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Louis Danziger

Louis Danziger (born November 17, 1923) is an American graphic designer and design educator. He is most strongly associated with the late modern movement in graphic design, and with a community of designers from various disciplines working in Southern California in the mid-twentieth century.[2] He is noted for his iconoclastic approach to design, and for introducing the principles of European constructivism to the American advertising vernacular.

Louis (Lou) Danziger
Danziger, 2008
Born (1923-11-17) November 17, 1923 (age 99)[1]
NationalityAmerican
EducationEvander Childs High School, Art Center School, New School
Known forGraphic Design, Advertising, Teaching
Awards1998 AIGA Gold Medal, many others

In 1998, Danziger was awarded the AIGA Gold Medal for “standards of excellence over a lifetime of work.”[3]

Early life Edit

Louis Danziger was born in November 1923, and raised in The Bronx, New York.[3]

At age eleven, Danziger was enrolled in courses in art and poster design run by the Federal Art Project: “Their art classes turned me into a designer,” Danziger later said.[4] He began to browse the German design magazine Gebrauchsgraphik, which was available at the Fordham Public Library,[5] and which he later credited with piquing his interest in typography, and with establishing his high visual standards.[6] As an art major at Evander Childs High School, Danziger received a free student membership to the Museum of Modern Art: as a consequence Danziger was exposed to the modern-art movements of Futurism, Constructivism, and Dadaism, and studied the work of Picasso, Matisse, and Paul Klee.

Danziger prepared for a career as a commercial artist. As a teenager, he worked as an apprentice at United Litho Company and silkscreen shop S&K. He also worked as a stage designer at Berkshire Country Club in the Catskill Mountains, and as an assistant to the art director at Delehanty Institute.[7]

After high school, Danziger served in the Army in the South Pacific (New Guinea, the Admiralties, the Philippines, and Japan), where he was a Staff Sergeant and worked as a radio operator and communication chief, from 1943 through 1945.

Education and influences Edit

After his discharge from the Army, and eager to escape cold weather, Danziger moved to Los Angeles and enrolled in the Art Center School on the G.I. Bill.[3]

At Art Center, Danziger encountered the first of two teachers who would be particularly influential: graphic designer Alvin Lustig. “I didn't like school at all, because it was very rigid at that time. But one day I heard this voice coming out of a classroom talking about social structure, religion, and the broadest implications of design. So I stuck my nose in the door and saw that it was Lustig. From then on I sat in on every class,” said Danziger. From Lustig, Danziger learned how graphic design connected to the worlds of art, music, and literature, and that design could have social and cultural importance: “(Lustig) made me feel, naively, that I could move the earth by putting pencil to paper.”[8]

Danziger left school less than two years later, and began to work as a freelance graphic designer. Discouraged by the scarcity of opportunities available in Los Angeles at the time, Danziger returned to New York City; while working at Esquire Magazine, he enrolled in the famous ‘Graphic Journalism’ evening class of graphic designer Alexey Brodovitch, at the New School for Social Research. Danziger was encouraged by Brodovitch's enthusiasm for Danziger's portfolio of work,[3] and was inspired by Brodovitch's insistence on originality and authenticity,[9] and his view of design as a simple, joyful activity: “(Brodovitch taught that) design needs no justification other than the pleasure of the act itself,” said Danziger.[10]

Danziger has spoken frequently about the twin influences of Lustig and Brodovitch, each very different from the other in style, focus, and temperament: “One said ‘night,’ and the other said ‘day.’”[10] Danziger observed that the differences between these two teachers helped him to resist the impulse to imitate either, and instead compelled him to develop his independent style and voice: “I always felt that it was the contradictions between my two masters that allowed me to form my own point of view.”[3]

Though noted for his intellectualism,[10] Danziger describes himself primarily as an auto-didact: “(Reading) constituted the major part of my design education.”[11] He has cited as formative texts Buckminster Fuller’s 'Nine Chains to the Moon,' György Kepes’ ‘Language of Vision,' Louis Sullivan’s ‘Kindergarten Chats,’ and Paul Rand’s ‘Thoughts on Design.'[10] Rand's writing in particular imprinted on Danziger the importance of identifying a solution to each design problem that connected closely to the visual language and conceptual territory of the subject matter, and the power of visual metaphors as a tool of communication.[4]

Work Edit

Danziger returned to Los Angeles in late 1948, where he studied architecture briefly at the California School of Art, under Raphael S. Soriano. He began an independent practice, offering graphic design, advertising, and consulting services, in Los Angeles in 1949.[3]

Prolific and efficient in his work,[10] Danziger created thousands of works of design over the next three decades, including advertising, book covers, magazines and catalogs, packaging, logos, album covers, and exhibition design. His client base grew from small local entities to large national corporations and organizations.[8] His clients included charitable and cultural institutions (Los Angeles County Museum of Art,[12] Skirball Museum, International Design Conference at Aspen, Eleanor Roosevelt Institute for Cancer Research), educational institutions (UCLA), and many commercial enterprises (Flax Artist's Materials, Container Corporation of America, Kwikset Locks, Gelvetex, Vivitar, Clinton Laboratories, TRW, Dreyfus Company, and others).

Among Danziger's better-known works:

  • Print ad for General Lighting Company (1949)
  • Logo and identity program for Flax Artist's Materials (1952)
  • House campaign for Dreyfus Advertising Agency (1956)
  • Print ad for Container Corporation of America (1958)
  • Print ads and packaging for Clinton Laboratories (1959-1963)
  • Posters for Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA)’s Exhibition of New York School Painters (1965) and Exhibition of American Painting (1966)
  • Catalogs for several Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) shows, most notably: New York School (1965), Exhibition of Japanese Art Treasures (1965), Art & Technology (1971),[13] and The Avant Garde in Russia (1980)
  • Advertising campaigns and packaging for Mamiya/Sekor (1966)
  • Catalog cover, UCLA Extension (1990)

Danziger largely retired from studio work in 1972, although for several years after he served as a corporate design consultant for Atlantic Richfield Company (ARCO); he also consulted for Microsoft, LACMA, the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), and others.

In 1995, Danziger donated his collection of visual work and related documents to the Design Archives of Rochester Institute of Technology, where it can be accessed by students, design scholars, and historians.[14]

Philosophy and approach Edit

Although Danziger himself tends to eschew labels, he is most strongly associated with the late modern movement in graphic design and advertising design. Danziger’s work is characterized by essential values associated with modernism, and more particularly with the principles of European constructivism:

  • Economy of means. “I strive for elegance, using the word in its scientific sense: accomplishment with minimum means.”[8] Danziger's stated goal is to take “a minimal amount of material and a minimal amount of effort—nothing wasted—to achieve maximum impact.”[15] Danziger has noted frequently that the constraints of any project, whether budget, schedule, or client requirements, were simply a condition of the process and no obstacle to finding an effective solution.
  • Appropriateness to the purpose. Danziger defines design as a useful, problem-solving activity rather than as an aesthetic pursuit. He insists on starting each project with a blank slate stylistically, in order to create a communication that is uniquely appropriate to that client and that situation: “The “look” is not brought to the work but rather emerges from the process.”[16] Similarly, he states: “I want solutions that make it difficult to separate form from content.”[8] Danziger rejects design that is (merely or primarily) aesthetically appealing as a vanity, and the province of the fine artist.
  • Clarity. Danziger is intolerant of any ambiguity or obfuscation in communication: “I want to be clear. I never try to be subtle or clever.”[8] He observed: “I am concerned with the production of work that demonstrates intelligence … there is continually a search for clarity and depth rather than cleverness.”[7]
  • Social responsibility. Danziger insists on viewing design as an ethical pursuit, mindful of its impact on its audience. “As socially responsible people we try to accomplish (our clients’) objectives in a positive way. We do this by providing some services for our audience. We provide information, entertainment, and aesthetic pleasure.”[7] He observed that ethics in design “is primarily about being responsible for what one does. In the case of communication design, the number one rule is not to deceive.” In contrast to designers who shunned advertising as banal or corrupt, Danziger embraced advertising as an important part of his practice, reasoning that he could change and improve the world of advertising by offering the audience work that was intelligent, respectful, and valuable to them.[16]

Danziger is also viewed as a seminal figure in the burgeoning graphic design and advertising industry in Southern California in the mid-twentieth century, which was noted for its experimentalism, its reverence for modern art, and its indifference to the strict design traditions of the east coast.[17] Danziger's work was additionally informed by his own knowledge of design history.[18]

Danziger resisted the stylistic signatures that are common to many graphic designers: this contributed to a sort of visual timelessness in his design, which critics have described as “effortless”[9] and “classic.”[3] Danziger is noted for his innovative uses of photography in advertising, including overlaying multiple photographic negatives to create a new image,[19] presenting tiny objects as enormous on the page, in order to draw new attention to them, and the deft use of visual metaphors.[17] Together, these techniques embodied a “revolutionary redefinition of the photograph” as an element of communication.[16]

Danziger had an early interest in the potential application of computers in graphic design, taking a course at UCLA Extension in the fundamentals of computer science in 1955.[16] Later Danziger worked with programmers at the California Institute of Technology to create perhaps the first logo to be designed with the aid of a computer (for Xybion Corporation, in 1975).[19]

Colleagues and collaborators Edit

By and large, Danziger worked alone, managing his firm largely without design assistants or professional collaborators. He noted that he preferred to do fewer projects, but to retain more control over production of each piece. With few exceptions, his work incorporated his own photography.[7]

Nevertheless, Danziger was closely connected with a group of designers from various disciplines who were active in Southern California from the 1950s to the 1970s, including Charles and Ray Eames, and the ‘Design Group’ (a group that consisted primarily of Alvin Lustig's students, which was active from 1948 to the early 1970s). These designers were not Danziger's direct collaborators; however, they met frequently, had common interests and preoccupations, and were cooperative and mutually influential. Danziger was something of an intellectual leader of this group: he was later described by his contemporary, graphic designer Deborah Sussman, as “a guru to everyone (in this confederation of designers).”[19] Designer Saul Bass said that Danziger “shaped Los Angeles design activity into an intellectual dialogue and was a major inspiration.”[16]

In 1949, Danziger joined a loosely affiliated, short-lived group called the Society of Contemporary Designers, which also included Saul Bass, Alvin Lustig, Jerome Gould, and John Follis, and which included graphic, product, and exhibition designers.[17] Danziger was described by Bass as “a critical link in the communal support system.”[16]

Danziger also enjoyed a close friendship and informal collaboration with graphic designer Paul Rand, and with Bauhaus master Herbert Bayer.

Danziger collaborated with architect Frank Gehry on the Danziger House and Studio (1965), a studio/residence which Danziger and his wife occupied until 1995. This project was one of the first of Gehry's projects to receive widespread attention.[20]

Teaching Edit

Despite his own lack of formal education, Danziger became a noted design educator, a “charismatic pedagogue.”[18] Danziger is associated most closely with three schools: Harvard University, where he was a visiting professor in graphic design from 1978 to 1988; Art Center College of Design (formerly known as Art Center School), where he taught courses in advertising and graphic design starting in 1958; and California Institute of the Arts (CalArts, formerly known as Chouinard Art Institute), where he taught from 1963 to 1979, and served as the Director of the Graphic Design Department from 1972 to 1979.[21] At CalArts, Danziger was credited with helping to create the first academic course ever offered in the history of graphic design;[15] and, averse to the promotion of a single point of view in design education, he was noted for recruiting faculty who represented a diverse range of styles.[16]

Danziger's teaching reflects the influence of Lustig, Brodovitch, Buckminster Fuller, El Lissitzky, Rand, and others, but filtered and interpreted through his own research and practice, and incorporating his own sense of humor. Danziger is famous among students for his pithy aphorisms, among them:

  • “The solution to the problem lies within the problem.” (Create a design solution that is germane to the subject matter: don't borrow interest.)
  • “Close the open doors.” (Remove all elements that might interfere with the intended communication.)
  • “If it’s not helping you, it’s hurting you.” (Remove unnecessary elements, because they are distractions.)
  • “Analysis of the problem is the most significant part of the design process.” (Research, and think, before beginning to design.)
  • “If it’s 'in,' it’s out.” (Resist the lure of fashion, or imitating what's ‘cool.’)
  • “You are the best you.” (Don't imitate. Be authentic in your life and work.)

In a 1998 interview coinciding with the awarding of the AIGA Gold Medal, Danziger summed up his advice to students in this way: “Work. Think. Feel.” Work: “No matter how brilliant, talented, exceptional and wonderful the student may be, without work there is nothing but potential and talk.” Think: “Design is a problem-solving activity. Thinking is the application of intelligence to arrive at the appropriate solution to the problem.” Feel: “Work without feeling, intuition, and spontaneity is devoid of humanity.”[3]

Many of Danziger's students rose to prominence in the design field, among them John Plunkett (founding designer of Wired Magazine), Neil Kellerhouse, Mikio Osaki, Frank Cheatham, Ray Engle, Robert Geers, Robert Overby, Sam Smidt, Roland Young, Archie Boston, Judy Johnson, John Van Hamersveld, Laurie Raskin, Cheri Gray, Tracey Shiffman, Dale Herigstad, Don Chang, Sean Adams, Troy Alders, Noreen Morioka, Lars M. Busekist, Ian Grais, Kristen Ding, Dan Goods, Maria Moon, Miya Osaki, among others.

Danziger has been critical of some schools and trends in design education—in particular, many schools’ rigidity, their emphasis on fashionability, and their imprinting of students with a uniform design style: “Most schools produce students whose work is interchangeable. The skills they teach are obsolete by the time a student graduates. If students are trained (instead) as genuine problem-solvers, they are able to deal with an unknown tomorrow.”[8]

Influence and impact Edit

Danziger is credited with influencing several generations of contemporary American advertising art directors and graphic designers, both through his work and through his teaching.[15]

In addition, Danziger's influence extended outside the United States. In 1957, when travelling to Italy to study the work of Italian designers, Danziger discovered that many Italian designers knew and admired his work already: graphic designer Massimo Vignelli said that it was the work of Danziger and Saul Bass that inspired him to come to the United States.[16]

Awards, honors and exhibitions Edit

Danziger's work is included and exhibited in the permanent collections of several design and art museums, including the Museum of Modern Art (New York), the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and the Library of Congress.[7]

In 2013, in honor of Danziger's 90th birthday, an exhibition of Danziger's key works was mounted at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California.

References Edit

  1. ^ Contemporary Designers, pg. 137
  2. ^ "Louis Danziger: Happy 90th - Print Magazine". Printmag.com. 2013-11-15. Retrieved 2016-07-15.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h "Louis Danziger". AIGA. 2008-09-01. Retrieved 2016-07-15.
  4. ^ a b "Designculture • Louis Danziger". Designculture.it. 2013-05-07. Retrieved 2016-07-15.
  5. ^ Meggs, P.B. (1990). "Notes on a Grand Master". Print: 66–79.
  6. ^ Heller, Steven (1998). "Recognition 1998 AIGA Medal". AIGA.
  7. ^ a b c d e Hillebrand, H. (1971). Graphic Designers in the USA/1. New York, New York: Universe Books.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Rubin, M. (1978). "Louis Danziger." Graphis, International Journal of Graphic and Applied Art, 266-273.
  9. ^ a b "Interview with Louis Danziger Part 1". Thinkingform.com. 2013-06-26. Retrieved 2016-07-15.
  10. ^ a b c d e Meggs, P.B. (1990). "Notes on a Grand Master". Print: 66-79.
  11. ^ "Louis Danziger: 20 Outstanding Los Angeles Designers, 1986". YouTube. 2007-08-24. Retrieved 2016-07-15.
  12. ^ "The Untold History of Design at LACMA | Unframed". unframed.lacma.org. Retrieved 2019-03-19.
  13. ^ "Networked Catalogue | Unframed". unframed.lacma.org. Retrieved 2019-03-19.
  14. ^ Rochester Institute of Technology. (1995). library.rit.edu/gda/designers/louis-danziger.
  15. ^ a b c Heller, S. (2001). Graphic Design History. New York: Allworth Press.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h Meggs, P. B. (1990). "Notes on a Grand Master." Print, 66-79.
  17. ^ a b c Aynsley, J. (2011). "Developing a Language of Vision: Graphic Design in California." In W. Kaplan, Living in a Modern Way: California Design 1930-1965. Cambridge: MIT Press.
  18. ^ a b Bojko, S. (1984). "Louis Danziger." In A. L. Morgan, Contemporary Designers (pp. 136-138). London: MacMillan.
  19. ^ a b c Sandhaus, L. (2014). Earthquakes, Mudslides, Fires & Riots: California & Graphic Design 1936-1986. New York, New York: Metropolis Books.
  20. ^ Isenberg, B. (2009). Conversations with Frank Gehry. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.
  21. ^ Yanow, J. (1978). "Louis Danziger: Training the Design Mavericks." Graphics Today, 38-41.
  22. ^ Jacobs, Jody (July 4, 1982). "Tribute '82 to Toast Cultural Leaders". Los Angeles Times. p. 4.
  23. ^ Bojko, S. (1984). "Louis Danziger." In A. L. Morgan, Contemporary Designers. London: MacMillan. 136-138.

External links Edit

  • "Interview with Louis Danziger Part 2". Thinkingform.com. 2013-07-16. Retrieved 2016-07-15.
  • "Louis Danziger". MoMA. 2010-02-22. Retrieved 2016-07-15.
  • "Louis Danziger" LACMA Collections

louis, danziger, born, november, 1923, american, graphic, designer, design, educator, most, strongly, associated, with, late, modern, movement, graphic, design, with, community, designers, from, various, disciplines, working, southern, california, twentieth, c. Louis Danziger born November 17 1923 is an American graphic designer and design educator He is most strongly associated with the late modern movement in graphic design and with a community of designers from various disciplines working in Southern California in the mid twentieth century 2 He is noted for his iconoclastic approach to design and for introducing the principles of European constructivism to the American advertising vernacular Louis Lou DanzigerDanziger 2008Born 1923 11 17 November 17 1923 age 99 1 Brooklyn New York U S NationalityAmericanEducationEvander Childs High School Art Center School New SchoolKnown forGraphic Design Advertising TeachingAwards1998 AIGA Gold Medal many othersIn 1998 Danziger was awarded the AIGA Gold Medal for standards of excellence over a lifetime of work 3 Contents 1 Early life 2 Education and influences 3 Work 4 Philosophy and approach 5 Colleagues and collaborators 6 Teaching 7 Influence and impact 8 Awards honors and exhibitions 9 References 10 External linksEarly life EditLouis Danziger was born in November 1923 and raised in The Bronx New York 3 At age eleven Danziger was enrolled in courses in art and poster design run by the Federal Art Project Their art classes turned me into a designer Danziger later said 4 He began to browse the German design magazine Gebrauchsgraphik which was available at the Fordham Public Library 5 and which he later credited with piquing his interest in typography and with establishing his high visual standards 6 As an art major at Evander Childs High School Danziger received a free student membership to the Museum of Modern Art as a consequence Danziger was exposed to the modern art movements of Futurism Constructivism and Dadaism and studied the work of Picasso Matisse and Paul Klee Danziger prepared for a career as a commercial artist As a teenager he worked as an apprentice at United Litho Company and silkscreen shop S amp K He also worked as a stage designer at Berkshire Country Club in the Catskill Mountains and as an assistant to the art director at Delehanty Institute 7 After high school Danziger served in the Army in the South Pacific New Guinea the Admiralties the Philippines and Japan where he was a Staff Sergeant and worked as a radio operator and communication chief from 1943 through 1945 Education and influences EditAfter his discharge from the Army and eager to escape cold weather Danziger moved to Los Angeles and enrolled in the Art Center School on the G I Bill 3 At Art Center Danziger encountered the first of two teachers who would be particularly influential graphic designer Alvin Lustig I didn t like school at all because it was very rigid at that time But one day I heard this voice coming out of a classroom talking about social structure religion and the broadest implications of design So I stuck my nose in the door and saw that it was Lustig From then on I sat in on every class said Danziger From Lustig Danziger learned how graphic design connected to the worlds of art music and literature and that design could have social and cultural importance Lustig made me feel naively that I could move the earth by putting pencil to paper 8 Danziger left school less than two years later and began to work as a freelance graphic designer Discouraged by the scarcity of opportunities available in Los Angeles at the time Danziger returned to New York City while working at Esquire Magazine he enrolled in the famous Graphic Journalism evening class of graphic designer Alexey Brodovitch at the New School for Social Research Danziger was encouraged by Brodovitch s enthusiasm for Danziger s portfolio of work 3 and was inspired by Brodovitch s insistence on originality and authenticity 9 and his view of design as a simple joyful activity Brodovitch taught that design needs no justification other than the pleasure of the act itself said Danziger 10 Danziger has spoken frequently about the twin influences of Lustig and Brodovitch each very different from the other in style focus and temperament One said night and the other said day 10 Danziger observed that the differences between these two teachers helped him to resist the impulse to imitate either and instead compelled him to develop his independent style and voice I always felt that it was the contradictions between my two masters that allowed me to form my own point of view 3 Though noted for his intellectualism 10 Danziger describes himself primarily as an auto didact Reading constituted the major part of my design education 11 He has cited as formative texts Buckminster Fuller s Nine Chains to the Moon Gyorgy Kepes Language of Vision Louis Sullivan s Kindergarten Chats and Paul Rand s Thoughts on Design 10 Rand s writing in particular imprinted on Danziger the importance of identifying a solution to each design problem that connected closely to the visual language and conceptual territory of the subject matter and the power of visual metaphors as a tool of communication 4 Work EditDanziger returned to Los Angeles in late 1948 where he studied architecture briefly at the California School of Art under Raphael S Soriano He began an independent practice offering graphic design advertising and consulting services in Los Angeles in 1949 3 Prolific and efficient in his work 10 Danziger created thousands of works of design over the next three decades including advertising book covers magazines and catalogs packaging logos album covers and exhibition design His client base grew from small local entities to large national corporations and organizations 8 His clients included charitable and cultural institutions Los Angeles County Museum of Art 12 Skirball Museum International Design Conference at Aspen Eleanor Roosevelt Institute for Cancer Research educational institutions UCLA and many commercial enterprises Flax Artist s Materials Container Corporation of America Kwikset Locks Gelvetex Vivitar Clinton Laboratories TRW Dreyfus Company and others Among Danziger s better known works Print ad for General Lighting Company 1949 Logo and identity program for Flax Artist s Materials 1952 House campaign for Dreyfus Advertising Agency 1956 Print ad for Container Corporation of America 1958 Print ads and packaging for Clinton Laboratories 1959 1963 Posters for Los Angeles County Museum of Art LACMA s Exhibition of New York School Painters 1965 and Exhibition of American Painting 1966 Catalogs for several Los Angeles County Museum of Art LACMA shows most notably New York School 1965 Exhibition of Japanese Art Treasures 1965 Art amp Technology 1971 13 and The Avant Garde in Russia 1980 Advertising campaigns and packaging for Mamiya Sekor 1966 Catalog cover UCLA Extension 1990 Danziger largely retired from studio work in 1972 although for several years after he served as a corporate design consultant for Atlantic Richfield Company ARCO he also consulted for Microsoft LACMA the National Endowment for the Arts NEA and others In 1995 Danziger donated his collection of visual work and related documents to the Design Archives of Rochester Institute of Technology where it can be accessed by students design scholars and historians 14 Philosophy and approach EditAlthough Danziger himself tends to eschew labels he is most strongly associated with the late modern movement in graphic design and advertising design Danziger s work is characterized by essential values associated with modernism and more particularly with the principles of European constructivism Economy of means I strive for elegance using the word in its scientific sense accomplishment with minimum means 8 Danziger s stated goal is to take a minimal amount of material and a minimal amount of effort nothing wasted to achieve maximum impact 15 Danziger has noted frequently that the constraints of any project whether budget schedule or client requirements were simply a condition of the process and no obstacle to finding an effective solution Appropriateness to the purpose Danziger defines design as a useful problem solving activity rather than as an aesthetic pursuit He insists on starting each project with a blank slate stylistically in order to create a communication that is uniquely appropriate to that client and that situation The look is not brought to the work but rather emerges from the process 16 Similarly he states I want solutions that make it difficult to separate form from content 8 Danziger rejects design that is merely or primarily aesthetically appealing as a vanity and the province of the fine artist Clarity Danziger is intolerant of any ambiguity or obfuscation in communication I want to be clear I never try to be subtle or clever 8 He observed I am concerned with the production of work that demonstrates intelligence there is continually a search for clarity and depth rather than cleverness 7 Social responsibility Danziger insists on viewing design as an ethical pursuit mindful of its impact on its audience As socially responsible people we try to accomplish our clients objectives in a positive way We do this by providing some services for our audience We provide information entertainment and aesthetic pleasure 7 He observed that ethics in design is primarily about being responsible for what one does In the case of communication design the number one rule is not to deceive In contrast to designers who shunned advertising as banal or corrupt Danziger embraced advertising as an important part of his practice reasoning that he could change and improve the world of advertising by offering the audience work that was intelligent respectful and valuable to them 16 Danziger is also viewed as a seminal figure in the burgeoning graphic design and advertising industry in Southern California in the mid twentieth century which was noted for its experimentalism its reverence for modern art and its indifference to the strict design traditions of the east coast 17 Danziger s work was additionally informed by his own knowledge of design history 18 Danziger resisted the stylistic signatures that are common to many graphic designers this contributed to a sort of visual timelessness in his design which critics have described as effortless 9 and classic 3 Danziger is noted for his innovative uses of photography in advertising including overlaying multiple photographic negatives to create a new image 19 presenting tiny objects as enormous on the page in order to draw new attention to them and the deft use of visual metaphors 17 Together these techniques embodied a revolutionary redefinition of the photograph as an element of communication 16 Danziger had an early interest in the potential application of computers in graphic design taking a course at UCLA Extension in the fundamentals of computer science in 1955 16 Later Danziger worked with programmers at the California Institute of Technology to create perhaps the first logo to be designed with the aid of a computer for Xybion Corporation in 1975 19 Colleagues and collaborators EditBy and large Danziger worked alone managing his firm largely without design assistants or professional collaborators He noted that he preferred to do fewer projects but to retain more control over production of each piece With few exceptions his work incorporated his own photography 7 Nevertheless Danziger was closely connected with a group of designers from various disciplines who were active in Southern California from the 1950s to the 1970s including Charles and Ray Eames and the Design Group a group that consisted primarily of Alvin Lustig s students which was active from 1948 to the early 1970s These designers were not Danziger s direct collaborators however they met frequently had common interests and preoccupations and were cooperative and mutually influential Danziger was something of an intellectual leader of this group he was later described by his contemporary graphic designer Deborah Sussman as a guru to everyone in this confederation of designers 19 Designer Saul Bass said that Danziger shaped Los Angeles design activity into an intellectual dialogue and was a major inspiration 16 In 1949 Danziger joined a loosely affiliated short lived group called the Society of Contemporary Designers which also included Saul Bass Alvin Lustig Jerome Gould and John Follis and which included graphic product and exhibition designers 17 Danziger was described by Bass as a critical link in the communal support system 16 Danziger also enjoyed a close friendship and informal collaboration with graphic designer Paul Rand and with Bauhaus master Herbert Bayer Danziger collaborated with architect Frank Gehry on the Danziger House and Studio 1965 a studio residence which Danziger and his wife occupied until 1995 This project was one of the first of Gehry s projects to receive widespread attention 20 Teaching EditDespite his own lack of formal education Danziger became a noted design educator a charismatic pedagogue 18 Danziger is associated most closely with three schools Harvard University where he was a visiting professor in graphic design from 1978 to 1988 Art Center College of Design formerly known as Art Center School where he taught courses in advertising and graphic design starting in 1958 and California Institute of the Arts CalArts formerly known as Chouinard Art Institute where he taught from 1963 to 1979 and served as the Director of the Graphic Design Department from 1972 to 1979 21 At CalArts Danziger was credited with helping to create the first academic course ever offered in the history of graphic design 15 and averse to the promotion of a single point of view in design education he was noted for recruiting faculty who represented a diverse range of styles 16 Danziger s teaching reflects the influence of Lustig Brodovitch Buckminster Fuller El Lissitzky Rand and others but filtered and interpreted through his own research and practice and incorporating his own sense of humor Danziger is famous among students for his pithy aphorisms among them The solution to the problem lies within the problem Create a design solution that is germane to the subject matter don t borrow interest Close the open doors Remove all elements that might interfere with the intended communication If it s not helping you it s hurting you Remove unnecessary elements because they are distractions Analysis of the problem is the most significant part of the design process Research and think before beginning to design If it s in it s out Resist the lure of fashion or imitating what s cool You are the best you Don t imitate Be authentic in your life and work In a 1998 interview coinciding with the awarding of the AIGA Gold Medal Danziger summed up his advice to students in this way Work Think Feel Work No matter how brilliant talented exceptional and wonderful the student may be without work there is nothing but potential and talk Think Design is a problem solving activity Thinking is the application of intelligence to arrive at the appropriate solution to the problem Feel Work without feeling intuition and spontaneity is devoid of humanity 3 Many of Danziger s students rose to prominence in the design field among them John Plunkett founding designer of Wired Magazine Neil Kellerhouse Mikio Osaki Frank Cheatham Ray Engle Robert Geers Robert Overby Sam Smidt Roland Young Archie Boston Judy Johnson John Van Hamersveld Laurie Raskin Cheri Gray Tracey Shiffman Dale Herigstad Don Chang Sean Adams Troy Alders Noreen Morioka Lars M Busekist Ian Grais Kristen Ding Dan Goods Maria Moon Miya Osaki among others Danziger has been critical of some schools and trends in design education in particular many schools rigidity their emphasis on fashionability and their imprinting of students with a uniform design style Most schools produce students whose work is interchangeable The skills they teach are obsolete by the time a student graduates If students are trained instead as genuine problem solvers they are able to deal with an unknown tomorrow 8 Influence and impact EditDanziger is credited with influencing several generations of contemporary American advertising art directors and graphic designers both through his work and through his teaching 15 In addition Danziger s influence extended outside the United States In 1957 when travelling to Italy to study the work of Italian designers Danziger discovered that many Italian designers knew and admired his work already graphic designer Massimo Vignelli said that it was the work of Danziger and Saul Bass that inspired him to come to the United States 16 Awards honors and exhibitions EditExhibition Society of Typographic Arts Chicago 1955 Elected Member of Alliance Graphique Internationale AGI 1974 Los Angeles County Museum of Art LACMA The Modern and Contemporary Art Council s Award for Distinguished Achievement 1982 honoring men and women prominent in the cultural life of Los Angeles alongside Ray Bradbury Ray Eames Norman Lear Billy Wilder John Williams Richard Diebenkorn 22 Distinguished Designer Fellowship National Endowment for the Arts NEA 1985 Pacific Design Center Stars of Design Lifetime Achievement Award 1997 Gold Medal American Institute of Graphic Arts AIGA 1998 Lifetime Achievement Award Art Center College of Design 2011 Exhibition Los Angeles County Museum of Art Pacific Standard Time Art in L A 1945 1980 2011 2012 23 Danziger s work is included and exhibited in the permanent collections of several design and art museums including the Museum of Modern Art New York the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the Library of Congress 7 In 2013 in honor of Danziger s 90th birthday an exhibition of Danziger s key works was mounted at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena California References Edit Contemporary Designers pg 137 Louis Danziger Happy 90th Print Magazine Printmag com 2013 11 15 Retrieved 2016 07 15 a b c d e f g h Louis Danziger AIGA 2008 09 01 Retrieved 2016 07 15 a b Designculture Louis Danziger Designculture it 2013 05 07 Retrieved 2016 07 15 Meggs P B 1990 Notes on a Grand Master Print 66 79 Heller Steven 1998 Recognition 1998 AIGA Medal AIGA a b c d e Hillebrand H 1971 Graphic Designers in the USA 1 New York New York Universe Books a b c d e f Rubin M 1978 Louis Danziger Graphis International Journal of Graphic and Applied Art 266 273 a b Interview with Louis Danziger Part 1 Thinkingform com 2013 06 26 Retrieved 2016 07 15 a b c d e Meggs P B 1990 Notes on a Grand Master Print 66 79 Louis Danziger 20 Outstanding Los Angeles Designers 1986 YouTube 2007 08 24 Retrieved 2016 07 15 The Untold History of Design at LACMA Unframed unframed lacma org Retrieved 2019 03 19 Networked Catalogue Unframed unframed lacma org Retrieved 2019 03 19 Rochester Institute of Technology 1995 library rit edu gda designers louis danziger a b c Heller S 2001 Graphic Design History New York Allworth Press a b c d e f g h Meggs P B 1990 Notes on a Grand Master Print 66 79 a b c Aynsley J 2011 Developing a Language of Vision Graphic Design in California In W Kaplan Living in a Modern Way California Design 1930 1965 Cambridge MIT Press a b Bojko S 1984 Louis Danziger In A L Morgan Contemporary Designers pp 136 138 London MacMillan a b c Sandhaus L 2014 Earthquakes Mudslides Fires amp Riots California amp Graphic Design 1936 1986 New York New York Metropolis Books Isenberg B 2009 Conversations with Frank Gehry New York Alfred A Knopf Yanow J 1978 Louis Danziger Training the Design Mavericks Graphics Today 38 41 Jacobs Jody July 4 1982 Tribute 82 to Toast Cultural Leaders Los Angeles Times p 4 Bojko S 1984 Louis Danziger In A L Morgan Contemporary Designers London MacMillan 136 138 External links Edit Interview with Louis Danziger Part 2 Thinkingform com 2013 07 16 Retrieved 2016 07 15 Louis Danziger MoMA 2010 02 22 Retrieved 2016 07 15 Louis Danziger LACMA Collections Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Louis Danziger amp oldid 1155518884, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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