Graphic style: From Victorian to post-modern

Category: Books,Arts & Photography,History & Criticism

Graphic style: From Victorian to post-modern Details

From Publishers Weekly Presented in celebration of 150 years of design (beginning with the Victorian age and concluding with the Post-Modern), this chronologically compiled volume entertainingly documents the development of graphic art, an often undervalued cousin of the fine arts. The esthetic and social values of each era are appropriately illustrated with a plethora of unusual and interesting black-and-white or color art, advertisements, typography, posters and everyday products, accompanied by a brief historical analysis. The designs of these previously inconsequential artifacts were influenced by political and economic events, and demonstrate the implications of expressive periods such as Bauhaus and Art Nouveau. This study by award-winning designer Chwast and Heller, art director for the New York Times Book Review , should heighten most readers' appreciation of the evolution of graphic design, as well as the way in which design reflects historical events of the period in which it was created. (Oct . Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc. Read more From Library Journal A minimum of words, a profusion of picturesand the result is a book on graphic style that is itself an expression of graphic style. This work examines printed communication as a reflection and often a manipulation of popular taste, whether for political motives, commercial gain, or philosophical beliefs. Stopping along the way for a look at Art Nouveau and Deco, Dada and Bauhaus, it discusses 48 distinctive styles. A major asset is the extensive bibliography and the index of every designer whose work appears in the book. However, the result is more style than substancesomething to leaf through rather than to read cover to cover. For large collections. Paula Frosch, Metropolitan Museum Lib., New YorkCopyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc. Read more

Reviews

It's a old edition, but the content is almost the same as the new edition without the computer art on the last eva of post-modernism. I have those references on other books, so I don't mind to have an old edition. It's a simiflied version of art histroy from victorian to post-modern evas. I found it on public library and make sure I like it before buying it.

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