History of Modern Design / Edition 2 available in Hardcover

- ISBN-10:
- 0205728502
- ISBN-13:
- 9780205728503
- Pub. Date:
- 06/29/2010
- Publisher:
- Pearson Education
- ISBN-10:
- 0205728502
- ISBN-13:
- 9780205728503
- Pub. Date:
- 06/29/2010
- Publisher:
- Pearson Education

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Overview
Filling the gap for an extensively illustrated history of modern design, this introduction provides a balanced chronological survey of decorative arts, industrial design and graphic design from the eighteenth through the twentieth centuries. Focusing on the appreciation of design as a creative activity, as well as an enterprise conditioned by economic, technological and social history, Raizman includes the study of products and furnishing designed for mass consumption, and examines the social context for the democratization of culture.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9780205728503 |
---|---|
Publisher: | Pearson Education |
Publication date: | 06/29/2010 |
Series: | Fashion Series |
Pages: | 432 |
Sales rank: | 1,011,105 |
Product dimensions: | 8.90(w) x 11.60(h) x 1.20(d) |
About the Author
David Raizman is a professor in the Department of Visual Studies at Drexel University in Philadelphia. He has published several studies in journals and books focusing on the art and architecture of Spain in the later twelfth and early thirteenth centuries for the journal Gesta. Professor Raizman is also the author of Objects, Audiences, and Literatures: Alternative Narratives in the History of Design, co-edited with Carma Gorman published by Cambridge Scholars Publishing (UK).
Table of Contents
Preface 8
Acknowledgments 10
Introduction: Thinking about Design 11
Products, Technology, and Progress 11
Designers and the Expansion of Design 12
Discourse 13
PART I
Demand, Supply, and Design (1700—1800) 15
Introduction to Part I 16
1 Royal Demand and the Control of Production 17
State-owned Manufactories 17
Artists and Craftsmen 20
Porcelain 22
The Guilds 23
The Printer’s Art 28
2 Entrepreneurial Efforts in Britain and Elsewhere 31
Design in an Expanding Market 31
Wedgwood and Antiquity 33
Commodities and Fashion 36
The United States 38
Popular Literature and the Freedom of the Press 39
PART II
Expansion and Taste (1801—1865) 40
Introduction to Part II 42
3 Growing Pains: Expanding Industry in the Early Nineteenth Century 43
A Culture of Industry and Progress 43
New Materials and Processes 44
Beyond the Printed Page 50
Wallpaper and Fabric Printing 52
The American System 54
4 Design, Society, and Standards 57
Early Design Reform 57
Industry and its Discontents 58
Reform and the Gothic Revival 59
Henry Cole and the “Cole Group” 61
The Great Exhibition of 1851 63
Images for All 70
Popular Graphics in the United States 74
A Balance Sheet of Reform 76
Conclusion 77
PART III
Arts, Crafts, and Machines — Industrialization: Hopes and Fears (1866—1914) 79
Introduction to Part III 80
5 The Joy of Work 81
Ruskin, Morris, and the Arts and Crafts Movement in Britain 81
Morris and Socialism 85
Morris as Publisher 85
The Influence of William Morris in Britain 88
The Arts and Crafts Movement in the United States 91
Printing in the United States 98
Chicago and Frank Lloyd Wright 99
6 The Equality of the Arts 103
Design Reform and the Aesthetic Movement 103
Books, Illustration, and Type 110
The Aesthetic Movement in the United States 113
Dress 118
Design Reform in France: L’Art Nouveau 120
Art Nouveau in Print and in Public 125
Glasgow: Charles Rennie Mackintosh 130
Austria 131
Belgium 136
Munich 138
Scandinavia, Eastern Europe, and the Vernacular 140
Italy and Spain 143
7 Mechanization and Industry 147
Design and the Workplace 147
Germany 148
The American System of Manufacture and Fordism 151
Developments in Merchandising, Printing, and Advertising 154
Conclusion 155
PART IV
After World War I: Art, Industry, and Utopias (1918—1944) 157
Introduction to Part IV 158
8 Paris and Art Moderne (Art Deco) Before and After World War I 161
Furniture and Modern Art 162
Glass and Metal 166
The Paris Exposition of 1925 172
9 “Modernism”: Design, Utopia, and Technology 181
Futurism 181
De Stijl 184
Constructivism 189
The Bauhaus 196
Beyond the Bauhaus 204
The Printing Industry and the “New Typography” 206
Jan Tschichold and the New Typography 208
Britain and Modern Design 214
Scandinavia and Modern Design 219
10 Design, Industry, and Advertising in the United States 223
Industrial Design and Fordism 228
Advertising, Art, and the Selling of Modern Design in the United States 229
The United States and International Modernism 237
Streamlining 240
The 1939 New York World’s Fair 242
Photography and Graphic Design 244
Industrial Design and Austerity 248
Graphic Design During World War II 251
Conclusion 252
PART V
Humanism and Luxury: International Modernism and Mass Culture after World War II (1945—1960) 255
Introduction to Part V 256
11 Modernism After World War II: From Theory to Practice 260
Promoting Postwar Design: Art Direction and the New Advertising 267
Graphic Design and Technical Information 273
Scandinavia and Britain 275
Italy 283
Germany 288
The International Graphic Style (Die Neue Grafik) 291
Means and Ends 296
Japan 298
Design and Corporate Culture 301
Trademarks and Beyond 302
12 Design and Mass Appeal: A Culture of Consumption 306
Detroit: Transportation as Symbol 308
Critics of Styling 313
Resorts and Luxury 314
Housing: Suburbia, Domesticity, and Conformity 317
Beyond High and Low Art: Revisiting the Critique of Mass Culture 322
Conclusion 325
PART VI
Progress, Protest, and Pluralism 1961—2010 326
Introduction to Part VI 328
13 New Materials, New Products 330
Plastics and their Progeny 331
Product Housing 335
Sports: Equipment and Progress 338
Visual Identity, Information, and Art Direction 338
Laminated Materials 345
Nature and Craft 346
14 Dimensions of Mass Culture 349
Mass Design and the Home 351
Mass Design: The Fringes 353
Pop, Protest, and Counterculture 355
Graphics and the Underground 356
Anti-Design in Italy 358
Radical Reform: Technology, Safety, and the Environment 362
15 Politics, Pluralism, and Postmodernism 367
Design and Postmodernism 369
Postmodern Products 370
Pluralism and Resistance 374
Hi-Tech 377
The Expanding Definition and Role of Design 378
16 Design in Context: An Act of Balance 381
Consumers 381
Reform and Social Responsibility 387
Design, Safety, and Terror 391
Production Technology: Meanings of Miniaturization 393
Design and Softness 396
Materials Technology and Softness 396
Lifestyle 400
Politics, Technology, and the Media 400
Graphic Design in a Digital Age 401
Craft: The Persistence of Process 406
Design and Continuity: Creativity, Responsibility, and Resilience 408
Timeline 409
Further Reading 412
Bibliography 417
Credits 422
Index 424
Preface
The material and methodology for this book were developed over eight years of teaching a course entitled History of Modern Design in the College of Media Arts & Design at Drexel University, and almost twenty years of general undergraduate art history teaching experience. During these past eight years it has been rewarding to hear students reflect upon everyday objects in relation to the values and attitudes of their time, to consider the complex interplay of technological, commercial, social, and esthetic considerations that deepen our understanding of their beauty and the range of their meanings.
One of the persistent difficulties in offering this course over the years has been the issue of a textbook. History of fine art courses are far more common than those in the history of design, and there is no shortage of art-history texts to provide images and narrative to accompany general and more specialized courses relating to a variety of periods and movements. Yet despite the many colleges and universities that educate professional industrial, interior, graphic, merchandising, textile, and fashion designers, I found in my teaching that no introductory text served the needs of a course that integrated material from a broad range of specialized design fields over the past three centuries. Rather than being limited to a single area like graphic design or industrial design, the present survey covers the history of these fields in relation to one another and the common themes they share, whether technology, production, consumption, or reform.
At first I relied upon a list of reserve readings, and in time supplemented these with my own outlines for lecture notes available through the university's computing services center. Subsequently I received a grant from the university to create a website that allowed an appropriate format to be developed for the presentation of a combination of text links and images for study and student preparation. Putting these notes into book form has been for me a formidable task. The required reading, travel, and study took me far from my own original training in the art of medieval Spain, requiring substantial historical perspective to provide a context for studying the objects and a desire to follow through with combining perspectives from both consumption and production for each chapter. In the course of writing and re-writing, I tried to organize the material both chronologically and thematically. Briefly stated, the themes are:
- SPECIALIZATION AND THE TECHNOLOGY OF MATERIALS AND PRODUCTION
- REFORM AND THE ROLE OF STANDARDS FOR DESIGN
- THE EQUALITY OF THE ARTS
- DESIGN FOR MECHANIZED PRODUCTION
- "GOOD" DESIGN AND POPULAR CULTURE
- PLURALISM AND DESIGN
In preparing this History of Modern Design I have benefited from a number of previous studies, beginning with most students' (of my generation anyway) introduction to modern design history, Sir Nikolaus Pevsner's Pioneers of Modern Design, and including more recent titles such as Penny Sparke's An Introduction to Design and Culture in the Twentieth Century (1986), Adrian Forty's Objects of Desire (1986), and Richard Woodham's Twentieth-Century Design (1997). There is also the excellent series of books by a range of specialists published by Oxford University Press. These include a number of volumes devoted to period styles (Arts and Crafts, Art Nouveau, Art Deco, Bauhaus, for example), as well as John Heskett's excellent Industrial Design (i98o). Also, Phillip Meggs's History of Graphic Design is a most informative survey of that material with a strong emphasis in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
As I began teaching the history, of modern design, I found myself drawn to the period room and decorative arts galleries of museums rather than to their Painting and sculpture galleries. As a result I've been pleased to observe, in my adopted city of Philadelphia,, that the Philadelphia Museum of Art has redesigned its galleries to merge fine with decorative art in a way which can only aid in the appreciation of our subject. It is also encouraging to note the recent increase in art-historical journals that have devoted issues to the applied arts, and those monographs that have done much to promote interest in the history of design. It is necessary to ma few of the latter, as they greatly aided in formulating many of the sections for the individual chapters that follow: Nancy Troy's Modernism and the Decorative Arts in France. Art Nouveau to Le Corbusier, the Guggenheim Museum's massive catalogue for The Great Utopia. The Russian and Soviet Avant-garde, 1915-1932 exhibition, the American Craft Museum's catalogues for their series of exhibitions on domestic design entitled The Ideal Home beginning with the period from 1890-1910, and Debora Silverman's Art Nouveau in Fin-de-Siecle France: Politics, Psychology, and Style. Many of these books incorporate ideas drawn from a significant literature on the study of consumption, stemming less from art history than from social anthropology and the field of popular and mass culture.
Aside from those mentioned above, a number of exhibitions and their accompanying catalogues introduced me to a wide range of material that has been incorporated into this text. These include German Graphic Design (2001), Godwin (2000), and Swedish Glass (1997) at the Bard Graduate School in New York; Henry Dreyfuss at the Cooper Hewitt (1998), the traveling collection of chairs and other furniture from the Vitra Museum in Switzerland (1999-2ooo) at the Allentown Museum and the Cooper Hewitt; Mackintosh (1994) and American Modernism (2000) at the Metropolitan Museum of Art (1994); the Aluminum by Design exhibition at the Carnegie Museum in Pittsburgh and the Cooper Hewitt (2000-2001); the Art in Rome in the Eighteenth Century exhibition in Philadelphia (2000); Will Price at the small Arthur Ross Gallery in the Fine Arts Library at the University of Pennsylvania; and the extensive Art Nouveau exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. (2000).
Recent monographs stemming from renewed interest in A. W N. Pugin, Christopher Dresser, Russel Wright, C. R. Mackintosh and others are filling gaps in our knowledge and bringing new material to light, including the publication of primary source material and a wide range of visual material: they are among the numerous healthy signs of growing public and scholarly interest in an area with wide-ranging appeal to students, artists and designers, art historians, and collectors. Great Britain remains most active in the field of design history, through a variety of conferences, the Journal of Design History, the Design Research Society and its on-line publication Design Research News (DRN), and the number of courses offered at colleges and universities. Finally, the journal Design Issues not only contributes articles on the methods of designers but also frequently offers historical perspectives and reviews. It is my hope that the approach to this introductory text will be viewed as balanced and tolerant, and that the analyses will promote appreciation and suggest the synthesis of description and a framework based upon the interconnections of social, commercial, esthetic, and technological perspectives on design. In addition, as a teacher I have always enjoyed the challenge of comparing works of art from different or even successive time periods that share formal or ideological similarities. I am happy for the students in the College of Media Arts & Design who have made the study of design history part of their education and hope that what they have learned will in some way be incorporated into the contributions they are certain to make to their chosen design professions.