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Jacqueline Casey

Jacqueline S. Casey (20 April 1927 – 18 May 1992)[1] was a graphic designer best known for the posters and other graphic art she created for the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). While practicing a functional Modernism, Jacqueline S. Casey was a graphic designer in the Office of Publications (later retitled the Office of Design Services) from 1955 to 1989, and was appointed director in 1972. In discussing her design, Casey stated, "My work combines two cultures: The American interest in visual metaphor on the one hand, and the Swiss fascination with planning, fastidiousness, and control over technical execution on the other."[2]

Jacqueline Casey
Typical posters by Jacqueline Casey
Born
Jacqueline Shepard

(1927-04-20)April 20, 1927
DiedMay 18, 1992(1992-05-18) (aged 65)
NationalityAmerican
EducationMassachusetts College of Art (BFA, 1949)
Known forGraphic design, fashion illustration, interior design
MovementModernist
Patron(s)Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Early life and education edit

Casey was born Jacqueline Shepard in 1927 in Quincy, Massachusetts, the only child of a working-class couple.[3]

She studied for a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in fashion design and illustration at the Massachusetts College of Art (MassArt), graduating in 1949. After graduating, she had a number of jobs, including work in interior design and advertising,[1] however she never obtained a job she was completely interested in; she stated, "I broke the negative cycle by traveling through Europe for three months" and came back "with the decision to focus my life on something related to the arts... to develop my visual sensitivity."[2]

MIT edit

The professional quality and creative additions to design are what made the MIT's campus design group widely respected in the field. MIT is acknowledged as the first American college to employ graphic designers as part of the faculty, and Jacqueline Casey was one of the few who were hired. The prototype for the university's publisher (MIT Press) was implemented by the graphic designers, known for their meticulous and straightforward style of their typography. Campus projects, programs, cultural, and scientific events were advertised to society through the group designer's works.

In 1955, Jacqueline Shepard was recruited by fellow MassArt alumna Muriel Cooper to work at the Office of Publications at MIT. She later stated, “In my early days at MIT, a designer working on summer materials would interview faculty and have a mini-course in a subject such as radioisotopes from the professor in charge. There was an opportunity to learn something new every day.”

In 1972, Casey became Director, taking over this position as her colleague joined the MIT faculty. The two women were among the few working at this professional level at MIT of the time.[4] During her tenure as Director, Casey became known for designing distinctive publicity posters for MIT events, working alongside Ralph Coburn and Dietmar Winkler. Casey's designs were influenced by the International Typographic Style recently developed in Switzerland, particularly designers such as Karl Gerstner, Armin Hofmann, and Josef Müller-Brockmann.[4]

Casey's posters generally consisted of a striking image or bold typography, accompanied by informational details in smaller text.[5] She often used typographic wordplay and visual puns in her work. Speaking of her designs in 1988, she said: "My job is to stop anyone I can with an arresting or puzzling image, and entice the viewer to read the message in small type and above all to attend the exhibition."[4]

As well as being used for promotion of on-campus events and in MIT publications, Casey's work was exhibited at MIT, the Chelsea School of Art in London, and the London College of Printing.[6]

Personal life edit

In 1958, Jacqueline Shepard married William "Bill" Casey, and changed her name to Jacqueline S Casey.[3] Her spouse was a psychologist doing social work from a home office in their art-filled home in Brookline, Massachusetts.[3] In 1975, he died of cancer.[3]

Jacqueline Casey herself was diagnosed with cancer in 1982, and struggled to handle the workload at MIT with assistance of her staff.[3] In 1989 she was forced to retire, but her longtime colleague, neighbor, and friend Muriel Cooper arranged for her to continue work as a visiting scholar at the MIT Media Laboratory.[3][1] Casey died of cancer on May 18, 1992.[3]

Legacy edit

Casey's work is held in the permanent collections of the MIT Museum, Library of Congress, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, and the Cooper-Hewitt Museum.[1]

The MIT Museum mounted exhibitions of Casey's graphic work in 1992, 2012, and 2018.[7] Her complete works for MIT are archived in the collection of the MIT Museum. In addition to the MIT holdings, the Rochester Institute of Technology has a collection of 99 posters, donated by the MIT Museum at the designer's request.[8] Selected examples of these posters may be viewed online.[9]

Works and exhibitions edit

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Give Blood. 1983.[10]

Arts on the Line. 1980.[10]

Poster for Coffee Hour. 1979.[11]

Ger Dekkers (New Dutch Landscape) Exhibition Poster. 1979.[10]

Mediums of Language. 1977.[12]

Art and Environment. Poster for MIT’s Center for Advanced Visual Studies, 1972.[13]

Poster for Octave of Prayer. 1972.[11]

Goya: The Disasters of War. 1971.[12]

Six Artists Exhibition Poster. 1970.[11]

Poster for Open House. 1969.[11]

Poster for The Moon Show. 1969.[11]

Poster for Center for Space Research. 1968.[11]

Light 7 Exhibition Poster. 1968.[10]

Miscellaneous Motions of Kinetic Sculpture. 1967.[12]

Poster for Boston Visual Arts Union. Hayden Gallery.[14]

Poster for MIT Gospel Choir: God Is...[14]

Poster for MIT Gospel Choir: There Is NoGreaterLove.[14]

LincolnLab Recruitment Poster.[14]

Walking in the Spirit: A Celebration of Gospel Music.[14]

North Carolina State University

Furniture by Architects Exhibition Poster. 1981.[10]

Two Views/Peter Berg, Two Sculptures/Ed Rothfarb. 1979.[10]

MIT Symphony Orchestra Tour 1973. 1973.[10]

Medicine of the Future. 1971.[10]

Monuments to Malcolm X Poster. 1970.[10]

Stop Oil Pollution. 1970.[10]

Library Booklet Cover. 1967.[10]

Ocean Engineering Recruitment Poster. 1967.[10]

Humanities Series Concerts. 1966.[10]

Corners Exhibition Poster.[10]

Presidents' Ball Poster.[10]

Technology and Policy Program at MIT.[10]

Rochester Institute of Technology

Jacqueline Casey. 1990.[15]

Academic Honesty: Are Our Standards Clear?. 1984.[15]

Elijah: Felix Mendelssohn. 1984.[15]

James Turrell: An Installation. Wallace Library. 1983.[10]

Constructed Color: Sculpture by James Biederman, James Hoberman, Steve Keister, Lizbeth Marano, George Mayocole. Wallace Library. 1982.[10]

Great Big Drawings. Wallace Library. 1982.[10]

Intimate Architecture: Contemporary Clothing Design. Wallace Library. 1982.[10][12]

4 Painters. Wallace Library. 1981.[10]

Body Language. Wallace Library. 1981.[10]

The Computer: From Counting To Cognition. 1979.[15]

Chemistry at MIT. 1978.[15]

Cancer: Symposium on the Occasion of the Dedication of the Seeley G. Mudd Building. 1975.[15]

Brassai, The Eye of Paris: An Exhibition of Photographs. 1974.[15]

Fredrich St. Florian Projects. Wallace Library. 1973.[10]

A Spring Festival of Music 1972 in Honor of Klaus Liepmann. 1972.[15]

Poster for Faculty-Student Exchange Program. 1972.[10][16]

Lift Equilibrium: An Outdoor Experiment. 1969.[15]

Hans Haacke Exhibition Poster. Wallace Library. 1967.[10]

Aesthetics of Progress.[17]

Helène Aylon.[18]

Seven Montreal Painters.[19]

Other

Casey, Jacqueline S. & Small, David. Fives. Visible Language Workshop, October 1990.[20]

Russia, USA Peace. 1985.[21]

Judge at Creativity on Paper exhibition. Sponsored by Art Direction magazine, 1966.[2]

Awards and honors edit

Casey has received numerous awards and honors for her work, including:[22]

  • William J. Gunn Award, Creative Club of Boston. 1988.
  • Honorary doctorate of fine arts, Massachusetts College of Art. 1990.
  • Appointed by the late President Bartlett A. Giamatti of Yale University to the Visiting Committee of the Yale School of Graphic Design.
  • Member of the Alliance Graphique Internationale and of the American Institute of Graphic Arts.

Further reading edit

  • Posters: Jacqueline S. Casey, Thirty Years of Design at MIT. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Museum, 1992. ISBN 0917027043

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Sherin, Aaris (2011). "Casey, Jacqueline". In Joan M. Marter (ed.). The Grove Encyclopedia of American Art. Oxford University Press. p. 413. ISBN 978-0-19-533579-8.
  2. ^ a b c Heller, Steven; D'Onofrio, Greg (2017-09-19). The Moderns: Midcentury American Graphic Design. Abrams. ISBN 978-1-68335-012-5.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Resnick, Elizabeth (2021). "Jacqueline Casey: Science and Design". Eye: The International Review of Graphic Design. 21 (101): 82–91. Retrieved 2023-09-21.
  4. ^ a b c Resnick, Elizabeth (2008). "Woman at the edge of technology". Eye: The International Review of Graphic Design. 17 (68). Retrieved 2023-09-21.
  5. ^ "The Humanistic Designer: Jacqueline Casey | MIT 2016". mit2016.mit.edu. Retrieved 2019-10-10.
  6. ^ Livingston, Alan (2003). "Jacqueline Casey". The Thames and Hudson Dictionary of Graphic Design and Designers. Thames and Hudson. p. 45. ISBN 0500203539.
  7. ^ "The Poster Art of Jacqueline Casey". MIT Museum. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Retrieved 2014-02-28.
  8. ^ "Collection: Jacqueline Casey posters". RIT Libraries: Distinctive Collections. Rochester Institute of Technology. Retrieved 2023-09-21.
  9. ^ "Jacqueline Casey". Cary Graphic Arts Collection | RIT. Rochester Institute of Technology. Retrieved 2023-03-21.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y "Browse All : Graphic Design by Casey, Jacqueline - NCSU Libraries Collections". images.lib.ncsu.edu. Retrieved 2019-11-25.
  11. ^ a b c d e f "Jacqueline Casey · SFMOMA". www.sfmoma.org. Retrieved 2019-11-24.
  12. ^ a b c d "Jacqueline Casey, USA (1974)". a-g-i.org. Retrieved 2019-11-25.
  13. ^ "The Humanistic Designer: Jacqueline Casey | MIT 2016". mit2016.mit.edu. Retrieved 2019-11-24.
  14. ^ a b c d e grafiktrafik (2017-06-22). "Jacqueline Casey's Swiss Style Posters". grafiktrafik. Retrieved 2019-11-25.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Jacqueline Casey | Graphic Design Archive | RIT Libraries | RIT". library.rit.edu. Retrieved 2019-11-25.
  16. ^ "Poster 3042". library.rit.edu. Retrieved 2019-11-25.
  17. ^ "Poster 3116". library.rit.edu. Retrieved 2019-11-25.
  18. ^ "Poster 3073". library.rit.edu. Retrieved 2019-11-25.
  19. ^ "Poster 3015". library.rit.edu. Retrieved 2019-11-25.
  20. ^ Small, David. "Expressive Typography: High Quality Dynamic and Responsive Typography in the Electronic Environment" (PDF). MIT. Retrieved 21 November 2019.
  21. ^ "The Graphic Designer and Her Presence – ephemeral states". Retrieved 2019-11-24.
  22. ^ "Designer Jacqueline Casey Dies at 65". newsoffice.mit.edu. Retrieved 7 March 2015.

jacqueline, casey, jacqueline, casey, april, 1927, 1992, graphic, designer, best, known, posters, other, graphic, created, massachusetts, institute, technology, while, practicing, functional, modernism, jacqueline, casey, graphic, designer, office, publication. Jacqueline S Casey 20 April 1927 18 May 1992 1 was a graphic designer best known for the posters and other graphic art she created for the Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT While practicing a functional Modernism Jacqueline S Casey was a graphic designer in the Office of Publications later retitled the Office of Design Services from 1955 to 1989 and was appointed director in 1972 In discussing her design Casey stated My work combines two cultures The American interest in visual metaphor on the one hand and the Swiss fascination with planning fastidiousness and control over technical execution on the other 2 Jacqueline CaseyTypical posters by Jacqueline CaseyBornJacqueline Shepard 1927 04 20 April 20 1927Quincy Massachusetts USDiedMay 18 1992 1992 05 18 aged 65 Brookline Massachusetts USNationalityAmericanEducationMassachusetts College of Art BFA 1949 Known forGraphic design fashion illustration interior designMovementModernistPatron s Massachusetts Institute of Technology Contents 1 Early life and education 2 MIT 3 Personal life 4 Legacy 5 Works and exhibitions 6 Awards and honors 7 Further reading 8 ReferencesEarly life and education editCasey was born Jacqueline Shepard in 1927 in Quincy Massachusetts the only child of a working class couple 3 She studied for a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in fashion design and illustration at the Massachusetts College of Art MassArt graduating in 1949 After graduating she had a number of jobs including work in interior design and advertising 1 however she never obtained a job she was completely interested in she stated I broke the negative cycle by traveling through Europe for three months and came back with the decision to focus my life on something related to the arts to develop my visual sensitivity 2 MIT editThe professional quality and creative additions to design are what made the MIT s campus design group widely respected in the field MIT is acknowledged as the first American college to employ graphic designers as part of the faculty and Jacqueline Casey was one of the few who were hired The prototype for the university s publisher MIT Press was implemented by the graphic designers known for their meticulous and straightforward style of their typography Campus projects programs cultural and scientific events were advertised to society through the group designer s works In 1955 Jacqueline Shepard was recruited by fellow MassArt alumna Muriel Cooper to work at the Office of Publications at MIT She later stated In my early days at MIT a designer working on summer materials would interview faculty and have a mini course in a subject such as radioisotopes from the professor in charge There was an opportunity to learn something new every day In 1972 Casey became Director taking over this position as her colleague joined the MIT faculty The two women were among the few working at this professional level at MIT of the time 4 During her tenure as Director Casey became known for designing distinctive publicity posters for MIT events working alongside Ralph Coburn and Dietmar Winkler Casey s designs were influenced by the International Typographic Style recently developed in Switzerland particularly designers such as Karl Gerstner Armin Hofmann and Josef Muller Brockmann 4 Casey s posters generally consisted of a striking image or bold typography accompanied by informational details in smaller text 5 She often used typographic wordplay and visual puns in her work Speaking of her designs in 1988 she said My job is to stop anyone I can with an arresting or puzzling image and entice the viewer to read the message in small type and above all to attend the exhibition 4 As well as being used for promotion of on campus events and in MIT publications Casey s work was exhibited at MIT the Chelsea School of Art in London and the London College of Printing 6 Personal life editIn 1958 Jacqueline Shepard married William Bill Casey and changed her name to Jacqueline S Casey 3 Her spouse was a psychologist doing social work from a home office in their art filled home in Brookline Massachusetts 3 In 1975 he died of cancer 3 Jacqueline Casey herself was diagnosed with cancer in 1982 and struggled to handle the workload at MIT with assistance of her staff 3 In 1989 she was forced to retire but her longtime colleague neighbor and friend Muriel Cooper arranged for her to continue work as a visiting scholar at the MIT Media Laboratory 3 1 Casey died of cancer on May 18 1992 3 Legacy editCasey s work is held in the permanent collections of the MIT Museum Library of Congress the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Cooper Hewitt Museum 1 The MIT Museum mounted exhibitions of Casey s graphic work in 1992 2012 and 2018 7 Her complete works for MIT are archived in the collection of the MIT Museum In addition to the MIT holdings the Rochester Institute of Technology has a collection of 99 posters donated by the MIT Museum at the designer s request 8 Selected examples of these posters may be viewed online 9 Works and exhibitions editMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyGive Blood 1983 10 Arts on the Line 1980 10 Poster for Coffee Hour 1979 11 Ger Dekkers New Dutch Landscape Exhibition Poster 1979 10 Mediums of Language 1977 12 Art and Environment Poster for MIT s Center for Advanced Visual Studies 1972 13 Poster for Octave of Prayer 1972 11 Goya The Disasters of War 1971 12 Six Artists Exhibition Poster 1970 11 Poster for Open House 1969 11 Poster for The Moon Show 1969 11 Poster for Center for Space Research 1968 11 Light 7 Exhibition Poster 1968 10 Miscellaneous Motions of Kinetic Sculpture 1967 12 Poster for Boston Visual Arts Union Hayden Gallery 14 Poster for MIT Gospel Choir God Is 14 Poster for MIT Gospel Choir There Is NoGreaterLove 14 LincolnLab Recruitment Poster 14 Walking in the Spirit A Celebration of Gospel Music 14 North Carolina State UniversityFurniture by Architects Exhibition Poster 1981 10 Two Views Peter Berg Two Sculptures Ed Rothfarb 1979 10 MIT Symphony Orchestra Tour 1973 1973 10 Medicine of the Future 1971 10 Monuments to Malcolm X Poster 1970 10 Stop Oil Pollution 1970 10 Library Booklet Cover 1967 10 Ocean Engineering Recruitment Poster 1967 10 Humanities Series Concerts 1966 10 Corners Exhibition Poster 10 Presidents Ball Poster 10 Technology and Policy Program at MIT 10 Rochester Institute of TechnologyJacqueline Casey 1990 15 Academic Honesty Are Our Standards Clear 1984 15 Elijah Felix Mendelssohn 1984 15 James Turrell An Installation Wallace Library 1983 10 Constructed Color Sculpture by James Biederman James Hoberman Steve Keister Lizbeth Marano George Mayocole Wallace Library 1982 10 Great Big Drawings Wallace Library 1982 10 Intimate Architecture Contemporary Clothing Design Wallace Library 1982 10 12 4 Painters Wallace Library 1981 10 Body Language Wallace Library 1981 10 The Computer From Counting To Cognition 1979 15 Chemistry at MIT 1978 15 Cancer Symposium on the Occasion of the Dedication of the Seeley G Mudd Building 1975 15 Brassai The Eye of Paris An Exhibition of Photographs 1974 15 Fredrich St Florian Projects Wallace Library 1973 10 A Spring Festival of Music 1972 in Honor of Klaus Liepmann 1972 15 Poster for Faculty Student Exchange Program 1972 10 16 Lift Equilibrium An Outdoor Experiment 1969 15 Hans Haacke Exhibition Poster Wallace Library 1967 10 Aesthetics of Progress 17 Helene Aylon 18 Seven Montreal Painters 19 OtherCasey Jacqueline S amp Small David Fives Visible Language Workshop October 1990 20 Russia USA Peace 1985 21 Judge at Creativity on Paper exhibition Sponsored by Art Direction magazine 1966 2 Awards and honors editCasey has received numerous awards and honors for her work including 22 William J Gunn Award Creative Club of Boston 1988 Honorary doctorate of fine arts Massachusetts College of Art 1990 Appointed by the late President Bartlett A Giamatti of Yale University to the Visiting Committee of the Yale School of Graphic Design Member of the Alliance Graphique Internationale and of the American Institute of Graphic Arts Further reading editPosters Jacqueline S Casey Thirty Years of Design at MIT Cambridge Mass MIT Museum 1992 ISBN 0917027043References edit a b c d Sherin Aaris 2011 Casey Jacqueline In Joan M Marter ed The Grove Encyclopedia of American Art Oxford University Press p 413 ISBN 978 0 19 533579 8 a b c Heller Steven D Onofrio Greg 2017 09 19 The Moderns Midcentury American Graphic Design Abrams ISBN 978 1 68335 012 5 a b c d e f g Resnick Elizabeth 2021 Jacqueline Casey Science and Design Eye The International Review of Graphic Design 21 101 82 91 Retrieved 2023 09 21 a b c Resnick Elizabeth 2008 Woman at the edge of technology Eye The International Review of Graphic Design 17 68 Retrieved 2023 09 21 The Humanistic Designer Jacqueline Casey MIT 2016 mit2016 mit edu Retrieved 2019 10 10 Livingston Alan 2003 Jacqueline Casey The Thames and Hudson Dictionary of Graphic Design and Designers Thames and Hudson p 45 ISBN 0500203539 The Poster Art of Jacqueline Casey MIT Museum Massachusetts Institute of Technology Retrieved 2014 02 28 Collection Jacqueline Casey posters RIT Libraries Distinctive Collections Rochester Institute of Technology Retrieved 2023 09 21 Jacqueline Casey Cary Graphic Arts Collection RIT Rochester Institute of Technology Retrieved 2023 03 21 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Browse All Graphic Design by Casey Jacqueline NCSU Libraries Collections images lib ncsu edu Retrieved 2019 11 25 a b c d e f Jacqueline Casey SFMOMA www sfmoma org Retrieved 2019 11 24 a b c d Jacqueline Casey USA 1974 a g i org Retrieved 2019 11 25 The Humanistic Designer Jacqueline Casey MIT 2016 mit2016 mit edu Retrieved 2019 11 24 a b c d e grafiktrafik 2017 06 22 Jacqueline Casey s Swiss Style Posters grafiktrafik Retrieved 2019 11 25 a b c d e f g h i Jacqueline Casey Graphic Design Archive RIT Libraries RIT library rit edu Retrieved 2019 11 25 Poster 3042 library rit edu Retrieved 2019 11 25 Poster 3116 library rit edu Retrieved 2019 11 25 Poster 3073 library rit edu Retrieved 2019 11 25 Poster 3015 library rit edu Retrieved 2019 11 25 Small David Expressive Typography High Quality Dynamic and Responsive Typography in the Electronic Environment PDF MIT Retrieved 21 November 2019 The Graphic Designer and Her Presence ephemeral states Retrieved 2019 11 24 Designer Jacqueline Casey Dies at 65 newsoffice mit edu Retrieved 7 March 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jacqueline Casey amp oldid 1181880460, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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