Typografische Monatsblätter August/September 1972
Schweizer Graphische Mitteilungen / Revue suisse de l’imprimerie
Rudolf Hostettler [Editor]
Rudolf Hostettler [Editor]: Typografische Monatsblätter / Schweizer Graphische Mitteilungen / Revue suisse de l’imprimerie [Swiss Typographic Monthly Magazine: Journal for Typographic Composition, Design, Communication, Printing and Production]. St. Gallen: Zollikofer / Schweizerischer Typographenbund Bern, Jahrgang 91, Nr. 8.9, August/September 1972. Text in German. Slim quarto. Perfect bound and stitched wrappers. 94 pp. Illustrated articles and trade advertisements. Cover Design: Wolfgang Weingart. Typefaces used throughout: Akzidenz Grotesk and Univers. Name to top of first page, clean and well preserved, so a very good or better copy.
9 x 11.685 typography journal with 94 pages of illustrated articles. Whether you call it the Swiss Typographic Monthly Magazine, Swiss Graphic Communications or The Review of Swiss Printing, you know the advertisements alone are worth the price of admission.
The Swiss Style (also known as International Typographic Style) was developed in Switzerland in the 1950s. This style was defined by the use of sans-serif typefaces, and employed a page grid for structure, producing asymmetrical layouts. By the 1960s, the grid had become a routine procedure. The grid came to imply the style and methods of Swiss Graphic Design. Also stressed was the combination of typography and photography as a means of visual communication. The primary influential works were developed as posters, which were seen to be the most effective means of communication.
Contents:
- Typografie
- TM Communication 2: Schule für Design Basel Vorkurs. Grafische Übungen. 24 pages of graphic exercised by Kurt Hauert and Manfred Maier based on the Basel foundation program. “I created the supplements “TM Communication” and “Typographic Process.” You can see them from 1972 onward, I published student work but also work by other people; studios, typographers, photographers,” Wolfgang Weingart said in an interview. “[The goal of those supplements was] to show good arrangement of pages. Most of the time I made the pages as an educational example. That was the idea behind it. To publish different people, artists—and we were totally free to do what we wanted . . . It was a whole movement at the time. My idea was to change graphic design, Swiss graphic design, from this very strict way of making typography to a more lively way. And it had some effect, internationally too.”
- Organisation
- Harro Werner, Zürich: Perspektiven der grafischen Industrie
- Satzherstellun
- W. Huldi, Zürich: Der Bereich Satzherstellung an der Drupa ’72
- Harris 2500 – ein neues vollelektronisches Redaktionssystem
- Aktuelle Nachrichten
- Offsetteil
- Kurt Ringer, St.Gallen: Bahnbrechender Vorstoss in die Ultraviolett- Trocknung von Offsetfarben
- W. P. Jaspert, London: Electronic Repro
- Bruno Gisi, Untersiggenthal: Protocol, das schnellste Filmmontage-system der Welt
- h: Solna-Offsetmaschinen: Hoher Bedienungskomfort, Neue Stativkonstruktion, Neue Registereinstellung am Platten-zylinder, Solna-Vorregistersystem
- Neue Solna 22 000-Rollenoffsetmaschine
- Numéro spécial : Drupa 1972
- Düsseldorf
- Le point de vue du compositeur
- Roger Chatelain : Après la Drupa
- Le point de vue du compositeur à la machine
- Marcel Probst : Tendance renforcée à l’automatisation
- Le point de vue de l’imprimeur
- Claude-Michel Jacot : Le plus grand marché international des arts graphiques
- Les exposants
- Deux nouveautés chez Heidelberg
- Le présent et l’avenir des arts graphiques
- Actualités graphiques
... Although "Swiss" graphic design was first adopted in U.S. by professionals in their design practices, soon several leading U.S. graphic design schools followed suit, going directly to the source. A number of Swiss teachers and their graduates, from Armin Hoffman's Basel school in particular, put down roots in schools including Philadelphia College of Art, University of Cincinnati and Yale. (The Swiss influence seems to have been particularly strong in U.S. and Canadian schools; Europeans have often expressed a certain mystification at this North American reverence for the Basel method.) Manfred Maier's book, Basic Principles of Design, on the Basel foundation program, was finally available in the U.S. in 1977, spreading this method farther. Under the influence of this highly structured educational method and its emphasis on the prolonged study of abstract design and typographic form, these American schools began to carefully structure their curricula. Based on objectivity and rationalism, this educational system produced a codified method that was easy to communicate to students, giving them a foundation for a visual design process and composition that went far beyond the superficial emulation of their heroes.
The Typografische Monatsblätter was one of the most important journals to successfully disseminate the phenomenon of Swiss typography to an international audience, as well as spread the burgeoning ideas of the New Wave style. In existence for almost eighty years, the journal was a vital forum for concepts and discussion. Throughout these years, the Swiss typographic journal witnessed significant moments in the history of typography and graphic design. In the second half of the 20th century factors such as technology, socio-political contexts, and aesthetic ideologies profoundly affected and transformed visual language.
Wolfgang Weingart (Germany, 1941 – 2021) was an internationally known graphic designer and typographer. His work is categorized as Swiss typography and he is credited as "the father" of New Wave or Swiss Punk typography.
“For me, typography is a triangular relationship between design idea, typographic elements, and printing technique.”
Weingart was born near the Swiss border of Germany, in the Salem Valley, in 1941. He lived near Lake Constance for about thirteen years, moving to Lisbon in 1954 with his family. In April 1958 he returned to Germany and began his studies at the Merz Academy in Stuttgart, where he attended a two-year program in applied graphic arts. He learned typesetting, linocut and woodblock printing.
Weingart then completed a three-year typesetting apprenticeship in hot metal hand composition at Ruwe Printing. There he came into contact with the company’s consulting designer, Karl-August Hanke, who became his mentor and encouraged him to study in Switzerland.
Weingart met Emil Ruder and Armin Hofmann in Basel in 1963 and moved there the following year, enrolling as an independent student at the Schule für Gestaltung Basel (Basel School of Design). In 1968, he was invited to teach typography at the institution’s newly established Kunstgewerbeschule where Hofmann taught. The designers that surrounded Hofmann were not as focused on using Swiss-style principles in application to their work. These stylistic choices proved to be a great influence on Weingart, who was one of the first designers to abandon these strict principles that controlled Swiss design for decades. As he later wrote, “When I began teaching in 1968, classical, so-called “Swiss typography” (dating from the 1950s), was still commonly practiced by designers throughout Switzerland and at our school. Its conservative design dogma and strict limitations stifled my playful, inquisitive, experimental temperament and I reacted strongly against it. Yet at the same time I recognized too many good qualities in Swiss typography to renounce it altogether. Through my teaching I set out to use the positive qualities of Swiss typography as a base from which to pursue radically new typographic frontiers.”
Between 1974 and 1996, at Hofmann’s invitation, Weingart taught at the Yale Summer Program in Graphic Design in Brissago, Switzerland. For over forty years he has lectured and taught extensively in Europe, North and South America, Asia, Australia and New Zealand.
According to Weingart, "I took 'Swiss Typography' as my starting point, but then I blew it apart, never forcing any style upon my students. I never intended to create a 'style'. It just happened that the students picked up—and misinterpreted—a so-called 'Weingart style' and spread it around."
Weingart was a member of the Alliance Graphique Internationale (AGI) from 1978 to 1999, and served on the editorial board of Typographische Monatsblätter magazine from 1970 to 1988. In 2005 he was awarded the honorary title of Doctor of Fine Arts from MassArt. In 2013 he was a recipient of the AIGA Medal, the highest honor of the design profession, for his typographic explorations and teaching. In 2014 Weingart received the Swiss Grand Prix of Design award, presented by the Federal Office of Culture for his lifelong merits as a designer. [Wikipedia]