NEW POSTER
International Exposition Of Design In Outdoor Advertising
Alexey Brodovitch [Designer]
Alexey Brodovitch [Designer]: NEW POSTER [International Exposition Of Design In Outdoor Advertising]. Philadelphia: The Franklin Institute, 1937. First edition [2,500 copies]. Oblong quarto. Wire spiral-bound printed boards. Unpaginated. 53 gravure reproductions. Boards edgeworn with minor chipping along binding edge with some loss. A few faint pencil underlines to text, otherwise interior unmarked and clean. Scarce. Cover and catalog design by Alexey Brodovitch. A very good copy.
11.75 x 8.5 spiral-bound softcover catalog with 53 black and white gravure plates printed by the Beck Engraving Company. With original essays by A. M. Cassandre, Charles Coiner and Christian Brinton. An amazing, early poster compilation that assembled many rare and unusual examples gathered from around the world and exhibited in Philadelphia in 1937. Excellent snapshot of the state of the art in outdoor poster design, circa 1937, with the original Cassandre essay and Brodovitch design only enhancing its iconic stature.
- The Poster in Time and Space by Christian Brinton
- L'Affiche by A. M. Cassandre
- Outdoor Advertising by Charles Coiner
- Elevation drawing for the exhibition in Franklin Hall by Alexey Brodovitch with lighting motif by Isamu Noguchi.
- Gravure plates of posters by Lois Pregartbauer (Austria), Zietara(Germany), P. Zenobel (France), Ludwig Hohlwein (Germany), V. Lebedeff (U.S.S.R.), N. Shukof (U.S.S.R.), Rigobaldi (Italy), Paul Colin (France, multiples), Konecsin Kling (Hungary), Gronowski (Poland), Marfurt (Belgium), Jean Carlu (France, multiples), G. Annekoff (France), Andre Masson (France), A. Derain (France), Loupot (France, multiples), E. McKnight Kauffer (England, multiples), Graham Sutherland (England), H. Feibusch (England), Jacques Nathan (France), Pierre Masseau (France), Raymond Gid (France), Herbert Matter (Switzerland, multiples), A. M. Cassandre (France, multiples), Alexey Brodovitch (United States, multiples), Mary Fullerton (United States), Leslie Gill (United States), Lester Beall (United States), Xanti Schawinsky (United States), D. H. Stech (United States), Victor Trasoff (United States), Eric Nitsche (United States), G. Carter Morningstar (United States), Lester Bushman (United States), John Atherton (United States), Raymond Ballinger (United States), P. Dannheiser (United States), Robert Graves (United States), Gustav Jensen (United States), Lucien Bernhard (United States), Nelson Gruppo (United States), Joseph Binder (United States), C. Albrecht, (United States) Rollin Smith (United States), and Harold Meinal (United States).
Alexey Brodovitch (1898-1971) is a legend in graphic design: during his 25-year tenure as art director of Harper's Bazaar, he exerted tremendous influence on the direction of design and photography. A passionate teacher of graphic design, advocate of photography and collaborator with many prominent photographers, Brodovitch is often credited with having a major influence on the acceptance of European modernism in America. His use of assymetrical layouts, white space, and dynamic imagery changed the nature of magazine design. He was responsible for exposing everyday Americans to avant-garde artists by commissioning work from cutting-edge artists such as Cassandre, Dali, Cartier-Bresson, Man Ray, etc.
Brodovitch played a crucial role in introducing into the United States a radically simplified, "modern" graphic design style forged in Europe in the 1920s from an amalgam of vanguard movements in art and design. Through his teaching, he created a generation of designers sympathetic to his belief in the primacy of visual freshness and immediacy. Fascinated with photography, he made it the backbone of modern magazine design, and he fostered the development of an expressionistic, almost primal style of picture-taking that became the dominant style of photographic practice in the 1950s.
He came to the United States in 1930 to start a department of advertising (later known as the Philadelphia College of Art). There he trained students in the fundamentals of European design, while embarking on numerous freelance illustration assignments in Philadelphia and New York. In 1934 Carmel Snow, the new editor of Harper's Bazaar, saw his design work and immediately hired him to be its art director. It was the beginning of a collaboration that was to revolutionize both fashion and magazine design, and that catapulted Bazaar past its arch-rival, Vogue.
Throughout his career, he continued to teach. His "Design Laboratory," which focused variously on illustration, graphic design and photography and provided a system of rigorous critiques for those who aspired to magazine work. As a teacher, Brodovitch was inspiring, though sometimes harsh and unrelenting. A student's worst offense was to present something Brodovitch found boring; at best, the hawk-faced Russian would pronounce a work "interesting." Despite his unbending manner and lack of explicit critical standards -- Brodovitch did not formulate a theory of design --many students under his tutelage discovered untapped creative reserves.