The
international Swiss Style, also known as the International Typographic Style is
a graphic design style that was created in Switzerland in the 1950’s. The
graphic design style choice has a strong sense of cleanliness, readability and
sleek design. Notable ascetics of this
graphic style are asymmetrical layouts, use of san-serif type treatments
(notable example: Akzidenz Grotesk) use of grids and left aligned copy/text. Objective
photography is also another design element that can be used to clearly present
information. These photographs are absent of any persuading influences that
propaganda or commercial advertising possesses. Often times, type if favored in this style as
opposed to illustrations or drawings.
The
International Swiss Style’s early years began in two major Swiss design
schools. The first school was where Ernst Keller became a teacher; the Zurich
School of the Applied Arts. He was actually more of a professor as opposed to a
teacher, as he would rather teach his philosophy on style, one that dictated
“the solution to the design problem should emerge from its content” Keller’s
works would include geometric shapes, bright colors and expressive imagery to
further clarify the meaning behind each one of his designs. Due to his
exceptional teaching at the School of Applied Art, Keller was dubbed “the
father of the Swiss school of graphics.”
In the
1950s, San serif font families such as Univers came into play. Univers was used
as a template by Max Miednger and his collaborator Edouard Hoffman to create
Helvetica, also known as Neue Hass Grotesk, one of the most common typefaces
used today.
A
publication in the 1959s titled “New Graphic Design” was created. It was edited
by several designers that were particularly influential in the development of
the International Swiss Style. The journal’s formant exhibited several of the
key elements that the style possessed through visual demonstration. The
publications was published throughout the world, thus spreading the Swiss Style
beyond the borders of Switzerland.
Josef
Muller-Brockmann, one of the various editors “sought an absolute and universal form of graphic expression through
objective and impersonal presentation, communicating to the audience without
the interference of the designer’s subjective feelings or propagandistic
techniques of persuasion.” Brockmann is recognized for his simplistic designs
and his use of shapes, colors and uses of type; Akzidenz-Grotesk begin his most
notably used typeface.
After World War II, international trade
had started to increase and relations between countries started to grow and a steadily
stronger pace. Clarity, objectivity, region-less glyphs, symbols --- All
of these assets of Typography and design were essential to communicated with
partners all around the globe. This is how the International Swiss Style broke
free of its bindings and found its place in this communicative climate and
carried its way over to America.
Rudolph de Hark, full name “Ram Shree Ram
Rudolph de Harak” born April 24th, 1924, was an American graphic
designer that was one of the first American designers to integrate Swiss design
with his on design styling. Many book jacket designs that Rudolph designed for
McGraw-Hill publishers in the 1960’s incorporate this style, often with
left-aligned type and an eye-catching image that elucidates the theme of the
book.
No comments:
Post a Comment