desert. Brin put a little
stick figure emblematic of the event on the Google logo
as a clue to where they were. Users loved it, and soon
the company hired an outside graphic artist to come
up with other simple cartoons to mark special events.
Hwang’s original job involved straightforward
programming chores, but soon he was charged with posting
those doodles and “cleaning them up,” in
programming parlance, so they looked better. After his
modification of a Fourth of July doodle caught the founders’
attention, word of Hwang’s art experience and
his talent got around. Pretty soon, Hwang became the
official doodler, completing about 50 doodles a year.
About once a quarter, a group of executives get together
to map out a calendar of doodle-worthy dates. Page and
Brin have the final say, and they sometimes approve
spontaneous drawings, such as when a Mars Rover landed.
Hwang creates the images, using an electronic tablet
and stylus for his sketches. The doodles are fun, usually
whimsical—and sometimes baffling. Know about Gaston
Julia, for example? Visitors to Google on February 3,
2004, saw the Google logo with a hurricane-shaped “o”
against a backdrop of equations to celebrate the French
mathematician’s birthday.
Clicking on a Google doodle will generate a page of
search results designed to illuminate the subject matter—the
significance, say, of the bottle of vinegar sketched
into a Persian New Year doodle. Derivative websites
like “Logoogle.com” have cropped up to feature
humorous take-offs on the Google doodles, such as the
Hooters restaurant chain owls’ eyes replacing
the two Os in Google.
Google’s 2004 stock offering and subsequent stratospheric
stock rise made billionaires of its founders and hundreds
of millionaires among its rank and file. These days,
Google is bursting at the seams of its Mountain View
“Googleplex” headquarters, where employees
jostle for parking spots (a valet will take care of
you for $20), lunchroom seats and conference-room space.
Googlers ride Segways and motorized scooters around
the campus. Around Silicon Valley, real estate agents
still talk about the high cost of housing being propped
up by “the Google factor.”
Hwang’s office, however, is unprepossessing.
A large, three-paned computer screen is the dominant
feature in a space otherwise jammed with overflowing
boxes. Next to his keyboard is the electronic tablet
he uses to create his art. In a box behind him is a
poster a fan sent him that features virtually all of
his Google doodles over the years, lovingly assembled.
“This took a lot of time to put together,”
he says.
Also on his desk is a mug from the March of Dimes that
provokes a wince. Last year the March of Dimes staged
a public-relations campaign to get Google to offer a
doodle promoting its project to raise awareness of premature
births. Eventually, the group collected more than 75,000
signatures. Hwang does occasionally use suggestions
from outside the company, and Google even held a Google
doodle contest for British schoolchildren when it opened
a U.K. office in 2005. But he didn’t accommodate
the March of Dimes’ request because there are
two hard and fast rules about the doodles’ subject
matter. First, they avoid religious subject matter.
Christmas, for example, is usually handled with secular
images like snowmen or icicles. Second, the logo artwork
is meant to be “fun and about Google, not about
corporate beliefs or causes we support,” he explains.
“We are not going to trivialize something that
is extremely worthy by reducing it to a doodle. It’s
why we won’t do a 9-11 doodle, for example. It
would trivialize the event.”
Surrounded by over-the-top Valley culture, Hwang seems
unaffected by his star status. Although he has little
free time, he tries to “keep up with the latest
tools” in computer animation. His most difficult
doodling tasks, he says quietly, involve honoring artists
whose styles he has studied and admired for years, such
as Claude Monet. Amid an almost infinite supply of people
and events to doodle, “artists’ birthdays
are the most precious to me,” Hwang says. “I’ve
always studied art history and trying to imitate their
style is the most pressure.”
 |
| JOAN O’C. HAMILTON, ’83, is
a frequent contributor to STANFORD. |
 |
| Some of the Really Great Hwang Doodles |
Louis Braille's Birthday
January 4, 2006 |
|
Leonardo's Birthday
April 15, 2005 |
|
Happy Halloween
October 31, 2006 |
|
Natonal Teachers Day
May 3, 2005 |
|
Happy New Year
January 1, 2007 |
|
St. Patrick's Day
March 17, 2006 |
|
|