Thursday, April 10, 2025
The sophisticated style of Alexey Brodovitch
alexey brodovitch exerted significant influence on American graphic design and photograph during his 25 year tenure as art director of Harper's Bazaar. his use of asymmetrical layouts, white space and dynamic imagery changed the nature of magazine design.
Brodovitch exposed Americans to the European avant-garde by commissioning work from leading European artists and photographers, including A.M. Cassisandre, Salvador Dali, Henri Cartier-Bresson, and Man Ray.
what's brodovitch style? elegance!
1- while fashion magazines showed the whole garment, brodovitch would crop images unexpectedly or off-center to bring a new dynamism to the layout.
2- the form lies in the photograph or illustration as a cue for how to handle the shape of the text, whether splayed out on the page or in the shape of a fan,
3- only two images per page,
4- a suggested surrealist content, i.e., female figures in blurry forms to communicate this new way of sharing information, torn edges on photographs, or pages, as if they had been torn through with a woman's figure stepping out of them. or covers and spreads of harper's in the form of lips, hands, and eyes.
the modern look of Lester Beall
what we have here?
1- european influence,
2- american energy,
3- color, shape tone interacting with layering sequence, drop-outs, overlays, and other processes,
4- a carefully manipulated vocabulary,
Through the 1930s and 1940s Beall produced innovative and highly regarded work for clients including the Chicago Tribune, Sterling Engraving, The Art Directors Club of New York, Hiram Walker, Abbott Laboratories and Time magazine. Of particular interest was his work for the Crowell Publishing Company which produced Colliers magazine. Also of interest in this period are the remarkable poster series for the United States government's Rural Electrification Administration.
You know of "pictorial statistics"? That's Neurath's contribution to graphic design
Otto Neurath came up with the idea of “representing social facts pictorially.” The idea was to bring “dead statistics” to life by making them visually attractive and memorable.
Neurath was right. Today in some circles, these might be referred to as “data visualizations” or “infographics”, previously referred to as “statistical graphics”, “picture statistics”, “pictorial statistics”, “information design” and or “information visualizations.”
Container Corporation of America's contribution to graphic design
Container Corporation of America (CCA) was founded in 1926 and manufactured corrugated boxes. 1968 CCA merged with Montgomery Ward & Company, Inc., becoming MARCOR. Under the leadership of Walter Paepcke, CCA was a patron of graphic arts and design. The company amassed a collection of artworks that eventually found their way to the National Museum of American Art. In the late 1940s, CCA commissioned Herbert Bayer to create a World Geo-Graphic Atlas, which was distributed free to more than 150 colleges and universities. A review described it as the "most handsome and best atlas ever published in America." (WIKIPEDIA)
1940s jenny on the job by kula robbins
the star of this series is jenny, the model production worker. the government had encouraged entry of women into the workforce, replacing
men fighting overseas. jenny on the job showcases eight posters issued
in 1943 by the United States Public Health Services.
jenny became a role model for many young women, probably new to industrial jobs, on working safely and efficiently, doing her best to help the war effort.
on content:
1. kula is able to sell jenny as the girl next door,
2. jenny is not only a problem solver, but a dutiful citizen in times of war,
3. jenny exhibits a sense of optimism & valor,
on form:
3. accessible rendition: jenny in action, and message, sometimes as imperative ("let's keep our room clear") or descriptive: "lift weight the easy way",
4. friendly atmosphere,
5. jenny comes out as resilient, witty & productive and
the genius of A. M. Cassandre (1920s-1940s)
A. M. Cassandre (1901- 1968) is an influential ukranian-french poster artist and type face designer.
his "art deco" posters are memorable for their innovative graphic solutions and their frequent denotations to such painters as Max Ernst and Pablo Picasso.
Cassandre taught graphic design at the École des Arts Décoratifs and then at the École d'Art Graphique.
In France, with the help of partners, he was able to set up his own advertising agency called Alliance Graphique.
his Bazaar's covers are unique in that they exhibit a particular french sense of humor, and a touch of surrealism,
sexy glamour and mystery? the vargas pinup girl!
click here for Vargas's illustrations for playboy throughout the 1960's-1980's, the beauty of the images is not at the same level as that of the 1930s and 1940s: the glamor and mystery are gone, and so is Vargas's touch for extreme detail.
BAUHAUS in architecture
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Haus am Horn designed by George Muche |
simple cubic design, utilizing steel and concrete in its construction.
or Bruno Taut,
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Bruno Taut's Onkel-Toms-Hütte, in Wilkistrasse |
or else, the amazing Wissenhoffsiedlung!
The square implies flatness, no ornamentation (after loos)
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Loos' Rufer House, 1922 |
This freeze is pretty interesting for Loos. It is bridging classical and modern orders.
Loos implements Raumplan to emulate a natural landscape internalized through interconnecting volumes by a multilevel organization on a single floor.
1. see that the first and second floors have a split-level distinction;
The great Herbert Matter
In 1936, Matter was offered roundtrip passage to the United States as payment for his work with a Swiss ballet troupe. He spoke no English, yet traveled across the United States. When the tour was over, he decided to remain in New York. He went to see Alexey Brodovitch, who had been collecting the Swiss travel posters (two of which were hanging on Brodovitch's studio wall). Matter soon began taking photographs for Harper's Bazaar and Saks Fifth Avenue. Later, he was producing covers and inside spreads for Vogue.
What do we have here?