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Avant-Garde Page Design 1900-1950

Avant-Garde Page Design 1900-1950 Cover

 

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

Includes bibliographical references (p. 378-384) and index.

Synopsis:

The primary goal of the artist-designers who were supporters of New Typography was to create an international optical language based on clarity and functionality. Using sans serif typefaces, asymmetrical compositions, photography, and photomontage, they designed type based on the simplest geometrical forms and eliminated the use of upper-case letters. Similar to the basis of the International Style in architecture, these innovations were considered to be the foundations of a new society in which the idea that form follows function and the rational, economical use of material and technique would be important elements in the creation of an egalitarian social order. However, the New Typography and International Style were utopian movements whose works and ideas did not always survive intact in a real and imperfect world. Indeed both became corrupted by political ideology and/or the corporate system. During the 1930s the corruption of avant-garde ideas and techniques were most visible in the fusion of advertising and political propaganda: the Nazis and the Soviets co-opted the powerful images and techniques of the avant-garde. The Nazi propagandists borrowed ideas from the Communists, and the Soviet Realists and Nazi artists shared a similar approach to imagery. It was this contamination of art and ideology, as well as the atmosphere of brutal political repression, that led Tschichold and others to modify or abandon their ideas and return to classical design principles.

Synopsis:

The definitive book on 20th century page design.

Product Details

ISBN:
9780929445090
Author:
Andel, Jaroslav
Publisher:
Delano Greenridge Editions
Location:
New York
Subject:
History - General
Subject:
History
Subject:
Europe
Subject:
Typography
Subject:
Commercial art
Subject:
Design - Book
Subject:
Graphic design
Subject:
Avant-garde
Subject:
Layout
Subject:
Graphic Arts - General
Subject:
History : General
Series Volume:
838-17
Publication Date:
February 2002
Binding:
Hardcover
Language:
English
Illustrations:
Yes
Pages:
388
Dimensions:
12.60x10.22x1.33 in. 5.86 lbs.
Avant-Garde Page Design 1900-1950
0 stars - 0 reviews
$ In Stock
Product details 388 pages Delano Greenridge Editions - English 9780929445090 Reviews:
"Synopsis" by , The primary goal of the artist-designers who were supporters of New Typography was to create an international optical language based on clarity and functionality. Using sans serif typefaces, asymmetrical compositions, photography, and photomontage, they designed type based on the simplest geometrical forms and eliminated the use of upper-case letters. Similar to the basis of the International Style in architecture, these innovations were considered to be the foundations of a new society in which the idea that form follows function and the rational, economical use of material and technique would be important elements in the creation of an egalitarian social order. However, the New Typography and International Style were utopian movements whose works and ideas did not always survive intact in a real and imperfect world. Indeed both became corrupted by political ideology and/or the corporate system. During the 1930s the corruption of avant-garde ideas and techniques were most visible in the fusion of advertising and political propaganda: the Nazis and the Soviets co-opted the powerful images and techniques of the avant-garde. The Nazi propagandists borrowed ideas from the Communists, and the Soviet Realists and Nazi artists shared a similar approach to imagery. It was this contamination of art and ideology, as well as the atmosphere of brutal political repression, that led Tschichold and others to modify or abandon their ideas and return to classical design principles.
"Synopsis" by , The definitive book on 20th century page design.
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