Graphic Design History
While Graphic Design as a discipline has a relatively recent
history, with the name 'graphic design" first coined by
William Addison Dwiggins in 1922,
graphic design-like activities span the history of
humankind: from the caves of Lascaux, to Rome's Trajan's Column to the
illuminated manuscripts
of the Middle Ages, to the dazzling neons of Ginza.
In both this lengthy history and in the
relatively recent explosion of visual communication in
the 20th and 21st centuries, there is sometimes a blurring
distinction and over-lapping of advertising art, graphic design
and fine art. After all, they share
many of the same elements, theories, principles, practices
and languages, and sometimes the same
benefactor or client. In advertising art the ultimate
objective is the sale of goods and services.
In graphic
design, "the essence is to give order to information, form
to ideas, expression and feeling to artifacts that document
human experience.The
advent of printing.
During the Tang Dynasty (618–906) between
the 4th and 7th century A.D. wood blocks were cut to print
on textiles and later to reproduce Buddhist texts. A
Buddhist scripture printed in 868 is the earliest known
printed book.
Beginning in the 11th century, longer scrolls
and books were produced using movable type printing making
books widely available during the Song dynasty (960–1279).
Sometime around 1450, Johann Gutenberg's printing
press made books widely available in Europe. The book design
of Aldus Manutius developed the
book structure which would become the foundation of western
publication design. This era of graphic design is called
Humanist or Old Style.
Emergence of the design industry
In late 19th century Europe, especially in the United
Kingdom, the movement began to separate graphic design from
fine art.
In 1849, Henry Cole became one of the
major forces in design education in Great Britain, informing
the government of the importance of design in his Journal
of Design and Manufactures. He organized the
Great Exhibition as a
celebration of modern industrial technology and Victorian
design.
From 1891 to 1896
William Morris' Kelmscott
Press published books that are some of the most significant
of the graphic design products of the Arts and Crafts
movement, and made a very lucrative business of creating
books of great stylistic refinement and selling them to the
wealthy for a premium. Morris proved that a market existed
for works of graphic design in their own right and helped
pioneer the separation of design from production and from
fine art. The work of the Kelmscott Press is characterized
by its obsession with historical styles.
This historicism
was, however, important as it amounted to the first
significant reaction to the stale state of
nineteenth-century graphic design. Morris' work, along with
the rest of the Private Press movement,
directly influenced
Art Nouveau and is indirectly
responsible for developments in early twentieth century
graphic design in general.
Twentieth century design
The name "Graphic Design" first appeared in print in the
1922 essay "New Kind of Printing Calls for New Design" by
William Addison
Dwiggins, an American book designer in the early 20th
century.
Raffe's Graphic Design, published in 1927, is considered to
be the first book to use "Graphic Design" in its title.
The signage in the
London Underground is a
classic design example
of the modern era and used a font designed by Edward
Johnston in 1916.
In the 1920s, Soviet
constructivism applied
'intellectual production' in different spheres of
production. The movement saw individualistic art as useless
in revolutionary Russia and thus moved towards creating
objects for utilitarian purposes. They designed buildings,
theater sets, posters, fabrics, clothing, furniture, logos,
menus, etc.
Jan Tschichold codified the
principles of modern typography in his 1928 book, New
Typography. He later repudiated the philosophy he
espoused in this book as being fascistic, but it remained
very influential.
A booming post-World War II American economy established a
greater need for graphic design, mainly advertising and
packaging. The emigration of the German
Bauhaus school of design to Chicago
in 1937 brought a "mass-produced" minimalism to America;
sparking a wild fire of "modern" architecture and design.
Notable names in mid-century modern design include
Adrian Frutiger, designer of
the typefaces Univers and Frutiger;
Paul Rand, who, from the late
1930s until his death in 1996, took the principles of the
Bauhaus and applied them to popular advertising and logo
design, helping to create a uniquely American approach to
European minimalism while becoming one of the principal
pioneers of the subset of graphic design known as
corporate identity; and
Josef Müller-Brockmann,
who designed posters in a severe yet accessible manner
typical of the 1950s and 1970s era.
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