Paperback
750 illustrations
272 pages
270 x 210 mm
ISBN 978 1 85669 487 2
$0.00
Published November 2006
Contents
1. The New Typography: Towards a New Graphic Design
2. The Survival of Modernism: Conflicts and Contradictions
3. Towards a Swiss Style
4. ‘New’ Graphic Design
5. An International Style
Content List (PDF) Reviews Post Comments Books by the same author
Originating in Russia, Germany and The Netherlands in the 1920s, Modernist graphic design and typography found a firm foothold in Switzerland. By the 1950s Switzerland had developed a uniquely clear graphic language, evident not only in posters, but also in pharmaceutical labelling, tourist brochures, train tickets, timetables, passports and bank notes. Abroad, 'Neue Grafik' or 'Swiss' style, as it became known, was admired for its formal discipline. Images and text were organized into geometrical grids used together with sans-serif typefaces such as Helvetica and Univers. These components of the Swiss style spread across the world and their influence is still seen today. Swiss Graphic Design gives a rich and fascinating account of this key period in graphic design history, setting the stylistic developments in the social and cultural context of the times.
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Richard Hollis is a freelance graphic designer and has worked as a printer, art editor, production manager, teacher and lecturer. His previous books include Graphic Design: A Concise History.
It speaks volumes of Hollis’ approach that one is continually discovering new ground unearthed in these discussions.
Eye
Hollis has set out to provide us with an authoritative and scholarly examination of the birth and growth of a modern graphic idiom. In this case he has more than succeeded.
Eye
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