Graphic Style - From Victorian To Post-Modern - Steven Heller & Seymour Chwast (1988)
Graphic Style - From Victorian To Post-Modern - Steven Heller & Seymour Chwast (1988)
Graphic Style - From Victorian To Post-Modern - Steven Heller & Seymour Chwast (1988)
SEYMOUR CHWAST
GRAPHIC STYLE
from Victorian to Post-Modern
For Louise and Paula The authors wish to thank Barbara Dominowski for Pabst, Verlag Silke Schreiber, Munich; Angewandte
her tireless research, efficient identification and Kunst Museum, Vienna; Bildarchiv Preussischer
organization of materials, and continued loyalty and Kulturbesitz, Kunstbibliothek mit Museum fur
good humor. Roxanne Slimak for her production Architektur, Modebild und Gra6k-Design, West
expertise and unfaltering patience. Margaret Berlin; The National Art Library, Victoria and
Donovan, our editor at Harry N. Abrams, for her Albert Museum, London; Museo Depero, Rovereto,
invaluable editing and unflagging enthusiasm. Sam Italy; Civici Musei di Udine, Italy; New York Public
Antupit, our art director at Harry N . Abrams, for Library; Cooper-Hewitt Library, New York; Pier-
his encouragement. Paul Gottlieb, our publisher at pont Morgan Library; Cammie Naylor, New-York
Harry N. Abrams, for his support. Martina Schmitz Historical Society.
for her research in the early stages of this project. Jeff Thanks also to those private collectors and artists
Powers for his fine production assistance. Ed Spiro who lent material: Steven Guarnaccia, Margaret and
for his much-needed photography. And Sarah Jane John Martinez, Eric Baker, Nathan Gluck, Szymon
Freymann, our agent, for her staunch efforts Bojko, Tony DiSpigna, F. H. K. Henrion, Tom
on our behalf. Eckersley, Abram Games, Gyorgy Kepes, Alex
This book would not have been possible without Steinweiss, Paul Rand, Leo Lionni, John Follis,
the cooperation of numerous people who were gen- Josef Miiller-Brockmann, Armin Hofmann, Gene
erous sources of material. Thanks to: Elaine Lustig Federico, Rudolph de Harak, Lou Dorfsman, Saul
ll1 P Pushpin Editions: Cohen, at Ex Libris, New York, for kindly making Bass, David Lance Goines, Paul Davis, Barry Zaid,
Producer: Steven Heller available her photographic records. Chris Mullen for Milton Glaser, James McMullan, Robert Crumb,
Designer: Seymour Chwast his generosity and intelligence in locating, explain- Michael Salisbury, Colin Forbes, Henry Wolf, Willi
Associate Designer: Roxanne Slimak ing, and securing materials from the United Fleckhaus, Franciszek Starowieyski,Jan Lenica,
Researcher: Barbara Dominowski Kingdom. James Fraser, director of the Library at Roman Cieslewicz, Andrzej Czeczot, Edward Dwur-
Fairleigh Dickinson University, Florham-Madison nik, Mieczyslaw Gorowski, Leszek Drzewinski, Jerzy
Harry N. Abrams, Inc.:
Campus, for his wisdom and for providing us with Czerniawski, Andrej Pagowski, Krystyna Hofmann,
Editor: Margaret Donovan our single most important resource. Renee Weber, Victor Moscoso, John Van Hamersveld, Rick
Art Director: Samuel N. Antupit Librarian, Special Collections, Fairleigh Dickinson, Griffin, Wes Wilson, Keisuke Nagatomo, Shigeo
for handling our countless requests for materials and Okamoto, Kenji ltoh, Tadanori Yokoo, Yusaku
bibliographic information. Robert Brown, of the Kamekura, Shigeo Fukuda, Kazumasa Nagai, lkko
Reinhold Brown Gallery, for his many contribu- Tanaka, George Hardie, Wolfgang Weingart,
tions. Barry Friedman, of Barry Friedman Fine Arts, Siegfried Odermatt, Rosmarie Tissi, Hans-U.
for opening his files to us. Stephen Greenglass and Allemann, Michael Zender, Dan Friedman, Inge
Unless otherwise stated, illustrations are from the Mercedes Quioga at the Mitchell Wolfson Jr. Collec- Druckrey, April Greiman, William Longhauser,
authors' collections. tion of Decorative and Propaganda Arts, who lent us Nancy Skolos, John Jay, Joe Duffy, Charles Spencer
some of our most prized rarities. Alexandra Corn Anderson, Jane Kosstrin, David Sterling, Warren
and Jack Rennert at Posters Please, who allowed us Leherer, Art Chantry, Christopher Garland, Louis
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
access to some remarkable posters. Fishauf, Mark Marek, Seth Jaben, Sussman / Prejza &
Heller, Steven. And our sincere appreciation to all the public and Company, Inc., Michael Manwaring, Woody Pirtle,
Graphic Style. private collections from whom we received assis- Alan Colvin, Michael Vanderbyl, Stephen Snider,
Bibliography: p. tance: Karl Wobmann, Kunstgewerbemuseum, John Casado, Susan Johnson, Alexander Jordan,
Includes index. Zurich; Rolf Thalmann, Gewerbemuseum, Basel; Garald-Paris Clavel, Pierre Bernard, Alain Le
I. Graphic arts-History-19th century- W. A. L. Beeren, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; Quernec, Gert Dumbar,Joost Swarte, Paul Wearing,
Themes, motives. 2. Graphic arts-History-20th Dr. Marie-Luise Sternath, Graphische Sammlung Chermayeff & Geismar Associates, Louis Silver-
century- Themes, motives. 3. Commercial art- Albertina, Vienna; Lucio Santoro, Santoro Graphics, stein, Rudy Vanderlans, Michael R. Orr, Donna
History-19th century-Themes, motives. 4. Com-
London; Georgia Barnhill, American Antiquarian Bagley, Rachel Schreiber Levitan.
mercial art-History-20th century-Themes,
motives. I. Chwast, Seymour. Society, Worcester, Mass. ; Pamela Robertson, Hunt- Further thanks for their generous support:
II. Title. erian Art Gallery, University of Glasgow; Freda Bloomingdale's, New York; Fiorucci, New York;
NC998.2.H45 1988 741.6'09'034 88-3287 Matassa, Goldie Paley Gallery, Moore College of Victoria Guirado, Artemide Inc., New York; Keiko
ISBN 0- 8109- 1033-0 Art, Philadelphia; Elena Millie, Library of Congress, Kubota, Editor-in-Chief of Rikuyo-sha Publishing,
Washington, D. C. ; Alicyn Warren, Graphic Arts Inc., Tokyo; Diana Edkins, The Conde Nast Publica-
Copyright © 1988 Steven Heller, Seymour Chwast, Collection, Princeton University Library; Melody tions Inc., New York; Anne Su, Swatch Watch USA
and Pushpin Editions Ennis, Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Inc., New York; Tom Goss, Associate Editor of Print
Design, Providence; Thomas Grischkowsky, The magazine; Marisa Bub.one, Editor of Craph1s U.S ;
Published in 1988 by Harry N. Abrams,
Museum of Modern Art , New York ; Miss C. M. Charles I lelmken; Phil Meggs; Sharon Stern.
Incorporated, New York. All rights reserved. No
part of the contents of this book may be reproduced Parry, Walker Art G allery, National Museums and
without the written permission of the publishers Galleries on Merseyside, Liverpool ; Sheila Taylor,
London Transport Museum ; Bauhaus-Archiv
A Times Mirror Company Museum fur Gestaltung, Berlin; Memphis Milano,
Italy; Musee de la Publicite, Paris; The Everson
Printed and bound in Japan Museum of Art, Syracuse, N. Y.; Collec tion Michael
CONTENTS
....,
INTRODUcrrlON
All art rs at once surface and symbol. priate style, the designer can attract the teristics common to most products of each
Oscar Wilde, The Prdure of Dorian right audience for a product or idea. In period to justify the use of the Victorian or
Gray, 1891 1969 strategists in the reelection campaign Deco umbrella.
of New York Mayor John Lindsay com- In studying and analyzing style through
The humblest as well as the most exalted missioned Peter Max, then guru of the the ages, historians have developed a
ornaments may one day become elements in commercial youth style, to design a psy- system of classification that commonly
that revealing whole, the decorative style of chedelic poster to attract the newly focuses on painting, sculpture, architec-
an epoch. enfranch ised baby-boomers. Likewise, ture, furniture, and clothing and pays
Emile Galle, Nancy, France, 1900 in 1972, the promoters of George only scant attention to graphic design.
McGovern's presidential campaign used Nevertheless, the advertising, posters,
Style is the signal ofa civilization. Histo- a Larry Rivers poster to lure a similar packages, and typefaces of a period, as
rians can date any artr/act by its style, be it group; in the opposing camp, Nixon's well as its illustrations and cartoons, are
Ey,yptian, Grecian, Gothic, Renaissance, publicity men came up with their own equally, if not more, indicative of the
Colonial, American or Art Nouveau It is version of a youthful-looking poster. society in which they were produced. As
impossible for man to produce objects with- While the two presidential candidates mass communication, commercial art is
out reflecting the society of which he is a proffered distinctly different points of often a synthesis of other arts and technol-
part and the moment in history when the view, their posters thus had similar ogies, demystified and made accessible
product concept developed in his mind.. .. graphic styles. to a broad audience. In fact, a vernacular
In this sense everything produced by man Simply defined, graphic style is the sur- graphic style usually indicates popular
has style. face manifestation or the "look" of graphic acceptance of visual philosophies that
Sir Micha Black, design. This book is concerned with how were once inaccessible, avant-garde,
The Tiffany/ Wharton Lectures, 1975 that look has evolved and been reapplied or elitist.
since commercial art had its beginnings as The farther one backtracks in history,
a result of the revolutions in industry and the more singularly representative of its
commerce during the nineteenth century. epoch a style appears to be (partly, of
Yet, even with such a narrow focus, a course, because lack of documentation
tyle, in its most general sense, is a linear examination of style is still compli- tends to force generalization). Our rela-
lthough Queen Victoria the "more aberrant lusts of human nature:' ing and making them larger and blacker.
was crowned in 1837, the And, as if industrialization were the meta- These bastardizations, called Fat Face
style of architecture and phor for these perverted desires, Vic- types, became emblems of the Victorian
decorative arts that bears torians disguised the advancements of look. As wood engravers mastered their
her name actually began their engineers under decorative excesses medium, outline, whiteline, and shad-
in the 1820s and continued in England, that mimicked natural forms. owed letterforms gained greater exposure.
America, and much of Europe until 1900. Victorian taste was confused by the The Egyptian faces-squared serif letters
Victorian style was not the invention of belief that ornamentation and design were apparently influenced by the revival of
this iron-willed matriarch, but rather identical functions. The art critic and interest in that country after Napoleon's
the aesthetic response of a society to architect Augustus Welby Northmore excursions-joined the Fat Faces as one of
industrialization. Pugin criticized this idea: "How many the most original typographic forms of the
The Industrial Revolution was a mixed objects of ordinary use are rendered mon- century. Wood display types were popu-
blessing in Britain. Along with technologi- strous and ridiculous simply because the larized in Britain and abroad through fre-
cal revelations, it brought crime, urban artist, instead of seeking the most conve- quent use by commercial printers. And
blight, and the rise of a self-indulgent nient form and then decorating it, has the distinctive Victorian style of layout-
nouveau riche class. Between the end of embodied some extravagance to conceal extreme variations of type size and weight
the eighteenth century and the middle of the real purpose for which the object has crammed within a single headline-was
the nineteenth, the once profound English been made:' Another Victorian commen- an invention of expedience, allowing the
sense of social, civic, and artistic respon- tator proudly replied, "Disguise is the printer to utilize every inch of precious
sibility diminished. Wealth became in spice of life:' space.
effect the motivating cultural force. As the Although England is recognized as hav- By 1845 the high-speed steam press had
desire for unlimited comfort spread from ing originated the Victorian style, other so increased the volume of printed matter
the wealthy to the middle class, popular burgeoning commercial centers in Europe that many townscapes were blighted by
aesthetics were increasingly devoid of any and America felt its influence, which was bills and posters covering every inch of
critical standards. disseminated to all classes through the available wall space. Legislation was
With contemporary aesthetic standards printed mass media. The surpluses cre- enacted and taxes levied to counter these
in decline, Victorian artists turned to the ated by the Industrial Revolution led to graphic assaults, and advertising was
past for inspiration. Taking special delight increased competition in the marketplace, ultimately restricted to special areas. Yet
in medieval ruins, they saw parallels in the as sellers sought to educate buyers to the advertisers persisted and their trade
Gothic art and architecture of previous virtues of products and services. To this became a fact of life, eventually elevating
centuries to their present-day Christian end, advancements in the simultaneous with it the role of commercial art. By the
virtue. Yet the borrowed elements in Vic- printing of text and image fostered the 1860s, an influx of academically trained
torian style were completely detached new medium called advertising, which craftsmen and artisans had entered the
from their original culture. In Analysi's soon became the clarion for announcing commercial arts, with the result that
of Ornament (1856), Ralph Nicholson the rewards of the Victorian life-style. printed matter became more visually
assailed the revivalists, stating, ''A designer The standards governing the produc- appealing and more conceptually sophisti-
might ... produce a perfect arrangement tion of graphic arts, like those guiding the cated-some of it even quite beautiful.
of forms and colours, and yet show the other decorative arts, were few and un- The technological advances that ushered
grossest stupidity in its application:' equal to the strides made by technology. in the Victorian style continued to alter
The early Victorians reveled in ostenta- Victorian commercial printed matter was its look throughout the century: first , as
tion. After the Great Exhibition of 1851, characterized by the era's pervasive orna- chromolithography advanced in Germany
the taste for ornamentation based on his- mentation, often imitating contemporary and America in the 1870s, and then, at the
torical forms was passionately indulged. architectural eccentricities; images were close of the century, as the camera gave
Victorians believed that the corpulent dis- frequently crudely drawn and engraved; birth to photoengraving. Little by little,
play of material gain gratified the eye; typography was decidedly poor. If a com- designers came to rely on standardized
ornament appeased their need to have vis- positor lacked a lower-case g, for example, motifs and generic ornaments sold
ible evidence of their social status. The he would not hesitate to use an upside- through printing catalogues. Victorian
exaggerated embellishment of virtually down b in its place. woodcuts and engravings, and the slab-
every article in the Victorian home cre- Sometimes, however, a merchant's serif and Gothic types, ultimately gave
ated an atmosphere of unshakable comfort demand for distinctive announcements way to more sinuous, organic, and cur-
and contributed to the decidedly cluttered did result in truly original display faces, vilinear forms. Indeed, during the
look of the style. While ornament might composed of odd, and even ingenious, seventy-five years that Victorian style was
seem simply to have offered Victorians woodblock letters. Designers of new dis- dominant, it evolved from a nostalgic
status and aesthetic pleasure, one contem- play faces savaged the elegant eighteenth- Gothic revival into a precursor of
porary critic argued that it served to hide century Badoni and Didot types, distort- Modernism. 1·
V 'OR.lA'N
BRITISll
16
TWO EXTRA LECTURES Will lpen u • ~t. •ext A11p1t 24lh.
l 'fo otady un aimpu• with U...t 01 ..... nlhu io ma~citoJe or P'""tical otiht7, ft
WESLOAN REFORM
HB~D
CHAPELJ
IO'A'lt:'\T NqVA . .C, f"IUR" FIKl,O,
t ...-cbu u Ctl'IU.1 l' ts, OW' frllolll' m,n, "er dnli6, and our upa'bWliu. Pbreoology po.ta
lh• ftn~u al • •en1.t11f howleJIS" on the ... bole .,o1e
or hwoao iokrul-m.ter'.al. oocial,
HARTLEPOOL,
ro
1oldloctoal, and moral,-ttcry cooJ. ond i.. iocnue; ...,,. rril, lbd Ila mnedy . Ma11'a
morale m•f b. 1wp.,,.•I, hll ,;..,. ••pp........i, h11 rirtun d.Yelop«I, and Pbreoology alunn
ho.... ShoulJ 11 not lhmiloro, oomm&Ad yoor ftnt allealion.
TllBIE NIGn ONtf!
:-4
'f• ... •1• TllH4&y, ..... lf ... '"1Nl•y, Ampl Ufli, Nt~
zz ase:arm
98tL
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on
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WILL GIVE
Perfection of Character,
aad
Or tM Monl Nalnro of Mao, in<loding bia rolationo Lo ·Soeit17 to Deity.-A flltare
rtale-po•er ta eoolrol ond direct 011r pnipenaitit.0 aod ,..Woo~ opd to raial lemplationo-
bow to ""'!Dire mpect, monl pnidcnce ud eircum1poclio•-lhe Imo or ocientilo 1nterpnla·
tioo or f•ITR, Hon, arid CH4ll!TT.
PRIVATE EXAMIS..t.TI058.
p,,,r..,.iODal D<lior•tio... wilu Chatt. and full writ~ llt.O<tiptioo of Chancter. and ..i.
"""io rqt.,d t.o "WHAT TO DO," or \ho moot oppn>pri&le oe<ufl"lioo11od JIOrouiu U.
Hie. 71.iu. bo ... lo oorniet \hem; Health, ho• ta -·~ a11d ,.(Ai.
ii; the Maoo~Oi<O t or
r.llildru , Self.i_a,pre<emtnt, M.m.gr, &..., Ji•on daring tbo Ja7 r. pri..ta ~D roon»
or lhe Trmporao,. II all PtTMD> d..lrlug the oonietti or MrMro. FOWL.Ii:& At WKl.I..~ .
oboald ..JI ""111, u llioir alAy io ll1nl• : • · · rmio1t" lOOD, ao<I ao olhtr oppoman1ty ma1
Dot ntt1Jf
:r ~r~~ ~.~- .
OCTOBER NOVEMBER
11
, ~1 ~ .Su - 7 H21 2R.
M I I'! 1522 29
T fi I'! 19 \!G ' I'
2 ~ 16 23 30
w Fi l.'S2027 .. w 310 17 2• ..
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FI !'i 15 :!2 29 F 6 12 19 26
s 2 !.l 16 :..!:J ;jQ S G132U27
HORTl~~Elj~~AL~~91ETY. 1
SHOW ·'",
'rJ'
~ I.' FLOWERS, FRUIT, AND VKGEIABLE!i :r""'
J
l
LEICESTER ROAD FIELD.
I,• s I l \ '·.
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ur
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SIXPl N(.'f
...
:r
ll 14
VICTORIAN
BRITISH
19
16
AMERICAN
October l, 1884
22. Designer unknown. The New York Fashion
Bazar Magazine cover, September 1885
23. E. N. Blue. Puck. Magazine cover, March
23, 1887
20
21 22
VOI XXI Na ~··· NEW YORK. MARCH 23, 1887. PRICE. TEN CENT~
--.__../
A CO NTRAST .
\ • 'lt 1 /lt"l:r fJ i "ll; , I' \lr W \\ lu: .. I J ~ r1
21
23
NE IV YORK
25 26
AND
3ALERATU3
28
VICTORIAN
AMERICAN
29
With the swing toward consumerism in America
after the Civil War, the need to educate the pub-
lic concerning a variety of new products caused a
shift in emphasis from simple announcements to
full-blown "advertisements." The same techno-
logical advances that had originally created the
market surpluses and the need to compete in
business also provided new economical printing
methods. Chromolithography was first used for
trade cards in 1840 and became a truly efficient
process by the 1870s; it soon proved a formidable
means of seizing viewer attention. Since advertis-
ing agents were more brokers of space than cre-
ative decision-makers, the owners of small
companies themselves determined early Vic-
torian advertising images on the basis of what ·
they instinctively thought would be effective.
The most popular themes included nationalism,
patriotism, progress, and work as well as comic
vignettes of all kinds. Printing firms, like Julius
Bien Co., Currier and Ives, and Louis Prang and
Company, eventually assumed a creative role in
conceiving and producing custom and stock cuts
and chromos for trade cards, song sheets, pack-
aging, posters, and greeting cards.
24. Designer unknown. Heinz Sweet Pickles_
Trade card, c. 1887
25. Designer unknown. Ring de Ban;o Sheet
music cover, 1851
26. Designer unknown. Cleveland's Baking
Powder. Trade card, c. 1886
27. Designer unknown. Soapine. Trade card,
c.1896
28. Designer unknown. Arm & Hammer.
Trade card, c. 1880
29. Designer unknown. Muzzy's Starch Trade
card, 1882
30. Designer unknown. Rose Leaf Trade card,
1865
31. Designer unknown. Vinegar Bitters Alma-
nac. Book cover, 1874
32. Designer unknown. Best in the World
Superzor Silk. Trade card, c. 1880
33. Designer unknown. Ivory Soap. Packaging,
c. 1895
2
32
VHN'O JAlll I
' "' .._
.~
.
AMERICAN
J>AJRof TJGERS.
,......... .... ........... . -
,_,~"-'·...,-"" --
LAMA.
h
f ~--- ' .
.
}4
24
r.,, PA Y N "~•
NAUCHTO N'S
•
& MCNAUG/{fi
. . . . . . . . . "'" ,.......... _.. . . . . 0.}/'_
ALDANY,N.Y. J
1~r,0~~~:,~~~;~~~=:~• I~:~.~'
4/V~~ ~--
~~ PAY~ ~
NAUCHTON'S
IDENDISH.
•
F.! TRA FHIE cur
J A MES RIVER
2~
VICTORIAN
COCK R0 BI~
27
VHJ'l 0 IAN 1' n a 11 G frani.: 'i. Ill Cl.: lll.
R OCHEFORT
... _.. A
FRENCH
involved the marriage of text and image and sup- "'•ll> •ll"'I"~' J~ '·"""''°· •]'-'"'
J'.:umiur h4'b~t.1.
f <1r•·111'ill~> ~ 111.inf!•'• 111~> r.1.,..ili= C'lh:"I~.
plied the basis for French Art Nouveau. ,\ l .fl't. 111
42
.I.
8 .
L'CEIL
Rtu~ , I\i11oli.ll1u~
n'lalher. ·'f HP t'Ptf P d11 Bou '1oi ru •.
1'!. 1~·
44
le CRUCHO.N. 5r._Yi CRUCHON. lr. 75
1
Boulevard ~la Y'!lle!te
1
a!~ ~ fa 111 S')faf'tm
Che tendre crorpts,and the vonge sonne
"
Flath in tht Ram his half\? cours vronnt,
Find Sm.!lC fowelrn maltm melod'!'e,
Chat slcpm al the n'!'ght with open C'!'e.
So prilterh hrm n.lture in hir cougcs;
Channt longm f'clh to goon on pilgl'imagts,
Find palmere e f'ortosehrn straunge srrondts,
l:o fcmc halw'.-r., howthc in son dry londes;
Find apcciaU·v. rrom ocry ahirca tndc
Of €ngdond, to Cauntcrburv th(J wend<,
l:ht hool'!' blieful martir fur to ache,
l:hat hem hath holpm whan that thev Wfl'f
atcltt.
fll. that in that srnon on a cU)',
In Southwtrlt at the t:.ab.J.rd a&
l 1.1'!',
~d)' to wmdm on mv pilgrym-
age
l:o Caunttrbury with ful d C'l>Out
coragc, ,
Flt nvgM were comt into that hostdryc
met nrne and twenrv in a compaignv<,
Of aondry f'cllt, by avmtur< )'l'allc
ln felawcshipc , and pilgrim ea Wtrc the)' all<,
l:hat toward Caunttrbur)' woldm rvdc.
ARTS AND OR.ArTS
32
ARTS AND CRAFTS
BRITISH
56
33
54
All'l'l:I AND CRAl"l'H
BRITISH
34
35
6
ARTS A.ND CR.JLFTS
BRITISH
71
37
70
K..E....E...-P "T'H E...
•
76. Walter Crane. Arts and Crafts Magazine
cover, April 1893. Published by the Art Worker's
Guild, Philadelphia
77 . Designer unknown. Original designs used
for the stenciling of wall s and decoration, c. 1902.
From The Craftsman
75
77
40
78. Henri de 1oulouse-Lautrec. Reine de Joie. Poster, 1892. The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Rodj.\c:rs
ART NOUVEAU
/.oreated madness, linear hysteria, lous middle-class concerns. In fact, Art when Octave Maus established the Cercle
!'RENCH BELGIAN
81
AH · MRCKM,lJ.~DO,ARtBR.
0 lllLEN . SU,,.,,. VSIDC ,OAPINCTOl'I, WE"'T
79
42
82
85
43
87
44
HH
ART NOlJVEAlJ
FRENCH / BELGIAN
16
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97
AU.T N O UVE AU
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ART NOUV .EAU
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ART NOUVEAU
JUGENDSTIL
Ill
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53
114 115
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120
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ART NOUVEAU
JUGENDSTIL
57
126
All'l' NOUVEA U
GLASGOW STYLE
1IVEKFCDL,A(Al)cl"\Y C)f
architects also fascinated the Austrian Seces-
sionists, who found it an exciting alternative to
floreated abstraction.
127. Charles Rennie Mackintosh. Clock, with
six columns and domino figures, 1917-19. Cour-
tesy Chris Mullen
128. Charles Rennie Mack intosh. High-
ARl7: flK)T AN NVAL
E-XH Ir?JTITON 1901 I
backed ladder-back chair, 1902
129. M. G Lightfoot. Midsummer Night's
Dream. Book cover, date unknown. National
Museums and Galleries on Merseyside, Walker
Art Gallery, Liverpool
130.]. Herbert MacNair. Liverpool Academy
of Arts. Poster, 1901. Merseyside County Art
Galleries, Liverpool
131.]. Herbert McNair and Margaret and
Frances Macdonald. Glasgow Institute of the Fine
Arts. Poster, 1895. Library of Congress, Washing-
ton , D.C. Poster Collection
132. Jessie M. King. The Arcadian. Restaurant
announcement, date unknown. Hunterian Art
Gallery, University of Glasgow
133. Charles Rennie Mackintosh. Stylized
Flowers and Checkerwork. Textile design, 1920.
Hunterian Art Gallery, University of Glasgow,
Mackintosh Collection
134. Charles Rennie Mackintosh. Tulip Lattice.
Textile design, date unknown. Hunterian Art
Gallery, University of Glasgow, Mackintosh
Collection
1•1
58 I127 128 DO
~ l(A~ )Ti\ttT I IADf\l))IUN fRlt
OPEN) 14~0(ToBfR. (~)[) 2~ NOVEt\5tR
132
133
59
!JI 134
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ART NOUVEAU
VIENNA SECESSION
I
During the 1890s, the visual arts in Vienna were
dominated by conservative academicians whose
schools and societies refused to exhibit the new
developments in European plastic and appl ie<l
arts, Frustrated by unsuccessful attempts to
expand the boundaries of their art and inspired
by the Munich Secession's break with tradition, a
group of young architects, painters, and graphic
artists, including Josef Hoffmann, Joseph
Olbrich, Gustav Klimt , and Koloman Moser in
1897 foun9ed the Vereinigung Bildender
Ki.instler Osterreichs, better known as the
136 Vienna Secession. As evidenced in their journal,
Ver Sacrum (Sacred Spring), the language of
Sezessionstil was akin to that of Jugendstil with
added personal touches of Pre-Raphaelitism, the
antique, and the classical. Yet, as the designs of
many of its exhibition posters show, certain
members of the Secession rejected naturalistic
tendencies in favor of Otto Wagner's purist
straight 1ine and Hoffmann's simplified geome-
try. In this regard, their work prefigured the
functionalism of future Modernists.
U5, Ferdinand Andri. Secession . Exhibition
poster, date unknown. Collection Barry Fried -
man Ltd., New York
136. Ferdinand H adler. \i>r Sacrum. Exhibi-
tion poster, 1904. Kunstgewerhemuseum, Zurich
137. Koloman Moser. Ver Sacrum. Magazine
cover, 1899
138, Koloman Moser. Ver Sacrum. Page, 1899
139. Designers unknown. Ver Sacrum. Adver-
tisement page, 1899
140. Koloman Moser. Ver Sacrum. Magazine
cover, 1899
138
139 140
61
ART NOUVEAU
VIENNA SECESSION
''
Despite their affinities with other contemporary
styles, the Secessionists reaffirmed their artistic
independence in their first issue of Ver Sacrum:
'''
"\'qe desire an art not enslaved to foreigners.
.. The art from abroad should act upon us as an
incentive to reflect upon ou rselves; we want to
recognize it, admi re it, if it deserves our admira·
tion; the only thing we don't want to do is imitate
It." True to this statement, the Secessionist
' '''
graphic style quickly evolved a distinctive per·
sonality, from the elegant classicism of Klimt's
first exhibition poster to the group's unprece-
dented feats of typographic artistry.
141.Joseph Maria Olbrich. Secession. Cata·
logue cover showing the Secession Exhibition
building, 1898-99. Collection Galerie Pabst,
Munich
142. Alfred Roller. Sixteenth Vienna Secession.
Exhibition poster, 1903 . Kunstgewerbemuseum ,
Zurich
143 . Koloman Moser. Thirteenth Vienna Seces·
''
-- '
sion. Exhibition poster, 1902. Graphische Samm-
liJlll&&llllUll
-·••11
lung Albertina, Vienna
14..J. Koloman Moser. Frommes Kalendar.
Poster, 1899. Collection Barry Friedman Ltd. ,
New York
145. Ferdinand Andri. JOth Exhib1iion of
Vienna Secession. Poster, c. 1901. Collection
Reinhold Brown Gallery, New York
146. Gustav Klimt. I. KunstaustellungSeces- llll:IUlll•
-
11111•1. .
-
sion. Poster for the first Vienna Secession exhi·
bition (before censorship), c. 1901. Courtesy
Posters Please, Inc., New York
• •
HEAAAl.J.., 0AHR
r (' , .·
- , j ,J-.J
WIEl.l(R· VtRll'IC.
141
62
144
145
63
148 149
The
14 7
Mi d s u l n rn ( r
Ho l i. d a y Nu n1 b c r-.
August.
150 151
64
ART NOUVEAU
AMERICAN
A
By 1890, a new genre of advertising known as the
art poster began to flower in America. Distinct
from the typographically cluttered bills of the
Victorian era, these were colorful, economically
rendereJ poslers usually sponsored by a publish·
ing house to advertise a special issue of a maga·
zinc or newspaper or a new book. The maste r
posterist Edward Penfield wrote, "I think the
American Poster has opened a new school whose
aim is simplicity and good composition." While
Harper's used Penfield exclusively, other pub-
lishers employed such artists as Will Carqueville,
Frank Hazenplug, Louis Rhead, and Maxfield
Parrish. The firm of Stone and Kimball, Amer·
ican publishers of 1he English arts journal
1he Yellow Book, commissioned one poster
- ..........
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·:--~
Purity, Lustre, and WearingQuality 153. Louis Rhead . Harper's Bazar. Cover and
back cover, 1894. Library of Congress, Washing·
.,,.,..-..... . . _,.,,........-'"'"_.,..._ ton, D. C. Poste r Collection
....1..,...,_n, .......
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154. Arthur Dow. Modem Art. Poster for a
book published by Louis Prang , 1895. Library of
1•·11 !'ll'th)-'> ~ f f+l \>fl .. ,MH" nA Congress, Washing1on, D.C. Poster Collection
l"lll~M\lflUIJllU'"'"'k mot.lln
1~3
65
154
AR.'l' .NO t1 !Tl!AU ' r~ I 1-1HJ '1:t' rH}"1A I Iii
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AMERICAN
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'166
69
A.R.'r NOUV\!AU
A
ITALIAN
~J?m©llO
be entirely excluded. Italian Art Nouveau was
pardy a geographical phenomenon: the closer a
region was to Austria, the greater the Viennese
influence and the more playful its symbolic
motifs. The Romantic poet and politician
Gabriele D:-\nnunzio evolved a form of literary rs~JEvrsltoAVJE~
Art Nouveau, which he later developed into the
reactionary Novocento Style, a celebration of
Roman virtues and modernistic design. The
major practitioners of Italian Art Nouveau are no
~§lliJ~
less imaginative. Giovanni Mataloni and Mar-
cello Dudovich created eye-catching advertising lYCE DOPPIA 36GRAMMID E •1
II
with their personal yet contemporary styles.
Leonetto Cappiello, who earned his fame in Italy
and France, produced hundreds of exuberant
MEIXC:ONSVM0 PElROi!OJJr:01RA ,
lithographic posters and blended both Art
Nouveau and An Deco in his style.
DI PETRO LIO· 50CANDEll!
1
169. Giovanni Mataloni. lncandescenza Lam-
pada con Reticella a Petrolio. Poster for oil lamps / SENZA FVMO LVCE FISSA !.
with incandescent mandes, 1896. The Mitchell
Wolfson Jr. Collection of Decorative and Propa- j SENZA ODORE IYCE BRll!ANTE '
ganda Arts, Miami . :I
170. Leonetto Cappiello. Livorno, Stagione
Balneare. Poster for a summer resort, 1901. The
ADAITAB I LE A ACCENSIONE '
Mitchell WolfsonJr. Collection of Decorative
and Propaganda Arts, Miami
OVAIYNOVE FACILISSIMA
171. Marcello Dudovich. Rassegna Tecnica
dell'faposiz.ione lnternaz.ionale di Milano 1906. LAMPADA·
lllNI
4 ORE01LVCE
Poster, 1906. The Mitchell Wolfson Jr. Collection
·~96' B RVC IA CON 10 CENJESIM
1
of Decorative and Propaganda Arts, Miami
172. Designer unknown. Fisso /'Idea. Poster
for an archery competition, 1911. The Mitchell
Wolfson Jr. Collection of Decorative and Propa-
PETR0 1!9C0 MVNE
ganda Arts, Miami
169
70
7.
172
LYCEQM
DON
UIXOTE
173. The BeggarstaffBrothers (James Pryde and William N1eholson). Don Qu1xote. Poster, 1896
i/2
EARLY MODERN
portin9 News
EARLY MODERN
PLAKATSTIL
ll
A loyal servant of business before the turn of the
century, the poster reached its creative and com-
municative peak between 1900 and 1930. Thanks
to communications directors like Peter Behrens
at AEG, designer and industry became happily
ensconced in a mutually beneficial relationship.
Artists, printers, and publishers united to raise
178
the poster to a high industrial art. To further this
177
end, Dr. Hans Sachs founded the Friends of the
Poster Society and its monthly organ, Das Plakat,
which showcased the work of significant up-and-
coming German posterists. Although other
influential journals and annuals were published
in Germany, Europe, and the United States, Das
Plakat, with its finely printed covers, tip-ins, and
fold-outs, gave its readers the most striking di s~
play of contemporary work. The Munich artist
Ludwig Hohlwein, whose work evinced a lively
yet tasteful use of type and image, was among the
most important proponents of Plakatstil (poster
style) worldwide.
174. Ludwig Hohlwein. Marco Polo Tee.
Poster, 1910. Collection Reinhold Brown Gal-
lery, New York
175. Ludwig Hohlwein. Hermann Scherrer.
Poster, 1907. Collection Reinhold Brown Gal-
lery, New York
176.]. D. Smith. The Complete Sporting News,
The New York Times. Car card, 1925 . Courtesy
Fairleigh Dickinson University, Madison, N.J.
177. Walter Kampmann. Das Plakat. Magazine
cover, 1921
178. Walter Schnackenberg. Das Plakat. Maga-
zine cover, 1921
179. Pirchan. Mitteilun[!.en des U.reins
Deutscher Reklame/achleute. Poster, 1913.
Courtesy Fairleigh Dickinson University,
Madison,N.J.
180. Peter Behrens. AEG (All[!,emeine Elek-
trixitats-Gesellscha/t). Trademark, 1908
75
EAltLY MODEll.N
PLAKATSTIL
181
6
18l
"!'I
'l/1llAA8
NEiii J 77
186
EARLY MODERN
PLAKATSTIL
189
79
190
I:Alt.LY MODI:JLN
A
WIENER WERKSTATTE
194 195
~o
196
197
81
199. Otto Dix. Der Krieg. Book cover, c. 1918. Courtesy Ex Libris, New York
:2
EXPRESSION ISM
n the late nineteenth century, a new yield an inner, imaginative expression defeat, with the abdication of the kaiser
I
internationalism based on the belief rather than an impression. Rejecting com- and the outset of the 1918 German revolu-
that man had the ability to solve plete abstraction, they were rooted in the tion, many Expressionists became activ-
social problems through rational past by their emphasis on the human fig- ists, allying themselves with left-wing
effort linked philosophers, scien- ure and their reliance on a humanistic parties to produce agitational posters,
tists, and artists throughout Europe. Romanticism. Yet, at the same time, origi- publications, and graphics. The Expres-
Although Expressionism was born in nality was a compulsion for them. Within sionist style defended the revolution,
Kaiser Wilhelm's Imperial Germany in the different traits of each individual's art, made calls to work and against strike-
1905, there was nothing particularly they generally favored Gothic expression breaking, and even combated Bolshevism.
German or imperial about it. While and ignored the tenets of classical beauty, In 1918, Dr. Adolph Behne, founder of the
indebted to the Nordic tradition, its unor- for to them pure expression had little to Arbeitsrat fur Kunst (Labor Office for
thodox visual language was more accu- do with beauty. With hurricane-like Art), wrote about this new propagandistic
rately a synthesis of pan-European trends: speed, their periodicals, like the Berlin- trend: "They do not advertise for a firm
Jugendstil's black-and-white linear pat- based Der Sturm (The Storm), promul- but for an idea. They do not address
terning, Impressionism's new scientific gated Expressionist ideas among the inter- themselves to a special public but to every
theories of vision, Fauvism's violent color national arts community. sort of public. ... That is why they need to
palette, Van Gogh's and Gauguin's emo- The second major Expressionist group, use new forms .... " A month after the
tionality, Russian mysticism and spiri- Der Blaue Reiter (The Blue Rider), was November revolution, the November-
tualism, and developments in Western founded in 1912. Its leading proponents, gruppe-including, among others,
science at the beginning of the new cen- the Russian Wassily Kandinsky and the Pechstein, Oskar Kokoschka, Erich Men-
tury. A personal calligraphy, based on an Munich-born Franz Marc, cultivated the delsohn, Otto Dix, and George Grosz-
inner search for symbolism, replaced tired abstract as a universal source of symbols. issued a battle call: "The future of art and
artistic conventions and soon emerged These "abstract" Expressionists broke the gravity of recent days compell us revo-
as a potent graphic art in Germany and with optical reality in order to find a psy- lutionaries of the spirit (Cubists, Expres-
abroad. chological basis for aesthetic pleasure. sionists and Futurists) to union .... "
German Expressionism did not begin Their 1912 periodical, Der Blaue Reiter Although similar groups sprang up
as an applied arts movement, nor was it Almanach, championed the birth of a new throughout Germany, feuds among paci-
all ied with the industrial culture develop- spiritual epoch after the inevitable decline fist, socialist, communist, and liberal fac-
ing in Germany-although Expressionist of nineteenth-century materialism. tions made unity difficult.
architecture, film, theater, book illustra- Expressionism soon developed into a The end of Expressionism came
tion, and advertising design did eventually distinctive, primitive visual language. Its between 1920 and 1922. In the wake of the
emerge. It began as a group of idealistic stark woodcuts and lithographs using very doomed Weimar Republic, the flame of
young men and women, previously few but violent colors were characterized, political passion was extinguished. For
excluded from the German arts establish- according to the historian Helmut artists, the incompatibility of their wishes
ment, became caught up in an interna- Rademacher, by "deformations, height- and the political reality caused disenchant-
tional youth movement. T he first group of ened intensity of expression and the treat- ment with activism. It was also inevitable
Expressionists, called D ie Bri.icke (The ment of reactions to psychic acts by an that the excitement of the novel and the
Bridge), formed in 1905; its members had ecstatic pathos .... " Influenced by the unprecedented, which had given rise to
studied architecture together at the dominant style of caricature in acerbic German Expressionism, should lose its
Kunstgewerbeschule (arts and crafts satire magazines like Simplicissimus and attraction once all facets of the style had
school) in Dresden. Its most notable par- Jugend, Expressionists distorted and elon- been developed. A whole graphic reper-
ticipants-including Erich H eckel, Ernst gated human figures and landscapes to toire of Expressionist forms, types, and
Ludwig Kirchner, Max Pechstein, Karl create a mood of excitement within out- color applications, created in the heat of
Schmidt-Rottluff, and Emil Nolde- lined and shaded forms. When employed feeling, was left to those who irresponsibly
embraced the idea that individualism was as book or periodical illustrations, their applied it to products as a stylistic veneer.
essential to artistic renewal. But being images were rarely literal representations An almost endless flood of artificial
accustomed to the spiritual togetherness of texts but, rather, subjective evocations Expressionism debilitated the movement.
common in German universities at the of an essence. With the coming to power of Adolf Hitler
time, they united into a brotherhood for Before World War I, the urge for social in 1933, Expressionist artists were
strength against a hostile world. change was expressed in largely meta- denounced as degenerate, as "artistic pol-
Bri.icke artists believed painting had a physical terms; political or cultural criti- lution," and their legacy expunged from
greater value than architecture in the hier- cism was merely implied. During the war, memory. Yet, even after World War II,
archy of social usefulness. These "figura- some artists took prowar, nationalist posi- Expressionist philosophy and graphic style
tive" Expressionists turned away from tions, while others promulgated pacifist continued to dramatically influence the
objective reality so that their art might and cautionary messages. After Germany's practice of art and design. 83
9P Sich mit Bla11 e,.f\ill~
NI~ Biiscli~ "ndBaume du Sl/'01112 i:
o~rwq,itiod,nttordennhwill~
L~ic.hieG'esmwad~r Wolktn
/Vv'\ "'Wtiue S2~~ldi<lit
D;e G"tsla&lduHimmtliJahirJ'tJ'
z,r~thtn in YJind unJ Lidi~
203
n• .ac ·4a
lfunSTlERGRUPFE BRu[KE
, _ d __ ,
EXPRESSIONISM
A~
GERMAN
205
DER STURM
WOCHENSCHR IFT FOR KULTUR UND DIE KUNSTE
GERMAN
86
212
21}
8i
2 14 2 15
216. Herbert Bayer. Sec1io11 Allemande. Poster, 1930. Staatliche Musecn Preussischer Kulturbesitz, West Berlin , Kumihibliothek
MODERN
R
s pervasive as their influ- break with reliance upon nature for sub- new products had no precedents in the
ence is today, Modernist ject matter and the complete rejection of decorative arts of the past. In theory at
art and design were, from decorative tendencies. As such, Cubism least, the masses, not the bourgeoisie,
the outset, never com- was despised by the bourgeoisie, yet even- became the primary consumer.
pletely accepted by the tually its surface mannerisms were bor- The Modernist style was perhaps most
majority. The early Modernists encoun- rowed by the day's leading fashion immediately recognizable in a multitude
tered opposition from those believing stylists. The Cubist practice of integrat- of graphic communications: posters, bro-
their philosophies subversive, elitist, or ing random, collaged letterforms into chures, books, handbills, and letterheads.
both. What we call the Modernist era- paintings significantly influenced the The first substantial change occurred
roughly between 1908 (from the beg in- free-form typography of subsequent in typography. The classical symmetrical
nings of Cubism) to 1933 (when Hitler movements. arrangements first erupted into Cubist,
came to power)-was a time of profound Futurism, originally formulated by the Futurist, and Dadaist typographic collage
political, social, and cultural turmoil Italian poet F. T. Marinetti in 1908, was images, then evolved into the more disci-
throughout the world. Various art forms , the first to raise the Modernist banner plined, yet decidedly revolutionary, asym-
from architecture to film to typography, on an international platform. This noisy metrical New Typography. Originating
posed challenges to social systems made proclamation of the Italian avant-garde in Soviet Russia and Germany, the New
obsolete by rapidly changing machine age curiously wed its theories of dynamic Typography was quickly adopted in other
technologies. The different Modernist Modernism to militant patriotism. Being centers of avant-garde activity, including
groups comprised activists who sought at once revolutionary and traditional, Holland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, and
both to free art from its bourgeois orna- Futurism revealed the inconsistencies of Poland, and was finally codified into a
mental superstructure and to influ- living equally for the present and the total revision of the rules of traditional
ence the politics of contemporary life. future. Suprematism, developed by the commercial layout. Its principles were
Although the Futurist label was applied to Russian writer and painter Kasimir promulgated worldwide in philosophical
only the Italians and the Russians, at the Malevich in 1913, synthesized Cubism and essays and technical manuals by El
heart of the entire Modernist spirit was a Futurism into an early geometric abstrac- Lissitzky, Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, Paul
forward-looking-and decidedly utopian tion and added a metaphysical compo- Renner, and its most devout (and rigid )
-ethic. The most emblematic typeface of nent. Suprematism found an opponent in adherent, Jan Tschichold. To these design-
the age was even christened Futura. Vladimir Tatlin's Constructivism, which ers the rules of the old typography, prac-
The machine was the most cogent sym- sought to encompass all human spiritual, ticed since the age of Gutenberg, violated
bol of the Modernists' glorified, often sen- cognitive, and material activity. Originat- the criterion of fitness for purpose in
timentalized, future; as Fernand Leger ing in 1916 in Zurich and later continuing design.
said, "The machine has altered the habitu- in Berlin, Dada was decidedly antiart and The Polish advertising designer and
al look of things." To smash the old visual politically active. The Dutch De Stijl painter H enryk Berlewi, who formed the
language and create a new one were the group, founded in 1917 by Theo van Group of Abstract Constructive Art,
professed aims of the Modernist artist- Doesburg, Piet Mondrian, and others, wrote that advertising design "must rest
aims expressed through abstract painting detached itself from Expressionist ex- on the same principles as prevail in mod-
and sculpture, functional architecture, cesses in favor of a universal harmony ern industrial production." Logically,
austere furnishings, and asymmetrical devoid of emotional overtones therefore, photography replaced realistic,
typography. The media were formidable Although the plastic arts figured promi- decorative, or otherwise sentimentalized
tools: Modernism was propagated by nently in these movements, the applied illustration. Photomontage, a completely
highly publicized demonstrations and arts were the ones to reach the broadest mechanistic means of illustration, became
exhibitions as well as through numerous constituency. The first Modernist battles, an effective propaganda weapon and the
manifestos reprinted in avant-garde peri- like the progressive ones at the turn of the most popular tool of the new graphic
odicals, almanacs, and newspapers, all century, were waged against the i ndus- design. When used together, asymmetrical
having relatively wide distributions. The trialists, who controlled public taste and typography, geometric layout, and photo-
Modernist movement was not a monolith used it for their own functions and inter- graph ic illustration defined the radical
but rather a confluence of disparate ests. A proper relationship between art new form language of Modernist design .
groups and individuals who intersected at and industry, Modernists believed, would Yet, as initial resistance to this powerful
times to share ideas. While they all con- dispel the hegemony of the industrialist. aesthetic turned into acceptance by com-
curred with the desire to smash academic Through arts and crafts workshops in mercial type foundries, printing firms,
aestheticism, they rarely could reach con- design schools such as the Bauhaus at and advertising agencies, the honest Mod-
sensus on the means to do so. Weimar and the Vkhutemas in Moscow, ernist characteristics were appropriated
Cubism was the seminal experiment on students were encouraged to produce util- into Moderne, a bastardization of hoth
which the form languages of the other itarian materials fit for everyday use. the functional and the decorative
movements were built. It marked the final Reduced to their functional essence, these ~pro~h m
MODl'.:ltN
.... -
. ... _,..........
.. - · ·~ ..
. .
A
FUTU RISM
J~~~~·L0.: '~::~~~X;'..~A~~:~~00~~::2~~~~i~:,!~·r~;~~~~:ll;xr~:Z~·:~:~~~~;:~~~~~~~~?~~·~:;~
1
Jlljjolln ~•onk•p
221. Filippo T. Marinetti. Zang Tumb Tumb ••l•h 'J' •ll p••PK ~ 1~~A.~
Book cover, 1912. Courtesy Ex Libris, New York
222. Filippo T. Marinetti. Dizionario Aereo.
Book cover, date unknown. Courtesy Ex Libris,
New York MARIN~TTI, ,,.,aJ,beca - Mont.a.gne • Vallate • Strada x Joflre
21 8 219
90
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l='T. MAIHNE11"1
93
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_ _ _ _. . . DENTE
DEPERO• ASSlLLANTll
e LA SUA ARTE. <0me
232
230
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234
2JJ 235
95
96
M ODERN
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Soaring to Success !
DAILY HERALD
- the Early Bird.
97
238
MODERN
WORDEN
"'."'
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ORA
TEN
CONSTRUC TIVISM
••
including Cubo-Futurism, Rayonnism, and the ....
mystical, nonobjective Suprematism of Kasimir . o•
Malcvich. Developed by Vladimir Tatlin,
Constructivism became an early Soviet youth
movement, an artistic outlook that aimed to
encompass the whole spiritual, cognitive, and
material activity of man. By declaring themselves
for the revolution, Constructivists expected to
be able to introduce their own programs for the
future. Lazar El Lissitzky sought to create a mod-
ern art that would take the viewer out of the tra-
ditional passive role and make him an active
spectator. In fact, throughout the course of
Russian art history (particularly with Russian
Orthodox religious iconography), there runs a
strong belief that art must have some redeeming
social purpose, a purpose to be achieved by elic-
iting certain physical responses. Lissitzky's civil-
war-era poster Beat the Whites with the Red z
~dge not only tried to convince viewers of the
legitimacy of the Bolshevik cause; it wanted
them to vigorously strive for revolution. Under
the influence of Suprematism, Lissitzky wrote
that the square was "tl1e >ource of all creative
expression." His children's book Of Two Squares
was a fable about the cooperation of a black and
red square in dispersing chaos and establishing a
new order.
239. El Lissitzky. Of Two Squares. Cover (top
left) and pages from a children's book about the
Russian Revolution and the triumph of Bolshe-
vism, Dutch De Stijl Edition, 1922
240. El Lissitzky. Beat the Whites with the Red
Wedge. Poster, 1920. Courtesy Szymon Bojko
+
.
w
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2J9
98
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240
MOO.Clt..N
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244
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246
MODERN
CONSTRUCTIVISM
TPEXrDPHDE
domestic design. What they called Productivism
PACK~nA
was their attempt to manufacture materials for
everyday use-textiles, dishware, clothing, fur-
niture, and so on-in a direct and efficient man-
ner. Rodchenko, Stepanova, and others made
advertising for commercial enterprises, like the
GUM department store, as well as for theatrical
and cultural events. Together with Mayakovsky,
Rodchenko also formed an advertising partner-
ship that created propaganda for nationalized
commerce, education, and services. Calling
themselves "advertising constructors," Maya-
kovsky wrote the poems and slogans and
Rodchenko designed images that caught the eye
with their strong geometry, bright color, and
bold lettering.
247. Alexander Rodchenko. Rezinotrest
Poster for a rubber conglomerate, 1923. Cour-
tesy Szymon Bojko
248. Alexander Rodchenko. Three Mountains
Beer Poster, 1923. Courtesy Ex Libris, New York
249. Alexander Rodchenko. Baby Dummies.
Poster for the Rubber Trust promoting baby
pacifiers, 1923. Courtesy Ex Libris, New York
250. Alexander Rodchenko. Rezinotrest.
Poster promoting the production of galoshes for
export, 1923. Courtesy Ex Libris, New York
251. Designer unknown. Poster urging Soviet 247 248
citizens to become stockholders, 1923. Courtesy
Ex Libris, New York
252. Varvara Stepanova. Death of Tarelkin.
Theater poster, 1922. Courtesy Szymon Bojko
253. Alexander Rodchenko. Poster advertis-
ing Leningrad Publishing House, 1925. Courtesy
PElMHDTPECT
InUIHTHMK B aa•llb M cnRKDTb
Ex Libris, New York
nPDDRIDTCJI ee3ne
102
249 2~0
rr-.r Hllln. ,., .....
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252 253
MJA. fUWTHI"!< nPOC.AltU;•..111
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l4
256
MODERN
I
I
· BO
•
CONSTRUCTIVISM
261
lC
MOD£RN
CONSTRUCTIVISM
262 266
267 268
10;
ll'JODI:ltN
CONSTRUCTIVISM
270
Constructivism's theory and style were exported
to I:.urope th rough manifestos , periodicals, and
the: personal efforts of its leading proponents.
Lissitsky, fo r example, spent a good deal of time
with Kurt Schwitters in Hanover, working on
the Dada pcrtodical, Mm. and with Uya Ehren-
burg in Berlin, publishing the Constructivist
journal, Ohjel In 1922 the Polish painter and
designer H t:nryk Bt:rlewi was inspired to create
his abstract Mechano-Faktura (mechanical art)
constructions after hearing Lissitzky lecture
in Warsaw. Two years later, he co-founded
Reklama -Mechano, an advertising agt:ncy whose
work came to best represent Polish Construc-
tivism. The Czech poet and artist Karel Teige
adapted the Constructivist language to the needs
of his nation's avant-garde. In Belgium, Fred
Deltro produced a series of caricatures of the
ruling class that were based on Constructivist-
inspirt:d gt:0metry. The cover for the Dutch pro-
fessional advertising magazine, De Reklame,
shows how a typical Lissitzky-like design can be
used simply as a decorative motif.
270. Designer unknown. De Recl.ame. Cover
of a Dutch advertising magazine, 1926. Courtesy
Fairleigh Dickinson University, Madison, N.J.
271 Juryi Roshkov. Photomontage for a
Vladimir Mayakovsky poem, 1925
272. Henryk Berlewi. Compos11io11 in Red and
Block (Mechano-Faktura Compositions). Print,
1922 . Courtesy Ex Llbris, New York
273. Karel Teige Ma Buch (My Book) Book
cover, 1922. Courtesy Ex Libris, New York
274. Fred Dehro. Jeu de Massacre. One of
twelve;: pochoirs for a book by Henri Barbusse
rBruxclles Editions Socialistes), 1920. Courtesy
Fairleigh Dickinson University, Madison, N.J.
08
271
272
A BUCH
OEDIC HTE
273
MOD£RN
DE STJJL
275
278
RBCDEFGHl_Jh'Lm
na PCJFi'STUUWH!::l2
279
280
EDEH
11
28 1
DEt: UNO
Au1=BAU
DES STAATLICHEN BAUHAUSES
VON
\NE llVIAR
WALTER GROPIUS
dnrd! des
miitteI
s BeE>enbigeomNBARTs1~
E" O"lt"M"E N........ .
A L L E
286
12
287
MODERN
BAUHAUS
•
Ex Libris, New York
290. Joost Schmidt. Weimar Bauhaus. Book
cover, 1924. Courtesy Ex Libris, New York
291. Walter Gropius (architect). Bauhaus
School, Dessau
1111111111•1111111111111111111lllU,llll1!1Lili.hlililiiill,llllllllUl1illllltllillllllll.lllllllllllUI
11.ulau~
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'.\O\l·\11\HI H"!l
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l~I
II
290
MODERN
BAUHAUS
-
Courtesy Ex Libris, New York
298. Herbert Bayer. Universal alphabet, 1925.
LU DWIG HIRSCHFELD-MACK
Courtesy Ex Libris, New York
294
14
292
..
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31
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296 297
•
a c e 1
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298
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303
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- -
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t1ffl7 I
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300
304
BAUHAUSB0CHER
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PUN Kl Um'• LINI E Zll FLACHE
&.AU•LMa
302 lO ~
MODERN
BAUHAUS
11
MODt~lt.N
__
-- ,,
--,,,
--,,t
NEW TYPOGRAPHY
•ymmeby. I"'back
development 1927to"'"'•El Ll~i<»y "'= '"
Marinetti'sparo/e m libr:rta, I 1.~~ll~i·lill
_ _ •• - - - •
Wyndham Lewis's layout for Blast, and the
Dadaist photomontager John Heartfield 's layout
for the magaiine Neue Jugend. El Lissitzky's I'
typography was the firsc formal application of the
new approach, and his sans-serif letterforms,
limited range of primary colors, and geometri-
cized forms were to become lasting cliches in
advertising typography. Lissitzky was one of the
first to absorb the lessons of modern art move-
ments and apply them usefully to communica-
tions, and Moholy-Nagy, in turn, adapted
Lissitzky's basic premises to his Bauhaus course.
In 1924 Max Burchartz opened his advertising
agency, Werbau, to work in the new style for
industrial clients. In 1925 a young professor of
typography from Leipzig, Jan Tschichold, who
had no direct connec tion with the Bauhaus, col-
lected and analyzed the significant examples of
modern work in a special issue of Typographische
Mittetlungen titled "Elementare Typographie."
Three years later, Tschichold formulated and
codified the fundamental principles of asymme-
try in Die Neue Typographie (The New Typogra- }07 308
phy), with which he sought to change the basic
practices of the German printing industry.
While asymmetric design afforded more variety
and could be more readily accommodated to the
new layout techniques, the type historian Her-
bert Spencer argues that "Tschichold's attempt to
strictly codify modern typography ... was neither
necessary nor relevant." And thus, by its very mitteilungen
nature, it contradicted the free spirit of modern (1)
typography.
307. Jan Tschichold. Graphische Werbekunst.
.r::.
0
Exhibition poster, 1926. Courtesy Ex Libri s, (/)
New York
308. Anton Stan kowski. Hill auch in Witten 1 .r::.
Advertisement, 1925 a.
309. Jan Tschichold. Die Hose. Movie poster, co
~
';•ft
1927. Courtesy Ex Libris, New York
O> elementare
.... I
310. Jan Tschichold. Typographische Mit-
teilungen. Magazine cover, 1925 . Courtesy Ex 0 typographie
Libris,' New York a.
311. Max Burchartz. Schubertfe1er der Stiid- ~
>.
tischen Buehnen, Essen (Schubert Festival). Poster, oflt> h•.;n•bou1,1••
"'""''••I oar••
1928. The Museum of Modern Art, New York. ...... t,. , .. ,,. ..... .-
.. "••·Iii.~
Gift of Philip John son ,.,..,., • ..,,.mu,.,1>ly· ... \f)
.. ... 1 ............. .
(Lusts ofMankind) . Movie poster, 1926.
Kunstgcwerbemuseum, Zurich l09
313. Jan Tschichold. Casanova. Movie poster,
1927. Kunstgewerbemuseum, Zurich JlO
314.Joost Schmidt. Uher Type Foundry. Page
from type catalogue, 1932. Courtesy Ex Libris,
New York
.18
MODI:RN
VA ODER NiHO OBCHODU
NEW TYPOGRAPHY
I
319. Ladislav Sumar. Poutlasky. Book jacket
for Upton Sinclair novel, c. 1930. Courtesy Ex
Libris, New York
320. L~dislav Sutnar. Drobnosti. Book jacket
for George Bernard Shaw work, c. 1930. Cour-
tesy Ex Libris, New York
321. Ladislav Sutnar. Obraceni Kapitana Brass·
bounda (Captain Brassbound~ Conversion). Book
jacket for George Bernard Shaw play, c. 1930.
Courtesy Ex Libris, New York
}16
20
Zdenek Rossmann
318
pismo/ fotografie
319
J l7
12
320 32 1
l22
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237
J25 326
122
MODERN
NEW TYPOGRAPHY
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dun lengsfineer
drog e lijmfilm
dik dwnre.f1nee,.
h1·u'JlnJl')-,I f1n .. ftl" dfl!uron
W I J.l l{llr1(1C:Jtl Hl
V\l<.JI do" ook gnl~· .... •·rd tnol'tt droge llJmfilm
conol\truc t 1n
machtnnat •ngehakl
e
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on u 1tvnor1ng
voorh~hot1cJon . roost•I"
24
MODERN
PAPI ER:
ISOLATIE
.. I l:ioa£io11111•n1•~ ......,"°
- . . .AG01tLaCT111SCM1ttJtUI•
NEW TYPOGRAPHY
·•
\
\
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334
6
335. Jean Ca rlu. Dl'nll/rices Gelle Freres. Poster for toothpaste, 1927. Musee Je la Publicite, Paris
ART DECO
hilc Modernist designers end of traditional design, but unlike das- - ally-<krives from the same Modernist
struggled after WOrld War I sical Modernism, it was founded on a typographic experiments. "Henceforth
to transform society with mania for the new. the art of layout is free of its bonds ... ," he
their utopian ideals of func- When the Exposition Internationale wrote. "It must carry conviction of its own
tion and fitness, Moderne des Arts Decoratifs et Industriels accord. The public must receive from it
or Modernistic design-a fashionable Modernes opened in 1925, it covered two what in amorous terminology one might
amalgam of the new reductive forms and banks of the Seine and stood as a monu- call 'the fatal dart.' In order ... to obtain a
"the old decorative tendencies-was taking ment to both the excesses and the freer variety of possible combinations, it
the consumer world by storm. In contrast dichotomies of Art Deco. Most of the became necessary to abandon the horizon-
to the perceived solemnities of the Mod- French exhibits, like E.]. Ruhlmann's fur- tal and vertical scheme ... to develop an
ernist Bauhaus, these often frivolous and niture pavilion, were oppressively ornate alternative ... of obliques and curves. At
shocking manifestations of the Jazz Age when compared to the few decidedly this point we come to the modern tech-
were forged into a broad international Modernist structures, such as Konstantin nique, and more particularly to the tech-
style called Art Deco, later termed "the Melnikov's angular glass Soviet pavilion nique of modern advertising."
last of the total styles" by the historian and Le Corbusier's L'Esprit Nouveau. As a pure style without ideology, Art
Bevis Hillier. Exhibits from the Netherlands, Britain, Deco could be applied to any subject or
Under different names in various coun- and Austria evinced similar decorative theme. Its distinctive graphic look was
tries, Art Deco universally affected archi- obsessions. By the close of the exhibition, identifiable regardless of national origin.
tecture, furniture, clothing, and graphic Art Deco's influence, like its ubiquitous And it was also nonpartisan: the Italian
arts between the world wars. As Art sunray motif, fanned around the world. and German fascists applied it to their
Nouveau began to wane, designers affili- Graphic design was practiced with the propaganda, as did the French commu-
ated with the Societe des Artistes Deco- same frenzy as the other decorative arts. nists, Spanish leftists, and British social-
rateurs realized that the middle class Art Deco's progressive yet unchallenging ists. Its heroic and futuristic visual language
required another unthreatening style as motifs provided not only an acceptable was equally appropriate in the service of
an alternative to the increasingly abstract metaphor for the glory of machine-age electrical appliances or despotic regimes.
(and, for many, inaccessible) Modernism. culture but an effective code for consum- International design magazines and
Despite the prevailing Modernist philoso- erism as well. Advertising typography annuals saturated the world market with
phy, the compulsion of the European and layout acted as the primary commu- Art Deco-in packaging, book and maga-
public for ornament persisted. nicators of the Art Deco graphic style. The zine design, and advertising. American
Art Deco was thus not retrogressive but official lettering on most signs and build- advertisers balked at first at Art Deco's
responsive to contemporary wants. While, ings at the 1925 exposition, Peignot, Modernist aspects but eventually
for instance, the couturier Paul Poiret became one of the typographic emblems responded to its combination of a rare-
despised Cubism, he found that certain of of the age. In addition, the elegant spec- fied esthetic quality with an up-to-date
its elegant visual traits could be incorpo- imen sheets of Moderne display faces pro- tempo. According to the historian Roland
rated into a new decorative and luxurious duced by type foundries served as paeans Marchand, during the 1926 New York Art
style. The style also acknowledged and to the style. The French master advertis- Directors' annual exhibition, "Modern art
responded to the demands of industrial ing posterists, like A. M. Cassandre, Paul forms were the predominant trend .... The
culture, including the availability of new Colin, Jean Carlu, Charles Loupot, and public seemed to want atmosphere, partic-
materials such as plastics, f erroconcrete, Leonetto Cappiello, skillfully dissemi- ularly in fantastic and eccentric forms.''
and vita-glass. Geometric rather than nated the Art Deco language to the public. Not all American design was based on
asymmetric, rectilinear rather than linear, In England, the American E. McKnight such fantasies, however. The 1930s was
Art Deco was inspired by Art Nouveau, Kauffer imbued his advertisements and the age of the industrial designer, who
the Ballets Russes, North American and book jackets with Cubist and Futurist derived new Moderne forms from the
Aztec Indian art, and even by certain characteristics. science of aerodynamics. Late Deco's
aspects of the Bauhaus. And, with the dis- In 1929, the Parisian designer A. Toll- raybands and motion lines were not mere
covery in 1922 of Tutankhamen's tomb mer published his book Mise en Page, ornaments but symbols of Streamline
near Luxor, Art Deco ornament became a which codified the Art Deco approach to technology. The Streamline era was inau-
unique confluence of Egyptian ziggurats, layout. Subsequently translated into gurated, celebrated, and ended at the
sunbursts, and lightning bolts with a bit of English, it became more universally used 1939-40 New York World's Fair. The
the zigzag line of the Charleston added for by advertising designers and printers than world was on the brink of war. Art Deco's
good measure. With its Modernist charac- Jan Tschichold's New Typography, pub- international dominance soon petered out
teristics, curious historical references, and lished the year before. Although the in the face of wartime austerity. The
controlled anarchy, it came to symbolize illustrations in Mise en Page are more anar- 1960s, another period of expanded con-
both efficient modern living and the ele- chic and carnival-like than those in sumerism, was to witness a nostalgic
gant life-style. Art Deco reemphasized the Tschichold's book, Tollmer's premise actu- revival of the style. 127
ART DGOO
FRENCH
EXPOSITION
INTERNATIONALE
~~TS Dt:CO~.&.TU'.S
CT INOU5TRIEL~ Mooe.RN~.5
336
129
10
ART DECO
FRENCH
131
ART nr.oo
FRENCH
348
/
EUE EIT PAI/EE I
-~ ,,,,,_,,,
-
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132
35 1
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134
ART D.CCO
FRENCH
Paris was the wellspring of the contemporary
poster dunng the nineteenth century and also its
capital between the wars. Not tied to any one
movement, the leading French graphic designers
drew inspiration from various sources. Georges
Barbier owed his style both to oriental art and to
the scenic design of Diaghilev's Ballets Russes,
the spectacle that revolutionized the European
dance world. Influenced by Leonetto Cappiello's
virtuosity, the Frenchmen A. M. Cassandre
(Adolphe Jean -Marie Mouron) and Jean Carlu
and the Swiss Charles Loupout and Paul Colin
became the most significant posterists associated
with the Art Deco era. They embraced Cubist
and Constructivist trends yet transcended their
cliches, thereby revolutionizing the poster and
dominating French advertising.
355. A. M. Cassandre. L'lnlransigeanl. Poster
for the newspaper, 1925. Courtesy Reinhold
Brown Gallery, New York
356. Jean Carlu. Disques Odeon Poster for rec-
ords, 1929. Gewerbemuseum, Basel, Museum fi.ir
Gestaltung
357. A. M. Cassandre. Grand Spar/. Poster,
1925 . Courtesy Reinhold Brown Gallery, New
York
358. A. M. Cassandre. Wagon-Bar Railway
poster, 1932. Courtesy Reinhold Brown Gallery,
New York
359. Georges Barbier. Pauleue Duval! Vaceilav
Svoboda. Poster, 1920. Courtesy Posters Please,
Inc., New York
360. Designer unknown. Encyclopedie des
Aris Decoratifs el Industriels Modernes. Twelve-
volume set of encyclopedias on Paris Art Deco,
1925. The Mitchell Wolfson Jr. Collection of
357
Decorative and Propaganda Arts, Miami
A I{ T )
DECOR 111r) 1\ 1
NDL)lRllL J
I p R \I I
J60
13'
358 359
ART DECO
GERMAN
)65
166
aAN IC• D D E s 0 N E Q. 8A N I( ~I L I A L. E l I E a N I T z
..
POSTSCHECK·ICONTO • e;ESLAU ND 3501.3
•
367
ART DECO
GERMAN
)68
n•
)69
ARTDEC:O
SWISS
40
m
ART DECO
SWISS
The Deco era was known for its sleek, fast auto-
mobiles. Along with planes and ships, they were
the most potent and prized symbols of moder-
nity. The Swiss, especially, conducted a love
affair with the car, and many of their finest and
most characteristically Art Deco posters were
devoted to motorcar races and exhibitions.
373 . Otto Baumberger. MotorComptoir
374 Zurich. Poster, 1932. Kunstgewerbemuseum,
Zurich
374 . Designer unknown. Geneve Poster, 1936.
Kunstgewerbemuseum, Zurich
375. Kaspar Ernst Graf. Grand Prix Suisse,
Automobile, Berne. Poster, 1934. Kunstgewerbe-
museum, Zurich
376. Noel Fomanet. Aulomobtl-A1m1e/lung.
Exhibition poster, 1930. Kunstgewerbemuseum,
Zurich
St.-•o.
GE~F
I ""'!;)
Ml&RZ
..
376
A'"PICM£$'"S0N0R"SA GENE"E 1-1
l77
m J~
ART DECO
EASTERN EUROPEAN
a
Other forms of Art Deco emerged in the various
DIESEMARKE European capitals. Deco was the dominant
.-; P :v!IT DEM KRO:--JCHEN« visual code between the wars, and it was impos-
liCHMUCKTALLE EDELFABRIKATE sible to pick up a graphic design magazine or
DER /\LTRENOMIERTEN
annual during this time and not find at least one
PARFUMERIE
AUS DEN KELLEREIEN DER. TIR. of its characteristic traits-undulating geometric
S. P E S S L
VIEN.l.l()';RNTNERSTRASSE NR,28
FRANZ KATHREINERfNACHF.
C-M
,._ "U E ~
4
H•H
c:.. . IE 1'I
patterns, airbrushed raybands, decorative sun-
bursts, and so on. In a special 1930 issue of the
German printers' journal Archiv dedicated to
J80 381 Hungarian Modernism, there appears Robert
Bereny's poster showing a haughty gent smoking
Modiano cigarettes, a masterpiece of witty Deco
styling. About his work Bereny said, "The poster
should be painterly, for the simple reason that ,
psychologically speaking, the human being
regards everything that is painted as painterly." ·
Advertisements here by the Austrian poster
masters Julius Klinger, the partners Cos! and
Frey, and Emil Preetorius typify the German
reductivist Deco style. And the poster for LOPP
by an unknown Polish designer underscores the
universality of Art Deco.
377. Robert Bereny. Modiano. Poster for'ciga-
rettes and cigarette paper, 1928
3 78. Julius Klinger. Wasserkraft-Elektrizitiils.
Poster for an Austrian hydroelectric utility, 1922
3 79. Cosl-Frey. Self-promotional poster for
design studio, c. 1930. Courtesy Fairleigh
Dickinson University, Madison, N.J.
380.Julius Klinger. Spessl. Poster, 1923 . Cour-
tesy Fairleigh Dickinson University, Madison,
N.J.
381. Emil Preetorius. Kathreiner Wt?ine. Aus-
trian poster, date unknown. Courtesy Fairleigh
Dickinson University, Madison, N.J.
382. Designer unknown. LOPP. Polish poster
for an aviation company, date unknown. Cour·
tesy Fairleigh Dickinson University, Madison,
N.J.
145
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u; CONQUIJT!; D!;LL' AVIAZION!;
384 385
A Tlc;IA~ATO
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l 86
ART DECO
ITALIAN
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IDR.OVOLAMTI S.55X- SAVO IA MARCHETTI - MOTORI ASSO DA 750 HP.
•
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ISOTTA FRASCHIHI - MAGHETI. CAHDELE E BATTERIE DELLA HAGHETI HARELLI- ;
CARBURAHTE PER AVIAZIOME STAMAVO DELLA SOC.ITALO-AHERICAHA PEL PETROLIO-GEHOVA ~
CdWICMd.Ci.A.P. l!OHA·HllANO ~ '5IONT' OA BOLLO 147
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ITALIAN
l48
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CVR A DELL' VFFIC 10
TORICO ED A BENEFl-
0 DELL' OPERA DI PRE-
NZA. DELLA MILl'ZIA
..
392
393
ENOLISH
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
KINDRED TRADES·6t STAMFORD STREET·LONDON·S·E-t 1931. The Mitchell Wolfson Jr. Collection of
Decorative and Propaganda Arts, Miami
395. E. McKnight Kauffer. BBC Handbook.
•• NINTH SESSION, t919-t9l0 Book jacket, 1929. Courtesy Chris Mullen
•
~
• 396. Wallace and Tiernan. The Yi'llr Book of
the London School of Prmtmg and Kmdred Trades
Book cover, 1929. The Mitchell Wolfson Jr. Col·
)96
lection of Decorative and Propaganda Arts,
Miami
397. E. McKnight Kauffcr. 1011 Can Be Sure of
Shell Poster, 1934. Courtesy Chris Mullen
All..T Dl::CO
SPEE D
ENGLISH
DEN NEUEN
52
PLYMO
CHRYSLERS LETZTE
H
SCHt>PFU~G
C()ll ~
ll
402
4
ART DECO
, ..
---
---- AMERICAN
---
his country by storm: "From the chaotic situa·
tion arising out of an era of prosperity without
precedent for decoration, produced by Expo '25
-----
... a style emerged ... or, better still ... a common
denominator-the modernist style. I believe this
term is a pure Americanism. It originated from
the hysteria created by Expo and serves to
denote the kind of work produced in the period
1925-29 which has no connection with anything
-----
produced previously.... The cliches of the past
were exchanged for an ill-digested present-day
formula. Self-styled designe rs blindly applied
ornament to the surface of form-in itself badly
planned. Their ornamental syntax consisted
--
almost entirely of ... the zigzag, the triangle,
--
fawn-like curves .... In the meantime the really
modern style was defined in other than modern-
ist terms and was only concerned with outside
appearances and the surface of things... For
Deskey and others, Art Deco was the style uf the
age but also its scourge.
402 . Designer unknown. Htgh Voltage Railway
Electrification Sculptural inlaid panel J e,igneJ
for the Westinghouse Pavilion, Chicago World's
Fair, 1933. The Mitchell Wolfson J r. Collection
of Decorative and Propaganda Arts, Miami
403. Designer unknown. General Electrtc-
Mazda Lamps. Advertising display for lightbulbs,
1925. The Mitchell WolfsonJr. Collection of
JE W ELR Y Decorative and Propaganda Arts, Miami
404. Designer unknown. Conoco Magazme.
Cover, May/June 1932
40l 405. Frank Lloyd Wright. Adhesive seal, small
paper bag, and trade card for V. C. Morris Store,
1942. The Mitchell Wolfson Jr. Collection of
Decorative and Propaganda Arts, Miami
406. Charles Chappel. Contact Advertisement
llllllr!
from specimen book, 1930
407. Designer unknown. umtact. Adveruse-
ment from specimen book, 1930
llh
ACT
407
AitTD:CCO
AMERICAN
eu•EOITEO "'NO
1938
u••OESIGNEO IY
l 0 H GM AH S, GR E EH 1 C0 L 0 H D 0 N · N CW Y O R K · T O It O N T 0
56 409
415
411
Tu" · ~ A 1· ut:NTRV appear. ••Ille• 1lle -•tt•r f•r bi•··· u-... .,.,.•p••
cu r•111lud h 1b•C II •u•C. ll••b . ,.• r C• h• •pl•I•• •• arl• ••tl a.-.r..,••hh•• •• 1111.-
.\n1llu•• ••• lkal II ran"I • .,, lh...,11&111 lhe •~p•• hi• _ . ••• • • rull•ll•k• and (~ habll•
1h1•ulr1• ••• ahuu1 all lhP p.-opl., " ·h•m 111~ II• P•C•• are •lo..rd lo tb"
.. uub1ful and mediocre •••
\ "nHH&!••r S••I ..,.-111 brf_&ak 11• ~- oun&:
I"·"· ...·.....
. ...
1
''" hrllllu11C ad'\"t.•rl&.111&: To"--' · ., 1·@1· :'\TIM.,.
LIGHTING 1111,,::11•,,. :u1 ...
........
Graduaue and -'lr_.
TO":\ .. 1' 01 °:\Tftll.
t"rt-NhHIUU HrP llu.. RIU•I fortnld-
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,.
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413 abl.-• lu1,;- l11C: furrr In lhf" reu.n1ry
II••~ • el •II• .. rtl•I••
.......
• • .. r 1 aee ,, , , , -_\LLll" . .. .. e•rr
416
15
ART DECO
AMERICAN
420 421
15'
l\.R.T DECO
STREAMLINE
423
.60
428
SHEPARD
161
l•·,
., --~-- -. -~-(--
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430
KEEP 'm'DUR
ART DECO
STREAMLINE
JEETH CLERn
public good. Artists and small studios around
the country created (many anonymously) hun-
dreds of WPA posters encouraging literacy, per-
4JI
sonal hygiene, and good habits in the workplace.
Many of these posters were stylistically influ-
enced by the European Modernists (particularly
those artists forced by the Fascists to emigrate to
the United States) and by the machine aesthetic,
popularized in exhibitions like the one at New
York's Museum of Modern Art. Lester Beall cre-
ated a series of posters for the Rural Electrifica-
tion Administration intended as reminders that
the Department of Agriculture is always working
for the citizenry. His use of photography and
strong, symbolic color is reminiscent of work
done at the Bauhaus. In 1941, Jean Carlu was
commissioned by Charles Coiner, Vice President
of N. W. Ayer, to render a defense poster, with
memorable results.
430. Lester Beall. Rural E/ectrr/ication Admin-
iJtration. Poster, 1937. Library of Congress,
Washington, D.C. Poster Collection
431. Designer unknown. Keep Your Teeth
Clean. WPA poster, 1936. Library of Congress,
Washington , D.C. Poster Collection
432. Robert Muchley. Work wzih Care. WPA
poster, 1936. Library of Congress, Washington ,
D.C. Poster Collection
433. Jean Carlu. America~ AnJwer.' Production.
Poster, 1941. Library of Congress, Washington,
D.C. Poster Collection
434. Designer unknown ; Ruth Bernhard
(photographer). Machine Art. Exhibition poster
for the Museum of Modern Art, 1927. Courtesy
Ex Libris, New York
... ~ ' '""'"··~ ~
4H
16~
1' l>:COO
1
STREAMLINE
164
439
44 1
443
ART DECO
DUTCH
16i
UNJ>AlS Sii: I
()AWA REN
DA MACHTE
Dl\.WAf?. ' ET
446. Kurc Schwiuers and Theo van Doesburg. Kleine Dada Soiree. Poster for Dada evem, 1922. Courtesy Reinhold Brown Gallery, New York
68
DADA
ada means nothing," declared the the renunciation of all objectivity, it was tion was photomontage. Heartfield (the
I
Romanian-born poet Tristan Tzara, the natural enemy of Dada. In Berlin, art director and co-founder with Grosz
yet the term was to become highly Huelsenbeck joined forces with the and Herzfelde of the publishing house the
charged. Dadaists rejected all forms painter Raoul Hausmann, the satirist Malik Verlag} pioneered this mechanical
of bourgeois art, including those, like George Grosz, and the brothers Wieland art and was its most exemplary practi-
Expressionism, once deemed revolution- Herzfelde and John Heartfield, to turn tioner, but Hausmann also took credit for
ary but later neutered, they felt, by mid- Dada into a sharper weapon of attack its discovery. "On the wall of almost every
dle-class acceptance. Dada was invented against both the old and new ruling house was a colored lithograph depicting
by a German refugee, the philosopher- orders. During his first lecture on Dada in the image of a grenadier ... ," Hausmann
poet Hugo Ball, and his companion, 1918, Huelsenbeck stated the Dada posi- wrote about his revelation. "To make this
Emmy Hennings, in 1916 in neutral tion: "For the first time Dadaism poses no military memento more personal a photo-
Zurich at the height of World War I. The longer in an aesthetic manner before life. graphic portrait of a soldier had been used
two were joined, in Zurich and in New It lacerates all the great words: ethic, in place of the head. This was a stroke of
York, by other emigre artists who had culture, 'interiorisation,' which are only lightning, one could ... make paintings
found safe haven from the horrors of a covers for weak muscles." In a polemic entirely composed of cut out photo-
war they blamed on the decadence of titled Art Is in Danger, Grosz stated, "If we graphs .... I began to realize this new
Western civilization. Dadaists scorned artists were the expression of anything at vision by using photographs from maga-
the idea that art was the highest form of all, then we were the expression of the fer- zines ... [and] decided to call these works
human expression and sought to destroy ment of dissatisfaction and unrest." His photomontages. This term translated our
the traditional barriers within artistic group soon shed the last remnants of aversion to playing artists, and consider-
endeavor: the poet became a typographer, Dada's pretense to art in favor of agitation ing ourselves as engineers ... from that
the painter a poet. While they rejected all in the service of the Spartacist, and later came our preference for overalls." Less
theory and most types of organization, the communist, cause. aesthetically concerned than other
Dadaists developed a unique syntax In its revulsion from the duplicitous Dadaists, Heartfield made montage politi-
and vocabulary in poetry, theater, and Social Democratic Party then ruling the cal postcards that said in image what was
graphic design. ill-fated Weimar Republic, Dada declared prohibited in words by government
Between 1916 and 1918, the Zurich a satiric shadow government. Its members censors.
Dadaists were involved at the Cabaret adopted official-sounding titles like Germany had two other, comparatively
Voltaire with a series of outrageous antiart Oberdada, Welt-Dada, Dadaosopher, and apolitical Dada groups. In Cologne, Max
happenings, reported on by Ball, Richard Propagandada and published parodistic Ernst, Theodor Baargeld, and Jean Arp
Huelsenbeck,Jean Arp, and Sophie manifestoes and pamphlets like What Is fomented trouble in the unorthodox
Tauber-Arp in the Dada review named Dadaism and What Does It \\'tant in Ger- reviews Der Ventilator and Die Scham-
after the cafe. As organized by Tzara, the many? (1919). Yet, despite its rhetoric, one made. In Hanover, Kurt Schwitters con-
Dada evenings were influenced by the could argue that Dada's real loyalty was ducted a one-man movement, parallel and
outlandish showmanship of the Italian not to politics but rather to Dada itself- sometimes merging with Dada, called
Futurists. Concurrently in New York, a decidedly logical concept in the Dada Merz. A poet, painter, typographer, and
Dada leaders Marcel Duchamp and Fran- scheme of things. advertising-design consultant, Schwitters
cis Picabia concerned themselves with A distinct Dadaist graphic style evolved published his stylistically influential
revealing, and hastening, the aesthetic from combining the random methods of review, Merz, from 1923 to 1932. Its
decomposition of Western art. (Du- Cubist colles and Futurist parole a liberta design, drawing inspiration from
champ's scandalous "ready-mades" had with the efficiency and economy of El Lissitzky's Constructivism and
foreshadowed his later Dadaist concoc- mechanical-reproduction techniques. Van Doesburg's De Stijl, was more geo-
tions.} Dada also developed a strong- Widely scattered and mixed typography metric than that of the Berlin journals.
hold in Paris, where it evolved during the characterized the numerous Berlin Dada Dada's extreme ribaldry and irrev-
mid-twenties into Surrealism, described periodicals, while the Zurich magazines erence seduced disaffected artists for
by the art historian Lucy Lippard as or Picabia's 391 had more crammed, only a brief time. After 1922 , with Ger-
"housebroken Dada." jumbled pages. Dada's anarchic layouts many in social, political, and economic
Immediately after the war, many of the capitalized on the contrast between a page chaos, many of Dada's proponents moved
exiles, the majority of whom were Ger- of type and a single word stamped across it either inward toward Surrealism or out-
man, returned to Berlin to carry on a like a slogan or on words boldly isolated as ward toward Constructivism and the New
decidedly politicized Dada. Expres- in cheap posters and advertisements-all Objectivity. Although they drifted away
sionism, which had begun by bringing as far removed as possible from elegance from the Dada style, Grosz and Heartfield
Germans so many welcome truths, had and good taste. continued to produce trenchant political
become something of an official national Simultaneously employed in Berlin and commentary until the Nazis put an end to
style; aimed at inwardness, abstraction, Moscow, the most lasting Dada innova- their efforts and they left Germany. 16
DADA
DADA
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460 461
DADA
In 1917, George Grosz, John Heartfield, and I Jahrgang Der Malik-Verlag, 86f'lin·LeipzlQ Nr. 1, 15. Februar 1919
D~PJeite
Erziihlungen. Jacket for book by Isaac Babel,
1931. Courtesy Fairleigh Dickinson University,
Madison, N.J.
466. John Heart field. Deutsch/and, Deutsch-
/and Ober Alles (Germany, Germany, Above All
Others). Jacket for book by Kurt Tucholsky, 1929.
Courtesy Fairleigh Dickinson University,
Madison,N.J.
467. John Heart field. Das Geld Schreibt Jacket
for book by Upton Sinclair, 1930. Courtesy Fair-
leigh Dickinson University, Madison, N.J-
468. John Heartfield. Petroleum. Jacket for
book by Upton Sinclair, 1927. Courtesy Fairleigh
Dickinson University, Madison, N.J.
74
464
466
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76
469. Klimaschin. USSR Agricultural Exhibition, 1939. Poster, 1939. The Mitchell Wolfson Jr. Collection of Decorative and Propaganda Arts, Miami
JlER.010 REALISM
!though avant-garde Soviet art- who conformed to official art forms. In were not too formally different from those
ists were enthusiastic in propa- 1934 a new doctrine called Socialist Real- of Soviet Socialist Realism). The propa-
gating the revolution, Lenin ism, devised by Stalin and Maxim Gorky, ganda poster actually played a greater role
had little confidence that their was presented at the first Soviet Writers' in the Nazis' rise to power than is gener-
.....__..__ __.abstract visual language could Congress. Socialist Realism rejected for- ally realized: when the radio was shut off,
communicate effectively with a predomi- malism, along with the plastic arts and the cinema dark, and the political meet-
nantly illiterate population. He also sus- design, deeming them "the bourgeois ings over, the poster still stood on every
pected that the young, trailblazing influences on art." Idealized scenes of street corner. One master of the agita-
Constructivists and Productivists had a leaders and workers replaced more tional political poster, the artist Mjolnir,
hidden aesthetic agenda that superseded abstract images, while staid typographic was given the Teutonic honorific of Reich
the needs of the infant government. Lenin treatments forced out the dynamic, asym- Plenipotentiary for Artistic Formulation.
had his own agenda: he wanted to shock metrical layouts of the New Typography. Even Ludwig Hohlwein, one of the virtu-
the Russian people out of their back- Though figurative painting was most pre- osos of the objective style in poster design,
wardness. Fervently believing that their ferred, photography and montage were became a treasured propagandist for his
new art would accomplish this goal, the acceptable and continued to be practiced keen ability to portray Aryan beauty.
revolutionary artists argued that advanced by artists like Alexander Rodchenko. Much of the early Italian fascist printed
artistic ideas reflected advanced political The repressive Soviet regime was not propaganda used Futurist and Art Deco
ideas. From 1918 to 1922, under the aus- the only one to feel enmity against the styles to advertise Mussolini's cult of per-
pices of Anatoly Lunacharsky, modern European avant-garde and its perceived sonality; on the other hand, most compa-
Soviet graphic design applied its daring elitism. Since the end of World War I, rable German ephemera were unadorned,
experiments in the service of social Modernist artists and designers in Ger- stark, and monumental, more consistent
change. But as the revolution became set many had supported left-wing political with other Nazi visual motifs. Hitler had
on an increasingly conservative course, organizations against the oligarchy, the formed the opinion that the masses were
those leaders who disapproved of progres- old-guard militarists, and Adolf Hitler's malleable, either already corrupt or corrupt-
sive art forced its practitioners to abandon National Socialist party. In 1929 the Nazi ible. There was no place in his propaganda
their methods in favor ofless radical ideologist Alfred Rosenberg founded the for a qualifying clause and, therefore,
approaches. By the time Stalin came to Militant League for German Culture to nothing was left to interpretation. He
power, many of those who still refused to combat avant-garde influences. Upon wrote, "The more radical and inciting my
sacrifice their ideals were either pressured coming to power in 1933, Hitler exacted propaganda was, the more it frightened
into exile or met worse fates at home. his revenge by expunging all actual and off weaklings and irresolute characters
Nevertheless, Stalin appreciated the symbolic traces of his artist-enemies. He and prevented their pushing into the first
power of the image in a country where even outlawed modern sans-serif type- nucleus of the [Nazi] organization."
such a large percentage of the population faces in favor of the medieval German The heroic style was not exclusively a
was illiterate. He understood that folk art Fraktur (eventually, realizing Fraktur's tool of dictatorships-during the Spanish
was a ready-made communications tool, problems of legibility, he declared that Civil War, both the fascist insurgents and
although he rejected its traditional, often Fraktur should be outlawed as a Jewish the supporters of the Popular Front effec-
religious subject matter. Posters became a invention). In 1937, at the opening of his tively imbued their printed propaganda
direct medium for educating the peasant infamous Degenerate Art exhibition at the with heroic imagery. And not all heroic
in almost every aspect of daily life-from newly built House of German Art, Hitler imagery has been used in the service of
the efficacy of bathing, to instructions on railed that "works of art that cannot be politics. Advertising and editorial illustra-
how to drive a tractor, to warnings against understood but need a swollen set of tion in Western industrial democracies
laziness, intoxication, and waste. A some- instructions to prove their right to exist has often employed romantic realism as a
what jaundiced article in a 1931 issue of and find their way to neurotics who are timeworn means of enhancing a product
Fortune refers to the posters' "bold receptive to such stupid ... nonsense will or idea in the consumer's eye. Yet heroic
splashes of color [that] appeal to a people no longer openly reach the German realism has never really been elevated to a
who see only drabness in their daily life. nation .... With the opening of this exhibi- national style in Western democracies,
[The posters'] naivete commends them tion has come the end of artistic lunacy except during wartime, and then only for
more strongly to men and women who, and with it the artistic pollution of our very specific needs. Even during World
like children and savages, love to look at people." War II, Modernist approaches brought to
similar pictures." Hitler and Joseph Goebbels, the cun- the United States and England by Euro-
In 1932 the Communist Party abolished ning Nazi Minister of Propaganda, pean immigrants characterized certain
the remaining cultural organizations in replaced Modernist art with classically wartime propaganda, thus planting the
which Modernists were members and heroic, Romantic depictions of the Aryan seeds of postwar graphic cndeavor. Heroic
instead set up monolithic unions of Soviet Superman or with equally overbearing realism as an official graphic style still pre-
writers, architects, composers, and artists images in a more realistic style (which vails in Soviet countries. Ii
,., r r r ,.
DEurscMr: lonH).lfsA
470
HEROIC REALISM
472
HET-l/IAU/H3MY!
iASCH'fHUS ·Nf/A'' ,fC Ii IN' 'H.' NO. fllJ'CISMf
474
JI :CROIC REALISM
180
WAR BONDS
477
Resolutely Support the Anti-imperialist Struggles of the People of Asia, Africa and Latin America.
Soutenir fermement la lutte anti-imperialiste des peuples d' Asie, d' Afrique et d' Amerique la tine
Firme apoyo a la lucha antiimperialista de los pueblos de Asia, Africa y America Latina
479
2
480. Herbert Matter. Pon/resina Travel poster, 1936. Kunstgewe1 bemuscum, Zurich
LATE MODERN
I)
espite its detractors, classi- with the orthodox schools and movements often had utopian goals, Late Modernists
cal Modernism exerted was jettisoned. Late Modern encompasses held conflicting opinions about such uni-
an immense influence on a number of distinct stylistic periods, versal aims. The period was, perhaps,
advertising and graphic spanning more than fifty years. The first more one of personal reevaluation than
design in most consumer period-immediately following Stalin's overriding public concern. Jan Tschichold,
societies immediately before and follow- and Hitler's initial repressions of Modern- for instance, renounced the Prussian
ing World War II. Its iconoclastic practi- ist art in the early 1930s-witnessed a rigidity of the rules set forth in his Mod-
tioners developed a functional vocabulary diaspora of Modernists, at first to the ernist bible, New Typography, in favor of a
that was supported by certain mainstream Eastern European countries and then to return to classical typography and symme-
critics and eventually adopted by many England, Switzerland, and the United try. Other notable postwar designers,
important corporations. Some progressive States, where they profoundly affected among them, Paul Rand, Alvin Lustig,
government agencies even commissioned prevailing design theory and practice. The Alexey Brodovitch, and Lester Beall, took
Modernist designers for various commu- second period, after the war, was one of certain truths from Modernism and incor-
nications projects- from railway signage business realignment in which emerging porated them into distinctly personal lan-
in Britain to postal information in Hol- international corporations, needing iden- guages. Rand's identity systems and
land to wartime survival manuals in the tity systems and strategic communications, collateral materials for major American
United States. Art Deco notwithstanding, fostered a new rationalist design approach corporations like IBM and Westinghouse
functionalism in design retained currency in the International Style. Then, begin- are imbued with his distinctive wit and
in those nations which, although hard hit ning in the mid-1950s and continuing to logic yet totally devoid of personal indul-
by economic crises, relied on an industrial the present, a revived interest in the gences. Brodovitch's design for Harper's
renaissance for renewed prosperity. While design styles of the fin de szecle and in the Bazaar was an outstanding example of per-
the repressive decrees of Stalin and Hitler artifacts of material prosperity made itself sonal style and taste in a mass-market
ensured an abrupt end to Modernism in felt in contemporary layout and typog- magazme.
most of Europe, the industrial enterprise raphy for magazines, advertising, and Narrative illustration was also redefined
on which the style was predicated contin- posters. Concurrently, advancements in in the Late Modern period. Often used in
ued and would continue for decades to photographic and computer technologies a literal, unimaginative manner for edito-
follow. Machine age graphic design was applied to typography and printing began rial or advertising purposes, figurative
destined to endure-although some- to change not only the look but the meth- illustration was generally regarded as a
what altered by the new communica- odology of graphic design. sentimental throwback to the past. While
tions requirements of business in the The kindred spirits in the postwar orthodox Modernists rejected narrative
postwar era. design centers (London, Chicago, New completely in favor of what Muller-
In the United States, where Modernist York, Zurich, Basel, Ulm, Stuttgart) all Brockmann called the "objective illustra-
techniques were not at first warmly began with the same prewar methods in tion" of photography and photomontage,
accepted by conservative advertisers, mar- developing their new styles. Yet Late others found new means of integrating fig-
keting surveys surprisingly concluded that Modern is not about conformity. Its styl- ure drawing with design in the style of
consumers equated Modernist design istic diversity arose as much from the turn-of-the-century posterists. Most nota-
with what one style manual at the time rejection of unworkable or unappealing ble among these were the Polish poster
called "the promise of the future:' The ideas as from the development of new artists who, influenced by the Symbolists
American advertising pioneer, Ernest ones. Moreover-with another devastat- and Surrealists, developed a painterly
Caulkins, who championed the idea that ing world war over and the promised graphic style with a lexicon of powerful,
advertising should be an equal marriage of "World of Tomorrow" finally at hand- eerie images. The Poles, in turn, inspired
text and image, extolled the virtues of designers sought with great purpose to the American psychedelic artists of the
Modernism, stating that it "offered the make styles that responded to the char- sixties, who went on to invent a new style
opportunity of expressing the inexpress- acter of their time, although there was of illustration by pairing comic-strip and
ible ... expressing not so much a motor car, scant international consensus on what this historical references with East Indian
but speed; not so much a gown, but style:' was. It was viewed quite differently, for motifs.
Simplicity was the designer's watchword, example, by the Swiss designers Max Bill, Japanese design is a highly imaginative
and style, therefore, would not be pre- Josef MUiier-Brockmann, and Armin synthesis of the most compelling Late
sented through wordy texts or literal Hofmann-who saw graphic design as Modern Western forms with traditional
pictures but through the association of systematized and architecturally con- Japanese ones, abetted by an abundance of
a product with the most appropriate structed on a grid-and by the New York- high-tech materials with which to visu-
graphic forms. based principals of Push Pin Studios, who alize the future. Japan's distinctive Late
In Late Modern, classical Modernist preferred a provocative interplay of his- Modern style has had a significant impact
techniques were popularly accepted and torical styles and forms. on the eighties' Post-Modern and New
widely applied, but the dogma associated Although classical Modernist designers Wave designs. 11
LATE ll'IOD'CRN
.........
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.....
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SWISS
184
482
485
18
LATI:l MODT:RN
ENOLISH
A
Frank Pick, London Tram.ports innovative cre-
auw direc tor, >et and maintained a standard of
artisttc ,ichieverrn:nt unprecedented in England
lx:fore the mid-twenties. In his desire to raise the
level of efficiency and safety of London's Under-
ground, Pick sought out the most up-to-date
artforms !like Man Ray's delightfully futuristic
poster) to leave a positive impression on the com-
muting public. Advertising pioneers like Pick
and his successor, William Crawford, deserve
credit for opening the public's mind not only to
the virtues of the service they promoted but also
to the modern design vocabulary. Their efforts
allowed E. McKnight Kauffer, F. H. K. Henrion,
and Tom Eckersley, among others, to improve
the quality of print communications and, by
extension , of the emi re visual landscape.
Describing this new methodology, Ashley
Havinden writes, "The modern point of view
.. . is to design inside out, as opposed to the tra -
ditional, which is a tendency to impose a pre-
conceived solution to a problem by designing
from the outside in."
486. Frank Pick and Edward Johnston .
London Underground. Trndemark for London
Transport, 1920
487. Man Ray. Keeps London Going. Poster for
London 1i-ansport, 1932. The Museum of Mod-
ern Art , New York . Gift of Bernard Davis
488. F. H. K. Henrion. Here Comes the Sun.
Poster, 1948. Courtesy the designer
489. E. McKnight Kauffer. Empire Telegrams.
Poster for telegrams, 1941
490. Tom Eckersley. Graphzs 31. Cover of mag-
azine edited and art-directed by Walter Herdeg,
1950. Courtesy the designer
186
488
489
491
POST OFFICE
SAVING IS E\'E:R\'HODl·s \\J\H .JOH SAVI NGS IAN I(
49) 494
LATE MODERN
ENOLISH
495
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497 498
500
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AMERICAN
A
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Jn a 1941 issue of PM magazine, Laszlo Moholy·
0 Nagy wrote somewhat disappointedly about
American design: "The Constructivist move·
ment in Europe originated in countries with
undeveloped industry.... The message about
American organization, production processes,
life standards, created a Utopian picture in the
mind of these young European artists. Their
i magi native picture of America governed their
thinking and their work. They admired exact-
ness and precision ... the skyscraper, the high-
)01 ways, the immense span of bridges .... They tried
to be the children of a new age as they believed
Americans to be.
"When I came to this country I was greatly
surprised to find that we Europeans were, to a
certain extent, more American than the Amer-
icans. I found that our imagination went too far.
[The Americans] created their high civilization
by instinct, introducing invention after inven-
tion into their daily routine. However, they did
not attach any philosophy to it as we did in
Europe. Forthem the nostalgia remained for
the good old traditional art.
" ... It took me a long time to understand the
Victorian dwellings and the imitations of Colo-
nial architecture or the old-fashioned advertis-
ing. Fortunately I soon saw that a new generation
was rising with the potentiality and discipline of
that America imagined by us in Europe."
Among these young Americans, wrote
Moholy-Nagy, Paul Rand was "one of the best
and most capable representatives." These mem-
bers of the first wave of American Modernists
were influenced by other recent European emi-
gres besides Moholy-Nagy, including the I Iun-
garian Gyorgy Kepes, the Czechoslovak La<lislav
Sutnar, and Bauhaus master Herbert Bayer. Join-
ing Rand were Lester Beall, who was dubbed the
Midwest Modernist , and Alex Steinweiss, a New
Yorker who pioneered in album-cover design.
496. Gyorgy Kcpes. What Is Modern Pailllmf.?
Exhibition catalogue cover for The Museum of
Modern Art, 1952 . Courtesy the designer
497. Alex Stcinweiss. AD. Cover of profes-
sional magazine, 1941. Courtesy the designer
498. Isa mu Noguchi. Vt'ew. Cover of Surrealist
art m<igazine, 1946
499, 500. Ladislav Sutnar. Desrf.11 and Paper.
Cover and inside pages for promotional bro-
chure for the Marquardt Paper Co., 1941
501. Lester Beall. Modem Pioneers in Peorra
Pages from a promotional brochure for a printer,
1935
502. Paul Rand. D1rectio11. Magazine cover,
April 1940. Courtesy the designer
LATE MODERN
AMERICA N
KEEP'EM ROLLING!
tionary and patriotic posters, survival manuals,
news magazines fo r overseas distribution, and
hundreds of other pieces of wartime propaganda.
Young Ame rican Modernists had a unique
opportumty tu prove the viability of the new
design, specifically as contrasted to the Heroic 504 505
Realism of other countries' graphics. In 1942, the
Austrian emigre Joseph Binder won first prize in
a Museum of Modern Art competition for his
iconographic recruitment poster for the United
States Army Air Corps. N. W. Ayer and Son's art
di rector, Leo Lionni, created a series of dynamic
posters intended to motivate defense plant work-
ers. In the 1930s Walter P. Paepcke, the president
of Container Corporation of America, had
become •Ul ea rly patron of Modernist design ;
during the war, CCNs art director, Egbert Jacob-
sen, commissioned designs from leading
emigre and American Modernists, including
Herbert Mauer, Herbert Bayer, and Jean Carlu,
for the company's advertising campaigns focus ·
ing on its war efforts and products. Autocar Cor-
poration, which supplied armored trucks to the
army, commissioned Paul Rand to produce a
striking (and curiously timeless) visual record of
its war production.
503. Ralph Eckerstrom. CCA. Trademark for
Container Corporation of America, 1957
504. Leo Lionni. Keep 'Em Rolling.1 Poster,
1941. The Museum of Modern Art, New York.
Gift of the Office for Emergency Management
505. Leo Lionni. Container Corporation of
507
America. Poster, 1942. Courtesy the designer
506. Joseph Binder. Azr Corps U.S. Army.
Poster, 1941. The Museum of Modern Art, New
York. Gift of the designer
507 . Herbert Matter. Container Corporation of
America. Poster, 1943 . Courtesy Ex Libris, New
York
508. Paul Rand. Mechanized Mules of Victory.
Cover and pages of a truck catalogue for Autocar
Corporation, 1942. Counesy the designer
92
I: .: .
~ vlctory
for victory
~
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The U 8. Army has called upon Autocar to build big, From its vury inception in 1897 every Autocar §
circulo.tlng oil sy11tem :For 4~ y ear
powerf'ul vehicles .speedy vehicle!!, for hauling a 11.ctivit;i1 ha!! trained the Company for its vital role §
insistence on mechanical perfection has wrought ti.
I
pre>clou• bwn!l.11 cargo of Amerlcu soldiers .. sturdy in the war program For 45 years YWlthout interruption ;:: tradition of precision that is honored by every one
impregnable vehicles, to safeguard that cargo .. 1t has manufactured motor vehicle11 e xclu11ively, _;:: of its master workers These are ach1evel!'.ents thlt.t
ftghtlng vahlcl.ts, to conquer th'! rorces of ill-will coni::entrating ln the last decade on heavy-duty ::;: only time can win ?he bar-vast of these years, ofthi!I
ALitocar izr.medlate 17 entered thia as order Jlumbl!lr l _____ vast experience, is at the service of our govern
trucil:s or 5 tons or over For 45 years Autocar has :;;::::§-
on l te 'oooks, &nd me.de tbe order-of-the-day "produc- 1onecred the way, developing n:any hl story-making ~ ment. Autocar le meeting its trell:lendous responsi
t ton"~ For the dun.ti on of the e11ergency Victory la "firsts" ln the lndustrr the fnst porcelain t1park- blllty to nationaldefenae by putting its 45 years'
in the driver's seat 11.t Autocar, guiding Mall-out lug, th"' tint American shaft-driven automobile; experience to work in helping to build for America
effort that refuaes to recognize the"ii:possiblc". the flr!lt double reduction gear drive, the f'irst a motorized a.r~ada such as the world ha.s never seen
lviV~t!.t"\\'a~ 11J1one: the first 1.n 1940 to rC"Ceive!).ofense 1'he nren ;•1ho worlr. on the vit&ls of th'!ae ·Jeh1cles 11.re Wha.t the artl.1an!I of Autoear prod'JCUl'Jn 11n- ir.inJ!'
?TjJrti Tod11.y those orders have grown to a hugl" bacJc- "'Xcelled ln the 1 r mechanJ. cal s:ull. The lr hands now for Amerl~a's a:illtJt.ry f:ree11 t!1"1 r.a·1• 1~1'-"
.o,; of ta'l.ny millions representlng 11. SW'll pro1•or·uon- move vii th the sw1ftnest acd suren"!!!!I of a surgl"On'11, co1J11tles111 tunea for Americ!l.11 ir,O..i!l~ry fh.,1 h•''"
,t~·ly i:.ii;hl!'r than ,\utocar's already high !lh11r1: of not pierce Autocar'a h.1.gh production ach~dule, the darting decisively fro~ tool box to point ot\\Oork built every Jcrnd of hauling .,,..r:i<' lt> :rro.. ~he : i 1;:r. •
tl':• r"'!!.'Jy-duty rr,arJcf't Md, thereforr·, high tr1'tute company perfected this special body-assembly lrn .rr.i,.d with tremendouz resourcot of sinU and e:xperl delivery trur)' to huge motoriz.. '1 tru.sp<:irh f,r
to the o.u--illty of lt~ product Autocar 19 nol'< produc. in the 11arne new two-story building th at houses the rl.' ~.the 11.rmy of nen at Autocar w~es a relentless and gasoline !low, for tne1r Uu.'lt'lr l eu1t.o~r. n<'.'l"
ll'., dlv1 r111f1ed types of military vehlcles: an anti chas:;ts assembly. The two aasembly lines chasHt :'ld victorious war agalnst t1MI' Tbesto rnen are in Sam, they have lncre11Bed th~1r ~1ant by 93,C'l.) sq•H•T"
t1:1.uA ·1~·h1cle, P••rsonnel Carrl.sr, Scout Car, ilnf1 on the first floor and body on the sieocoml tra·•el he front ranlc.e in the toattle of producti.on They feet and havl" &-d.1ed 1,500 ~m~loy!'"• te u,,. rt•!':'"
Tr:>r.1 C'irr~r Highl•ghb from one of th'l'St' a.s~mhly their O'l'ln Autocar-l!'nglneered route!! to one ;wr:c- rtt doing all in thetr pO'l'ler to supply America all withln llttle!- more tr.an 11. year'i u~ n.•y p•Tl"lt
ltnq· aM illustrated on th~ followin15 pages tlon where they are joined lnto o. Rolling :Fortr ~!:~ .~ith an ever mounting numr:er of military truck& nothing tQ etand 1n t!-.e ;iiay of ~roo ... :~lon for -·1• t.
-tn1.tea.:r neec not restrict the 1J.se of ~ 'to eave time, Autvcar, lhto only hl:'avy.d,,,ty :.rue:<
·n· ·-h1cle~ to mode1·n, smooth hlghways. The ~ conpany to do so, ingeniously combine~ the boa:r and
f'•.::: t '.)r treads \.l&t.><1 ln place of rear wheels will ~"'-·
--
chassls assembly llnes under one roof. The asseir.bl:v
"rry tn•w ~I'. .;.ft ly O\'L•r uneven terrain they never ;::. routes were engineer"'d and coordinat.. d by ,\loltocar
•. ' ir ,rip. Ca.tl'rp1ilar-lHte, they cllrnb cut of exp.,.rts so that the arD'or-plated ~y ls coir:pletc;;
~t• H J":• ....:t r.o:.u: Teai:ied 1"itl': the rolling front
~ :!:~;t::ee~~csa1:1:'n1~~ ~~= ~~~~·s~tr::~:u~!:~~:~
r• ,2tl,.ul~; '"n::-1'111.rd. Des1it.,. thrir hu(ie weight ~
i.
• '!" th<?:t t.l·il'J-' -,ur r.iotorl.:erJ infantry moving
lower the body over the i::ha3s1s, and l!'XJ•f:rts !e "'.. tn
•. l ~-- "r: <il an;.cr_ th«-se Au tocarmanufactured -.-ehi· _ 1~ork to f1t the two major .section& tog1•tt1er ·riltr.
w1 ~o·.cr ~rtuml a.ta speed o~ ~O :ril~s an hour. waste tune and txcess rr.ouon eompl•Jtl;!l,.Y • .l .. 11 ln'1t<id
I~
508
509 510
arts fr arc~itecture l
AMERICAN
19
NeueGrafik
New Graphic Design
Graphisme actuel
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CORPORATE STYLE
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By the early 1950s, television and computers had Jhree
begun to usher in the Information Age, and the 411ou,
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5"13. Herb Lubalin. Avant Garde. Magazine
cover, January 1968. Courtesy Tony DiSpigna
5"14.James McMullan. Paul Desmond· Late
3
Lament. Album cover, 1987. Courtesy the
designer
545. R. Crumb. Cheap Thrills . Album cover
for Big Brother & The Holding Company
(Columbia Records), 1968. Courtesy the artist
546. Michael Salisbury. West. Magazine cover
for Sunday supplement of the Los Anf!,eles Times,
December 26, 1971. Courtesy the designer
547. Mervyn Kurlansky. Alphabet using
found studio objects, designed for a special issue
on typography for Preston Polytechnic's own
design publication, 1977. Courtesy Pentagram,
London
548. Henry Wolf. Show. Magazine cover, Feb-
ruary 1964. Courtesy the designer
549. Willi Fleckhaus. Twen. Magazine con- 545
tents page, 1970. Courtesy Bob Ciano
04
.". . . . A -
I
I
I
-
rr~ Jr~ ~i
1-. ,~9JTU
Cheer up, Charlie. All is forgiven. I /
546 5,
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548
POLISH
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554
555 556
08
LATE MODERN
POLISH
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562
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566
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212
LATE MODERN
PSYCHEDELIC
21
JAPANESE
•
War II period, Japanese graphic design has given
as much as it has absorbed ." In his capacity as
managing d i rector of the Japan Design Center in
1960, Yusaka Kamekura brought Japan's inno-
vative new designers together with its booming
postwar industry, and the results were remark -
able. Tadanori Yokoo broke from the Inter-
national Style to pursue a more intuitive and
anarchic approach that emphasized the Japanese
fascination with past, present, and future
cultural icons, both Eastern and Western.
574. Kenji ltoh. Kataoka Bussan Co., Ltd.
Package design for tea , 1986. Courtesy the
designer
575 . Takashi Nomura (designer) and Seitaro
Kuroda (illustrator). Mosquito on the lOth Floor.
Film poster, 1982. C.otirti:-sy Kcisuke Nagatomo
576. Shigeo Okamoto. Lrfe and Pottery. Poster
for the 21st Pottery Test and Research Center
Exhibition, 1986. Courtesy the designer
577. Tadanori Yokoo. Science Fiction Movies.
Film festival poster, 1975. Courtesy the designer
578. Tadanori Yokoo. The Wonders of Life on
Earth. Poster for a book by lsamu Kurita, 1965 .
Courtesy the designer
579. Tadanori Yokoo. John Silver. Theater
poster, 1967. Courtesy the designer
'76
'14
S78
salon
de
friendall
21
HIROSHIMA APPEALS
1983
..
LATE MODERN
\ \ I I JAPANESE
2
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JAPANESE
PAOPtlECY
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TECHNICAL ECSTASY
588. George Han.lie and Richard Manning (Hipgnossis). Black Sabbath: Tixhmcal Ecstasy Record album cover, 1976. Courtesy the designers
20
l'OST ·MDDERN
• a • ithin the basically once playful, irreverent, and critical of architects Robert Venturi and Michael
= = = eclectic design environ- rigid functionalism. Their nature as threc- Graves, developed Post-Modern deco-
. . . . . ment of the eight ies, dimensional collage/ assemblages strongly rative motifs characterized by a stream-
-=- = the term Po5t-A1odern affected the look of graphic design in lined Neo-classicism. Teachers at the
W W has come to apply to a Milan, Barcelona, Los Angeles, San Fran- Cranbrook Academy in Bloomfield Hills,
distinctive international style based not cisco, and Tokyo. And it continues today Michigan, formulated an analytical design
on dogma but on the somewhat haphazard to define how graphic design is applied to approach based on the theory of
confluence of various theories and prac- consumer durable products. deconstruction: the limits of abstract
tices of individual designers worldwide. The earliest Swiss contributions to visual communication arc tested by find-
In cu rrent architectural criticism, the Post-Modernism can be traced to Basel, ing how many levels of meaning can be
term formally and effectively describes where Wolfgang Weingart joined the fac- expressed through complex typographic
the rejection of orthodox Modernist ulty of the Basel Allegemeine Gewerbe- configurations. While essentially deco-
purity in favor of an updated Neo-classical schule in 1968. Rejecting the order and rative, this theory is best applied in the
ornamentation ; in contemporary design, it cleanliness of the Swiss grid-locked design functional design work of the contempo-
is less precise, perhaps only a temporary and typography, Weingart mixed type rary Dutch firms Studio Dumbar and
rubric. The most general interpretation of weights within the same word, created Total Design.
the term for design purposes wou ld grids and then violated them, and Along with such analytical explorations
include all contemporary practitioners arranged type into images. Though draw- of graphic design, there were the more
who are not strict Bauhausians and would ing from Swiss formalism, Weingart's expressive, serendipitous approaches. Like
embrace such eighties' substyles as Neo- Basel Style provided a kind of computer- Psychedelia almost a decade before, Punk
Dada, Neo-Exprcssionism, Punk, and age liberation from two-dimensional (also known as Neo-Expressionism and
Pacific Modern. space. Numerous European and American Neo-Dada) was the spiritual offspring of
Like Art Deco, the last major inter- students who studied with Weingart the sixties' underground press and its anti-
national style, Post-Modern blends art expanded his creative approach to create a design aesthetic. Originating in England
history and new technology w ith a deco- distinct look for the eighties. as an offshoot of the rock music scene,
rative tendency to achieve a broad-based, The New York designer Dan Friedman, Punk developed in the context of various
commercially acceptable look. Linking a Basel graduate and later a teacher at Yale local cultures, particularly in London,
its various substylcs are certain distinctive and SUNY Purchase, was one of the most New York, Los Angeles, and Seattle. Its
visual, if not philosophical, characteris- effective teachers of the new style. Fried- design was governed by speed and econ-
tics: a playful kinetic geometry featuring man devised various stimulating student omy, and its posters and tabloid news-
floating forms, sawtooth rules, and ran- projects that tested the relationship papers were characterized by the use of
domly placed blips and lines; multiple between avant-garde and practical design raw-edged torn paper and ruling tape and
layered and fragmented images; pleasant applications. In 1973, he wrote: "Legibility by a "ransom-note" approach to type and
pastel harmonies; discordant, letter- (a quality of efficient, clear, and simple image. As with the underground press,
spaced typography; and frequent refer- reading) is often in conflict with read- comics played an important role in Punk's
ences to art and design history. ability (a quality which promotes interest, overall visual image. Swiss Punk repre-
The Post-Modern design aesthetic was pleasure, and challenge in reading). To sented a more refined use of type and
in the wind long before the name was what degree can a typographic statement image-a more violent high-tech attack
coined. In the late fifties and the sixties, be both functional and at the same time on the grid-and eventually deteriorated
certain premature Post-Modernisms aesthetically unconventional?" Friedman's into the more commercially oriented New
appeared in the Art Nouveau and Art approach was to ricochet through Amer- Wave. As cartoonist Gary Panter laments,
Deco mannerisms reprised in the work of ican design education. In Los Angeles, "Punk was an honest expression, while
Push Pin Studios. Even earlier, in 1947, designer April Greiman and photographer New Wave is a packaging term:'
Ettore Sottsass, Jr., had executed a series Jayme Odgers took the new language fur- Despite the Post-Modern label, design
of graphics combining Constructivist ther by using kinetic photography. They style in the eighties must be defined as
forms and gaily colored geometric debris combined Basel precepts with California the sum of its various parts. Evidence
in a prefiguration of his influential yet Pop/ Funk in what might be termed an definitely exists of a common period
short-lived Memphis Style. When he real- image overload, similar in texture to the vocabulary, or at least a kindred aesthetic
ized, in the early 1980s, that he had little work of Hipgnossis, the British album- sensibility and artistic cross-pollination,
chance of significantly improving the cover design studio, and the Japanese visible in all media and applied to diverse
broader urban environment, Sottsass poster artist Tadanori Yoko. Greiman later products. Yet the aesthetic continues to
decided to focus on redesign of the home, expanded the boundaries of legibility even evolve primarily from the styles of specific
the last domain of individual freedom. more through the use of abstract com- designers and to be propagated through
His cartoon-li ke, pastel-colored Memphis puter imagery. Concurrently, a group of the media as popular fashion. Only time
furniture, textiles, and accessories were at San Francisco designers, influenced by the will reveal its true nature and significance. 2;
PO J.' IlfOll>ERN
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610
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612 61J
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6 17
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621
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I
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622
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639 640
SELECTED DIDLIOORAPHY
Abdy, Jane. The French Poster. New York: Graphiques, 1977. Constantine, Mildred, and Fern, Alan. Revolutwnary Soviet Ftlm Posters. Balti-
Ades, Dawn. Photomontage. New York : Pantheon, 1976. more: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1974.
- - - . Posters: The 20th-Century Poster Design of the Avant-Garde. New York: - - - . Word and Image. New York: The M useum of Modern Art, 1968.
Abbeville, 1986. Cooper, Austin. Making a Poster. London: T he Studio, 1949.
Anikst, Mikhail, ed. Sovte/ Commercial Design of the Twenties. New York : Cooper, Douglas. The Cubist Epoch. London : Phaidon, 1970.
Abbeville, 1987. Crane , Walter. Of the Decorative Illus/ralion ofBooks Old and New. London:
Anscombe, l sabelle, and Gere , Charlotte . The Arts and Crafts Movement in Engumd George Bell, 1896.
and Amenca. New York: Rizzoli, 1978. - --. William Morris lo Whistler. London : George Bell, 1911.
Art Deco Trends m Deszgn Ch icago: The Berg man Gallery and University of Delhaye, Jean. Art Deco Posters and Graphics. New York: Rizzoli, 1978.
Chicago, 1973. Delpire, Robert. Paris 1925. Paris: Gallimard, 1957.
Arnhei m, Rudolf. A rt and Visual Perception. A Psychology of the Creative Eye. Design in America.· The Cranbrook Vision 1925-1950. New York: Harry N. Abrams,
Berkeley, Ca lif. : University of California Press, 1974. 1983.
Arwas, Victor. Art Deco. New York: H arry N. Abrams, 1980. Deslandres, Yvonne, with Lalanne, Dorothea. Poire/. New York: Rizzoli, 1987.
Ashwin, Clive. A History of Graphic Design and Communication: A Source Book Dewey, John. Art as Experience. Reprint. New York: Wideview/ Per igee, 1980.
London: Penbr idge, 1983. Dorfles, Gilio. Kitsch: The WorM of Bad Taste. New York: Universe, 1969.
Aslin , Elizabeth. The Aesthetic Movement.· Prelude to A rt Nouveau . New York: Downey, Fairfax. Portrati of an Era as Drawn by Charles Dana Gibson: A Biography.
Praeger, 1969. New York: Charles Scribner & Sons, 1936.
Baljev, Joost. Theo van Doesburg. New York : Macmillan , 1975. Elliott, David, ed. Alexander Rodchenko and the Arts of Revolutionary Russia.
Ban ham, Reyner. Theory and Design in the Firs/ Machine Age. New York: Praeger, New York: Pantheon, 1979.
1967. Ferebee, Ann. A History of Design from the Victorian Era lo the Present. New York:
Barnicoat, John. A Conczse fl i1tory of Posters. 1870-1970. New York : O xford Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1970.
University Press, 1980. Fortz, Adrian. Objects of Desire: Design and Society from Wedgwood lo IBM New
Battersby, Martin. The Decorative Thirties. New York: Walker, 1971. York: Pantheon, 1986.
- - -. The Decorative Twenties. New York: Walker, 1969. Fraser, James, and Heller, Steven. The Malzk U.rlag 1916-1947, Berlin, Prague,
Bayer, Herbert . Bauhaus 1919-1928. New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 1972. New York. New York: Goethe House; Madison, N.J. : Fairleigh Dickinson
- - - . Herber/ Bayer· Pam/er, Designer, Architect. New York: Van Nostrand University, 1985.
Reinhold, 1967. Friedman, Mildred, ed. DeSujl-1917-1931, Visions of Utopia. New York: Abbeville,
Billcliffe, Roger. Mackintosh Textile Designs. New York: Taplinger, 1982. 1982.
Bing, Samuel. Artistic America, Tiffany Gum and Art Nouveau. Reprint. Cambridge, Frutiger, Adrian. Type, Sign, Symbol. Zurich: ABC Verlag, 1980.
Mass.: M.I.T. Press, 1970. Fuld, James]. A Pictorial Bibliography of the First Editions ofStephen C Foster.
Black, Mary. American Advertising Posters of the Nineteenth Century. New York: Philadelphia: Musical Americana , 1957.
Dover, 1976. Gallo, Max . The Poster in History. New York: American H eritage, 1974.
Boe, Alf. From Gothic Revival lo Functional Form. A Study in Victorian Theories of Garner, Philip. Contemporary Decorative Arts from 1940 lo the Present New York:
Design. Oslo: Oslo University Press; Oxford: Blackwells, 1957. Facts on File, 1980.
Bojko, Szymon. New Graphic Design in Revolutionary Russia. New York: Praeger, Gerstner, Karl, and Kutler, Marcus. Die Neue Graphik!The New Graphic Art.
1972. New York: Hastings House, 1959.
Bolin, Brent C. Flight of Fancy. New York: St. Martin's, 1985. Glaser, Milton. Milton Glaser Graphic DesiJ!.n. Woodstock, N.Y: Overlook, 1974.
Branzi, Andrea. The Hot House.· Italian New Wtwe Design. Cambridge, Mass. : Gluck, Felix, ed. World Graphic Design.· Fifty Years of Adver11s1ng Art. New York:
M.l.T. Press, 1986. Watson-Guptill, 1969.
Briggs, Asa, ed. William Morris: Selected Writings and Designs. Harmondsworth , Gombrich, E. H. Art and Illusion . 2nd edition. Princeton: Princeton University
England: Penguin, 1962. Press, Bollingen Series, 1961.
Broas, Kees. Piel Zwart 1885- 1977. The Hague: Gemeentemuseum, 1973. Grannis, Chandler B., ed. Heritage of the Graphzl: Arts.· A Selection of Lectures Delzv-
Brown, Robert K., and Reinhold, Susan. The Poster Art ofA. M. Cassandre. ered at Gallery 303, New York City. New York and London: R. R. Bowker, 1972.
New York: E. P. Dutton, 1979. Gray, Camilla. The Russian Experiment in A rt 1863-1922. New York: Charles
Brunhammer, Yvonne. The Nineteen Twenties Style. London: Paul Hamlyn, Scribner & Sons, 1973.
1%9. Gray, Nicolette. A History of Let1ering. Creative Expert menI and Lei/er Ide11111y
Burckhardt, Lucius. The Werkbund: History and Ideology, 1907-1933. New York: Oxford, 1986.
Barron's, 1977. - - - . Nineteenth Century Ornamented Typefaces. Berkeley: University of
Busch, Donald. The Streamlined Decade. New York: George Braziller, 1968. California Press, 1977 .
Cabarga, Leslie. A Treasury of German Trademarks. New York: Art Direction Book Greif, Martin. Depression Modern.· The Thirties Style m Amenca New York:
Co., 1985. Universe, 1977.
Callen, Anthea. Women Artists of the Arts and Crafts Movement, 1870-1914. New Hageney, Wolfgang. Parts, 1928-1929. Rome and Milan: Edition Belvedere, 1985
York: Pantheon, 1980. Hammond, Wayne G. , and Volz, Robert L. Book Decoration m America, 1890-1910
Campbell, Joan. The German Werkbund: The Politics of Reform in the Applied Aris. Revision. Williamstown, Mass.: Chapin Library, Williams College, 1979.
Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1978. Havinden, Ashley. Adverllsing and the Ar/ls/ London: The Studio, 1956.
Carter, Rob; Day, Ben; and Meggs, Philip. Typographic Design: Form and Communi- Heartfield,John. Photomonlages of the Nazi Perzod New York · Universe, 1977.
cation. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1985. Henderson, Sally, and Landau, Robert. Billboard Art San Francisco: Chronicle,
Carter, Sebastian. Twenlteth Century Type Designer. New York: Taplinger, 1987. 1979.
Clark, Robert J. Arts and Crafts Movement zn America. Princeton: Princeton Hillier, Bevis. Art Deco of the 20s and 30s. London: Studio Vista; New York:
University Press, 1972. Dutton, 1968. 2
/he Decoralwe Aris of the Fornes and F1ft1es. Austerity Bm11.e. London : - - . The Twen/1e1h Century Book. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1967.
Stud io Vista, 1970. Lewis, John, and Brinkley, John. Graphic Design. London: Routledge & Kegan
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- - . The World of Art Deco. New York: E. P. Dutton, 1971. Lindsay, Jack. Wtllzam Moms: His Lr/e and Work. New York: Taplinger, 1980.
Hine, T homas. Populuxe. New York: Alfred A. Knop!, 1986. Lippard, Lucy R. Dados on Art. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1971.
Hipgnoss is and Hardie, George. fh e Work of H1pgnossis . New York: A & W Visual Lissitzky-Kuppers, Sophie. El L1ssitzky: Lz/e, Let!ers, Text. London and New York:
Library, 1978. Thames & Hudson, 1980.
Hlavsa. Oldruich. A Book ofTvpe and Des111.n. New York: Tudor, 1960. Lista, Giovanni. Le Livre Futunste. Modena, Italy: Editions Panini, 1986.
Hofm ann, Armin. Graph!(: Des1?,n Manual: Principles and Practice. New York: Van Lois, George, and Pitts, Bill. The Ar/ of Adver11sing.· Georf!.e Lois on Mass Comm11ni-
Nostrand Reinhold. 1965. ca/1on. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1977.
Horn , Richard. Memphis: Objects, Furmture, and Patterns. Philadelphia: Running Lodder, Ch risuna. Ruman Constructivism. New Haven: Yale University Press,
Press, 1986. 1987.
Hornung, Clarence P., and Johnson, Fridolf. 200 Years of American Graphic Art: A Lucie-Smah , Edward. Cultural Calendar of the 20th Century. London: Phaidon,
Re1rospec11ve Survev of the Pr1111111g Arts and Adver11s111g Since the Coloma! Per10d 1981.
New York: George Braziller, 1976. McCarthy, Fiona. A History of British Design, 1830-1970. London and Boston:
Howarth, Thomas. Charles Renme Mackintosh and the Modern Movement. London: George Allen & Unwin, 1979.
Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1952. McClelland, Gordon. Rick Griffin New York: Putnam and Perigee Paper Tiger,
Hu!ten. Pontus, organizer. Futunsmo, Futurism and Fu111nsms. New York: 1980.
Abbeville, 1986. McDermott, Catherine. Street Style: Br111sh Design in the 80s. New York: Rizzoli,
Hurlburt, Allen. The Design Concept. New York: Watson-Guptill, 1981. 1987.
- -. The Grid New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1978. Macfall, Haldane. Aubrey' Beardsley.· The Man and His \Vork. London: John Lane,
Huszar, Vil mos. Schrlder en Ontwerper 1884-1%0, De Grote Onbekende 1'0n de 1928.
S11jl. Utrecht: Sjarel Ex, Eis Hoek, 1985. McLean, Ruari.Jan Tschrcho!d. Typographer. Boston: David R. Godine, 1975.
lgarashi, Takenobu, ed. World Trademarks and Lo[!.olvpes II. Tokyo: Graph ic-sha, - - . Modern Book Desrgn. New York: Faber & Faber, 1958.
1987. ---.Victorian Book Dr<r~n. New York: Faber & Faber, 1963.
Jan Tschichold: LebEn und W'erk des Typographen With an introduction by Werner McLuhan, Marshall, and fiore, Quentin. War and Peace 111 the Global Village.
Klemke. Dresden: VEB Verlag der Kunst, 1977. New York: Bantam, 1968.
.Japan Package Design Association, ed. Package Des1?,n in Japan: Its Hislorv. Its Faces. Madsen, Stephen Tschudi. Sources of Art Nouveau. New York: Da Capo, 1976 .
Tokyo: Rikuyo-sha, 1976. Marchand, Roland. Adverttslllf!. the American Dream: Making Way for Modermty
Johnson, Diana Chalmers. American Art Nouveau. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1920-40. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1985.
1980. Margolin, Victor. American Poster Renaissance: The Great Age of Poster Design,
Johnson, Douglas and Madeleine. The Age of Illusion· Art and Politics in France 1890-1900. New York: Watson-Guptill, 1975.
1918-1940. New York: Rizzoli, 1987. Manio, Peter. The Democratic Art · Pictures for a 19th Cent11ry America. Boston:
Jones, Owen. The Grammar of Ornament. Reprint. New York: Portland House, David Godine, 1979.
1986. Mayor, A. Hyatt. Popular Prmts of the Americas. New York: Crow n, 1973.
Jubb, Michael. Cocoa & Corsets. London: Public Record Office, Her Majesty's Meggs, Philip B. A History a/Graphic Des1?,n. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold,
Stationery Office, 1984. 1983.
Kahn, Douglas. John Heartfield Art and Mass Media. New York: Tanam, 1985. Meikle, Jeffrey L. Twentieth Century Limited· Industna! Des1v1111 America,
Kallir, Jane. Viennese Des1?,n and the Wiener Werkstiitle. New York: Galerie 1925-1939. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1979.
St. Etienne/George Braziller, 1986. Metz!, Ervine. The Poster Its 1-11story and Its Art. New York: Watson -G uptill, 1963.
Kargrnov, German. Rodchenko. New York: Pantheon, 1980. Moholy-Nagy, Laszlo. Vision in Motion. Chicago: Paul Theohald, 1947.
Kelly, Rob Roy. Amertl:an Wood Type, 1828-1 'JOO. Notes on the Evolution of Deco- Morison, Stanley. First Prmaples o/'fvpof!.raphv. Cambridge, England: Cambridge
rated and Large Types. New York: Da Capo, 1969. Universltv Press, 1957.
Kepes, Gyorgy. Lanf!.Uaf!.e of Vts1on. Chicago: Paul Theobald, 1945. Mouron, I Ienn. A. M Cassandre New York: Rizzoli, 1985.
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Khan-Magomedov, Selim 0. Alexander Rodchenko: The Complete Work. Hastings House, 1961.
Cambridge, Mass.: M.I.T. Press, 1987. - --.A History of Visual Comm11mcat1011 New Yc.irk: l lastings I louse. 1967.
---.Alexander vesnm and Ruman Construc11v1sm. New York: Rizzoli, 1987. Muller-Brockmann, Josef, anJ Miillcr-Brockmann, Shizuka. A History of the
Kimura, Katsu. Art Deco Package Co!!ect10n . lokyo: Rikuyo-sha, 1985. Poster New York: I fastings I louse, 1961.
Kostelanetz, Richard, ed. Moholv-Nagy. New York and Washington: Praeger, 1970. Murgatroyd, Keith. Madan Graphics. London: Studio Vim, 1969.
Koretski, Victor Borisovich. Comrade Poster. Mo>cow, 1978. Naylor, Gillian. "/he Arts and Crafts Movement: A Studv of Its Sources, Idmls, and
Koumenhoven, John A. Made 111 America: The Arts in Modern Gvilizatron New In/l11enceon D1·s1f!.n Cambridge , Mass.: M.I.T. Press, 1975.
York: Doubleday, 1948. Neuwmann, Eckhard. Bauhaus and Bauhaus People. New York: Van Nostrand
Kunzie, David. The Early Comic Strip. Berkeley: University of Californi a Press, Reinhold, 1970.
1973. - --. F11nc/1011al Graphic Drngn m the 20s. New York: Reinhold, 1967.
Lang, Lothar. Expressromst Book Illustration in Germany, 1907-1927. Bo;ton: Ozenfant, Amedee. Fo11ndat10ns of Modem Art New York: Dover, 1953.
New York Graphic Society, 1976. Packer, William. The Art o/Vogue Covers 1919- 1940. New York: Bonanz;1, 1980.
Larner, Gerald and Celia. The Glasft.OW Style. London: Astragal, 1980. Passuth, Kristina. Moholy-Na!!,y. London and New "fork: Thames & l Judson, 1984.
Lewis, John. Anatomy of Printing: The Influences of Art and History on Design Pentagram. Ideas on Des1f!.n. New York: Fahcr & f.'ahcr, 1986
236 New York: Watson-Guptill, 1970. - - - . Uvm!!. by Drn?,n New Ycirk: Whitney Library of Design, 1978.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- -
Peterson, Theodore. Magazmes m the Twentieth Century. Champaign-Urbana, Ill.: Thorgerson, Storm, and Dean, Roger, eds. Album Cover Album A Book of Record
University of Illinois Press, 1964. Jackefl. New York: Dragon's World Book, 1977.
Pevsner, Nikolaus. Pioneers of Modern Design: From William Morris to Walter Tichi, Cecelia. Shi/ting Gears: Technology, Literature, Culture 111 Moder111st America.
Grop1us Harmondsworth, England: Penguin, 1960. Chapel Hill, N.C.: University of North Carolina Press, 1987.
Pitz, Henry C. The Practice of lllustration. New York: Watson-Guptill, 1947. Tolmer, A. Mise en Page: The Theory and Practice of Layout. London: The Studio,
Prokopoff, Stephen. The Modern Dutch Poster. Champaign-Urbana, Ill.: University 1930.
of Illinois, Krannert Art Museum, 1987. Tracy, Walter. Leiters of Credit: A View of Type Desig,11. Boston: David Godine,
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Cambridge, Mass.: M.I.T. Press, 1986. Twyman, Michael. Printi11g, 1770-1970: A11 Illustrated History of Its Development
Quilici, Vieri, ed. Rodche11ko, the Complete Work. Cambridge, Mass.: M.I.T. Press, and Uses in E11gla11d. London: Eyer & Spottiswoode, 1970.
1987. Updike, Daniel Berkeley. Printing Types, Their History, Forms and Use: A Study i11
Radice, Barbara. Memphis: Research, Experiences, Results, Failures and Successes of Survivals. New York : Dover, 1980.
New Design. New York: Rizzoli, 1984. Vallance, Aymer. William Morris.· His Art, His Writings and His Public Life.
Rand, Paul. A Designer's Art New Haven: Yale University Press, 1985. London: Studio Editions, 1986.
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Read, Herbert. Art and Industry. New York: Horizon, 1961. 1969.
Reed, Orrel P., Jr. German Expremomsl Art. The Rober/ Gore Ri/kind Collection. Varnedoe, Ki rk. Vienna 1900.· Art, Architecture and Design. New York: The
Los Angeles: University of California, Frederick S Wright Art Gallery, 1977. Museum of Modern Art , 1986.
Rennert,Jack. Timeless Images Tokyo: Isetan Museum of Art, 1984. Veronesi, G uilia. Style & Design 1909-1929. New York: George Braziller, 1968.
Rhodes, Anthony. Propaganda· The Art of Persuasion, World War II. Victor Mar- Watkinson, Raymond. Pre-Raphaelite Art and Design. New York, 1970.
golin, ed. New York: Chelsea House, 1976. Weber, Eva. Art Deco 1n America. New York: Bison, 1985.
Rowland, Kurt. History of the Modern Movement. New York: Van Nostrand Weill, Alain . The Poster: A Worldwide Survey and History. Boston: G. K. Hall, 1985.
Reinhold, 1974. \Xeisberg, G abriel P. Art Nouveau Bing, Paris Style 1900. New York: Harry N.
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of Modern Art, 1968. 1986.
Rublowsky,Joh n, and H eyman, Ken. Pop Art. New York: Basic Books, 1965. Welo, Samuel. Trademark and Monogram Suggestions. New York: Pitman, 1937.
Sanders, Barry. The Craftsman: An Anthology. Santa Barbara: Peregri ne Smith, Wember, Paul. Johan Thorn Prikker. Krefeld, Germany: Scherpe Verlag, 1966.
1978. Wingler, H ans M . The Bauhaus: Whmar, Dessau, Berlin, Chicago. Cambridge,
Sartogo, Piero. I1alia11 Re-Evolutio11. Design i11 Italian Society in the Eighties. La Mass.: M.I.T. Press, 1969.
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Schau, Michael. All Amer1ca11 Girl: The Art of Coles Phillips. New York: Watson- Yasinskaya, I. Revolutionary Textile Des1~n: Russia in the 1920s and 1930s. New
G uptill, 1975. York: Viking, 1983.
Schm idt, Joost. Lehre u11d Arbe1t am Bauhaus 1919-32. Diisscldorf: Edition Young, Frank H . Advertising Layout. New York: Pascal Covici, 1928.
Marzona, 1984.
Schweiger, Werner ]. Wie11er Werkstiilte: Design i11 Vien11a, 1903-1932. New York: ANNUALS
Abbeville, 1984.
American Institute of G raphic Arts. A IGA Graphic Design, USA. New York :
Selz, Peter, and Constantine, Mild red . Art Nouveau. New York: T he Museum of
Watson-Guptill, 1980.
Modern Art, 1976.
Art D irectors Club. Annual ofAdvertising and Editorial Art. New York:
- - - . Art Nouveau: A rt and Design al the Turn of the Celllury. New York : T he
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Museum of Modern Art , 1959.
Coyne, Richard. CA Annual of Design and Advertising. Palo Alto: Communications
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Arts Books, 1958.
Shahn, Ben. The Shape of Conlent. Cambridge, Mass.: H arvard University Press,
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1957.
House, 1952.
Snyder, G ertrude, and Peckolick , Alan. Herb Luba/in: Art Director, Graphic
Print Casebooks. T h ree six-volume editions of the best in graphic design from 1975
Designer and Typographer. New York: American Showcase, 1985.
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Sparke, Penny. An Introduction to Des1g11 and Culture in the Twentieth Century.
"The Society of Illustrators." The Illustrators Annual New York: I lastings H ouse,
London: Allen & Unwin, 1986.
1959.
Sparke, Penny; Hodges, Felice; Coad, Emma D ent ; and Stone, Anne. Desig,11 Source
Typography: The Annual of the Type Directors Club. New York: Watson -Gu pull,
Book. Secaucus, N.J. : Chartwell, 1986.
1985 .
Sparling, H. Halliday. The Kelmscolt Press and William Mom s, Master-Cra/tsma11.
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Spencer, I lerbert. Pioneers of Modern Typography. New York: H astings H ouse,
1970.
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1987.
Spencer, Isobel. Walter Cra11e. New York: Macmillan, 1975.
Spiegelman, Art, and Mauly, Fran<;oise, eds . Read Yourself Raw. New York :
Pantheon, 1987.
Sutnar, Ladislav. Package Design: The Force of Visual Selli11g. New York : A rts, 1953.
Taylor, Joshua C. Futurism. New York : The Museum of Modern Art, 1961. 2
Leni, Paul, 87 Pannaggi, Ivo, 92 Sterling, David, 226
Lenica,Jan, 206 Panter, Gary, 229 Stern, Julius]., 157
Leonard , 139 Parks, Melanie Marder, 226 Stickley, Gustav, 38
Le Petit, Alfred, 28 Parrish, Maxfield, 64 Stoecklin, Niklaus, 184, 185
Le Qucrnec, A lain, 232 Paul, Bruno, 53, 57 Stone, Wilbur Macey, 32
Leupin, I lerbert, 185 Pechstein, Max, 86, 87 Storch, Otto, 203
Levitan, Rachel Schreiber, 231 Penfield, Edward, 65 Strauss, H. M. A., 160
Lewis, Wyndham, 96 Peske, Jean Miscelas, 44 Studio Dumbar, 233
Leyendecker,]. C., 160 Pfund, Paul, 138 Sussman/Prejza & Company lnc., 230
Lightfoot, M. G., 58 Phillips, Coles, 66, 67 Sutnar, Ladislav, 120, 122, 123, 190
Lionni, Leo, 192 Pick, Frank, 186 Swarte, Joost, 233
Lissitzky, El, 10, 98, 99, 100, 101, 104, 105 Pi rchan, 75
Livemont, Privat, 42 Pi rtle, Woody, 231 Tanaka,Ikko,219
Lohse, Richard P., 196 Poclzig, Hans, 87 Teige, Karel, 109, 120, 121, 122
Longhauser, William, 225 Prampolini, Enrico, 93 Telingater, Solomon, 100, 105
Loupot, Charles, 128 Preetorius, Emil. 145 Terry-Adler, Margit, 113
Lubalin, H erb, 204 Prikker, Johan Thorn, 57 T hompson, Bradbury, 194
Lustig, Alvin, 195 Prusakov, Nikolai, 106 Tiernan, 151
Pryde, James, 72 Tissi, Rosmarie, 223
Macdonald, Margaret and Frances, 59 Purvis, Tom, 150 Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri de, 40, 43, 45
Mackintosh, Charles Rennie, 58, 59 Tschichold, Jan , 118, 119
Mackmurdo, Arthur 11. , 35, 37, 42 Rackow, Leo, 164 Turpain, A., 45
McMullan,James, 204 Rand, Paul, 11, 191, 193 , 200
MacNair,J. H., 58, 59 Reno, 140 Updike, Daniel Berkley, 39
Mangold, Burkhard, 76 Rhead, Louis, 65
Manning, Richard, 220 Riccobaldi, Giovanni, 146 Vadasz, Miklos, 48
Man Ray, 186 Rich, A. L., 69 Vanderbyl, Michael, 231
Manwaring, Michael, 230 Ricketts, Charles, 34, 35 Vanderlans, Rudy, 227
Marc, Franz, 85 Roberts, William , 96 Van de Velde, H enri, 57
Marek, Mark, 229 Robbins, Tom, 212 van Doesburg, Theo, 110, lll , 168, 170, 173
Marinetti , Fi lippo T., 90, 91 Rodchenko, Alexander, 101, 102, 103 , 105 Van Hamersveld, John , 212
Matte r, H erbert , 141, 182, 192, 195 Rogers, A., 152 Venna, Lucio, 148
Mattaloni, Giovanni, 70 Roller, Alfred, 62 Vincent, Rene, 132
Mayakovsky, Vladimir, 101, 105 Roshkov, Juryi, 108 Vivarelli, Carlo L., 196
Mayer, H y, 69 Rossmann, Zdenek , 121 Von Reznicek, Franz, 53
Meunier, I lenri, 42 Rouchon,29
Micic, Ljubomir, 121 Rummler, 20 Wallace, 151
Mocnring, John R. ,2 12 Wearing, Paul, 233
Moholy-Nagy, Laszlo, lll , 112, 116, 117 Salisbury, Michael, 205 Weiluc, 48
Morris, William , 30, 33, 34 Schawinsky, Xanti, 116 Weingart , Wolfgang, 223
Moscoso, Victor, 211 Schlemmer, Oskar, 112 White, Gleeson, 35
Moser, Koloman, 61, 62, 63 Schmidt,Joost, 113, 115, 116, 119 Willrab, 77
Mouly, Frani;oise, 229 Schnackenberg, Walter, 75 Wilson, Wes, 210, 211, 213
Mucha, Alphonse, 46, 50 Schreiber, Georges, 159 Wolf, Henry, 205
Muchley, Robert, 163 Schuitema, Paul, 124 Wright, Frank Lloyd, 155
Muir, Donna, 229 Schulpig, Karl, 136
Muller, Fridolin, 196 Schulz-Neudamm, 137 Yokoo, Tadanori, 214, 215
Muller-Brockmann, Josef, 196, 199 Schwartz, Samuel L., 166
Schwitters, Kurt, 168, 170, 171, 173 Zaid, Barry, 203
Nagai, Kazumasa, 218 Seguini, Antonio, 148 Zender, Michael, 224
Nagatomo, Keisuke, 214 Semionov, Semion, 107 Zwart , Piet, lll, 124, 125
Nash, Jim, 164 Seneca, Federico, 148
Neuberg, Hans, 196 Severini, Gino, 90
Nicholson, William, 72 Shepard, Otis, 160, 161
Noguchi, Isamu, 190 Silverstein, Louis, 201
Nolde, Emil, 85 Skolos, Nancy, 225
Smith,]. D., 74
Odermatt, Siegfried, 223 Snider, Steve, 231
Odgers, Jayme, 224 Sottsass, Ettore, 222
Okamoto, Shigeo, 214 Spiegelman, Art, 229
Olbrich, Joseph Maria, 62 Stankowski, Anton, 118
Orazi, Emmanuel, 51 Starowieyski, Franciszek, 206
Orr, Michael R, 231 Steinitz, Kathe, 173
Steinlen, Theophile Alexandre, 43
Pagowski, Andrej, 207 Steinweiss, Alex, 190
Paladini, V., 93 Stenberg, Georgy and Vladimir, 107
Paleologue, Jean de, 44 Stepanova, Varvara, 103 2.
BRITISH VICTORIAN VORTICISM LATE MODERN
AMERICAN VICTORIAN CONSTRUCT! VISM SWISS MODERN
FRENCH VICTORIAN DESTIJL ENGLISH MODERN
BRITISH ARTS AND CRAFTS BAUHAUS AMERICAN MODERN
AMERICAN ARTS AND CRAFTS NEW TYPOGRAPHY SWISS INTERNATIONAL
FRENCH ART NOUVEAU BRITISH ART DECO AMERICAN ECLECTIC
JUGENDSTIL FRENCH ART DECO AMERICAN REVIVAL
GLASGOW STYLE ITALIAN ART DECO PSYCHEDELIC
VIENNA SECESSION SWISS ART DECO POLISH LATE MODERN
AMERICAN ART NOUVEAU AMERICAN ART DECO JAPANESE MODERN
ITALIAN ART NOUVEAU STREAMLINE POST-MODERN
PLAKATSTIL DUTCH ART DECO NEW WAVE
WIENER WERKSTATTE GERMAN ART DECO MEMPHIS
EXPRESSIONISM EAST EUROPEAN DECO ZURICH SCHOOL
MODERNISM DADA BASEL SCHOOL
FUTURISM HEROIC REALISM PUNK
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