GREAT IDEAS OF WESTERN MAN
ADVERTISEMENTS FOR 1960 – 61 – 62 – 63
Herbert Bayer [Art Director]
Herbert Bayer (Art Director): GREAT IDEAS OF WESTERN MAN ADVERTISEMENTS FOR 1960 – 61 – 62 – 63. Chicago: Container Corporation of America, 1963. Original edition. Printed cardboard portfolio folder containing 22 loose, color plates. Folder is in fine condition. All plates are in fine condition as well. Out-of-print. Truly exceptional—the cleanest CCA Portfolio set we have handled.
11.5 x 14.25 cardboard portfolio folder with 22 [11.25 x 14] color plates featuring advertisements created for the Container Corporation of America by many contemporary greats in modern graphic design, art, and photography.
1960 - 61 - 62 - 63 Portfolio Contents:
- Herbert Bayer: Theodore Roosevelt
- Jacob Landau: John Milton
- Yusaku Kamekura, Sofu Teshigahara, Ken Domon: Buddha
- John Massey: John C. Calhoun
- Matazo Kayama: Buddha
- Vin Giuliani: William Penn
- Abraham Rattner: Emerson
- Herbert Bayer: Thomas Carlyle
- Luise Kaish: Frederick the Great
- Robert Osborn: Rabindranath Tagore
- Charles T. Coiner: Marcus Manillus
- Harold Altman: Francis Bacon
- Alexey Brodovitch: Rousseau
- Herbert Bayer: Aesop
- Rene Magritte: George Santayana
- David Aronson: Edmund Burke
- Morris Broderson: Goethe
- Art Kane: Albert Einstein
- John Massey: Michel de Montaigne
- Clark Richert: Frederick Neitzsche
- Jean Helion: Spinoza
- David Walsh: George Santayana
From 1950 to the mid-1970s, the CCA ran advertisements in a series called "Great Ideas of Western Man." Art Director Herbert Bayer commissioned major artists and designers to illustrate selected ideas of the greatest philosophers, writers, scientists, and cultural, religious, and political figures of history. An excellent vintage snapshot of corporate America's embrace of the European Avant-Garde, speciifically by Chairman Walter Paepcke of the CCA.
These CCA Portfolios contain absolutely the best reproductions of these pieces, many of which are rightly considered high points of American Graphic Design.
The Container Corporation of America [CCA], the largest domestic manufacturer of paperboard and packaging materials, was an early and influential patron of Modern design in the United States. Design work commissioned by the CCA reflected their progressive business approach as well as the growing consumer culture fueled by new attention being paid to the aesthetic shaping of products and advertising. In following its mission—and especially through its advertisements—CCA founded a style of institutional communication that influenced the field and prefigured contemporary socially oriented campaigns.
In 1970, responding to the first wave of American environmental concerns, CCA developed a major recycling program. The company sponsored a national competition to design the recycling symbol, which was won by a California college student, Gary Anderson.
Walter Paepcke [1896–1960], founded the CCA in 1926, and initiated a progressive design program in 1935 under the direction of Egbert Jacobsen [1890–1966], who created a cohesive visual appearance for the company, standardizing the look and style of everything from factories and trucks down to the company letterhead. Initially, the CCA hoped to gain a competitive market edge and overcome the Depression-era mistrust of big business by portraying the company as a patron of “good design,” intelligence, and taste aimed at making the business world a better place.
Beginning in 1937 a seminal series of ads directed by Charles Coiner [1898–1989] used illustrations by A. M. Cassandre, Jean Carlu, Leo Lionni, Herbert Bayer, Herbert Matter, and other European vanguard artists and designers. This campaign marked a unique integration of progressive art into mainstream American promotion and advertising.
But Paepcke deepened his impact on Modernism in America when he became the friend and financial supporter of Bauhaus émigré László Moholy-Nagy, who came to Chicago in 1937 to launch the New Bauhaus. Paepcke also became the patron of Bauhaus alumnus Herbert Bayer, who profoundly aided him in his goal of bettering humanity through his commercial products and advertising.
Walter Paepcke began redeveloping the resort town of Aspen, Colorado in 1945, the same year he hired Bayer as the Design Director for CCA. Bayer moved to Aspen in 1946 where he co-designed the Aspen Institute, oversaw the restoration of the Wheeler Opera House, and designed promotional posters that identified skiing with wit, excitement, and glamour. In 1956, he was promoted to Chairman of the Department of Design, where he was responsible for the corporation’s entire aesthetic environment, including graphic design, advertising, marketing, industrial design, architecture, and interiors — his first foray into the concept of creating a total corporate environment.
As a result of his relationship with Paepcke, Bayer pioneered the concept of collaboration between the artist and a corporation. Their shared vision of a symbiotic relationship between corporate culture and an aesthetic philosophy was Bayer’s realization of the true Bauhaus credo.
With the outbreak of World War II, CCA launched its highly successful “Paperboard Goes To War” institutional campaign. Using telegraphic copy and symbolic imagery to promote the importance of paperboard packaging in the war effort, the campaign was designed to improve the competitive position of paperboard in the postwar market by touting its strength and durability, features that made it an alternative to the wooden barrels and crates then in use for most shipping.
The CCA’s influential advertising campaigns were organized under such themes as wartime service and patriotism, the United Nations, the States of the Union, and finally the influential ”Great ideas of Western Man,” that employed pioneering artists and designers to visually interpret historic quotations from philosophers to politicians.
In 1938, advertising executive David Ogilvy had denigrated CCA advertising as “an exercise in amateur pretension” and predicted that “it would soon be consigned to oblivion.” Thirty-eight years later, he declared it to be “the best . . . corporate advertising that has ever appeared in print.”