December 31, 2009
Greetings from the Left Coast
Later this month Metropolis Books will release Earthquakes, Mudslides, Fires & Riots: California Graphic Design 1936–1986, Louise Sandhaus’ herculean history of (and tribute to) the unique status and nature of graphic design in the Golden State—the result of ten years of research.
While there is always some truth in stereotypes—and the book abounds in the lightheartedness, effervescence, and optimism that signals “California” in the popular imagination—as the title suggests, Earthquakes, Mudslides, Fires & Riots also reveals how political shifts, sexism, and the environment also had an impact on the development of generations of designers who responded to California’s unique cultural climate. Books on graphic design history abound; memorable movements and celebrated creators are well documented, but no book yet has set out to capture California’s particular native output and influence on the larger history of graphic design. Louise Sandhaus has succeeded here in establishing the record of a singular—and ongoing—phenomenon.
Design Observer congratulates Louise and her collaborators on the release and excerpts the book all week as a preview to its readers.
Today: “Sunbaked Modernism”
—The Editors
No matter where the exposure to modernism originated, the outcome gained vitality from the California heat and nourishment from a proximity to Latin and Asian cultures—influences we encounter in the forms and colors favored by designers such as Ray Eames, Alexander Girard, and the Neuharts. Ultimately, a new blend of creativity, artistry, ingenuity, and craft gained independence, unshackled from ball-and-chain allegiances to a prescribed, imported modern design.
Danziger and Keith Godard, colleagues at California Institute of the Arts, are widely regarded within the ï¬eld as being the ï¬rst in the United States to offer courses in the history of graphic design. In the remote outpost of Vacaville, off the stretch of highway between Sacramento and San Francisco, Birrell conceived the ï¬rst shop for West Coast modern design, preceding even Girard’s legendary interior-design retail establishment for Knoll in New York, Textiles & Objects, which combined folk art with modernist decor. Computer technology, one branch of which originated in California, also advanced the language of graphic design, especially in the work of motion-graphic designers such as John Whitney. It’s a good bet that the ï¬rst computer-generated logo came from California, as well.
The examples here represent some of the vivid tastes and flavors of the West Coast, 
as well as a design language that speaks not demurely but with a declarative California 
accent to enliven and advance the modernist conversation. In some cases, these works are well known but warrant a second look. Other projects have been widely recognized but for reasons other than their graphic design. The assessment of “beautiful” within modern graphic design is commonly attributed to reï¬ned works originating in New York and Europe. In California, modernism blossomed beyond borders of reï¬nement into manifestations that, in their wonder and remarkability, demand a larger stage. Examples range from the grand—Kratka’s vibrant abstract murals at the Los Angeles International Airport—to the small, such as the emphatic cover designs that Follis and Matter created for Arts & Architecture. Folk modernism is yet another strain that took hold in the West, with colorful, charming, and delightful variations of handmade and traditional crafts celebrated and transformed in the inspired hands of the Eameses, Girard, and the Neuharts. Along with Ward Ritchie and Stauffacher, the Neuharts also explored new approaches to letterpress, and the work they produced was diverse in its intentions and outcomes.
Observed
View all
Observed
By Louise Sandhaus
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