Synopses & Reviews
During the 1920s and 1930s, Edward Steichen was the most successful photographer in the advertising industry. Although much has been said about Steichen's fine-art photography, his commercial workand#151;which appeared regularly in
Vanity Fair, Vogue, Ladies Home Journal, and almost every other popular magazine published in the United Statesand#151;has not received the attention it deserves.
At a time when photography was just beginning to replace drawings as the favored medium for advertising, Steichen helped transform the producers of such products as Welch's grape juice and Jergens lotion from small family businesses to national household names. In this book, Patricia Johnston uses Steichen's work as a case study of the history of advertising and the American economy between the wars. She traces the development of Steichen's work from an early naturalistic style through increasingly calculated attempts to construct consumer fantasies. By the 1930s, alluring images of romance and class, developed in collaboration with agency staff and packaged in overtly manipulative and persuasive photographs, became Steichen's stock-in-trade. He was most frequently chosen by agencies for products targeted toward women: his images depicted vivacious singles, earnest new mothers, and other stereotypically female life stages that reveal a great deal about the industry's perceptions of and pitches to this particular audience.
Johnston presents an intriguing inside view of advertising agencies, drawing on an array of internal documents to reconstruct the team process that involved clients, art directors, account executives, copywriters, and photographers. Her book is a telling chronicle of the role of mass media imagery in reflecting, shaping, and challenging social values in American culture.
Synopsis
During the 1920s and 1930s, Edward Steichen was the most successful photographer in the advertising industry. Real Fantasies traces Steichen's work from his early naturalistic style through increasingly calculated attempts to construct consumer fantasies. Patricia Johnston uses Steichen's work as a case study of the history of advertising and the American economy between the wars. Her book is a telling chronicle of the role of mass media imagery in reflecting, shaping, and challenging social values in American culture.
Synopsis
"This well-researched book is a much-needed contribution not only to a knowledge of Steichen's significant role in advertising but to an understanding of modernist cross-currents as they affected artistic and commercial photography in the 1920s and 30s. Further, it provides a glimpse into decision-making about the visual arts in the newly powerful advertising industry of the time."and#151;Naomi Rosenblum, author of
A World History of Photography and
A History of Women Photographers"This book marks a major advance in the history of commercial photography. What is particularly impressive is the author's capacity to situate Steichen's commercial career in several contexts so that the study ultimately casts light on the histories of photography, modernism, and advertising."and#151;Jackson Lears, author of Fables of Abundance: A Cultural History of Advertising in America
"Johnston makes a stellar contribution to the historical literature on American advertising and consumer society; there is no other text on this subject that so effectively uses images as evidence. . . . Lucidly written, imaginatively constructed, and beautifully argued."and#151;Regina Lee Blaszczyk, Technology and Culture
"Downright gripping, an unexpected page-turner filled with treats for the eye."and#151;Neil Baldwin, Los Angeles Times
About the Author
Patricia Johnston is Associate Professor of Art History at Salem State College.