Meggs’ History of Graphic Design

Höfundur Philip B. Meggs; Alston W. Purvis

Útgefandi Wiley Professional Development (P&T)

Snið ePub

Print ISBN 9781118772058

Útgáfa 6

Útgáfuár 2016

10.390 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Preface
  • Preface to the First Edition
  • Acknowledgments
  • Part I The Prologue to Graphic Design
  • 1 The Invention of Writing
  • Prehistoric visual communications
  • The cradle of civilization
  • The earliest writing
  • Mesopotamian visual identification
  • Egyptian hieroglyphs
  • Papyrus and writing
  • The first illustrated manuscripts
  • Egyptian visual identification
  • 2 Alphabets
  • Cretan pictographs
  • The North Semitic alphabet
  • The Aramaic alphabet and its descendants
  • The Greek alphabet
  • The Latin alphabet
  • The Korean alphabet
  • 3 The Asian Contribution
  • Chinese calligraphy
  • The invention of paper
  • The discovery of printing
  • The invention of movable type
  • 4 Illuminated Manuscripts
  • The classical style
  • Celtic book design
  • The Caroline graphic renewal
  • Spanish pictorial expressionism
  • Romanesque and Gothic manuscripts
  • Judaic manuscripts
  • Islamic manuscripts
  • Late medieval illuminated manuscripts
  • Part II A Graphic Renaissance
  • 5 Printing Comes to Europe
  • Early European block printing
  • Movable typography in Europe
  • Copperplate engraving
  • 6 The German Illustrated Book
  • Origins of the illustrated typographic book
  • Nuremberg becomes a printing center
  • The further development of the German illustrated book
  • Typography spreads from Germany
  • 7 Renaissance Graphic Design
  • Graphic design of the Italian Renaissance
  • Italian writing masters
  • Innovation passes to France
  • Basel and Lyons become design centers
  • The seventeenth century
  • 8 An Epoch of TypographicGenius
  • Graphic design of the rococo era
  • Caslon and Baskerville
  • The origins of information graphics
  • The imperial designs of Louis René Luce
  • The modern style
  • The illuminated printing of William Blake
  • The epoch closes
  • Part III The Bridge to the Twentieth Century
  • 9 Graphic Design and the Industrial Revolution
  • Innovations in typography
  • The wood-type poster
  • A revolution in printing
  • The mechanization of typography
  • Photography, the new communications tool
  • The inventors of photography
  • The application of photography to printing
  • Defining the medium
  • Photography as reportage
  • Popular graphics of the Victorian era
  • The development of lithography
  • The Boston school of chromolithography
  • The design language of chromolithography
  • The battle on the signboards
  • Images for children
  • The rise of American editorial and advertising design
  • Victorian typography
  • 10 The Arts and Crafts Movement and Its Heritage
  • The Century Guild
  • The Kelmscott Press
  • The private press movement
  • A book-design renaissance
  • 11 Art Nouveau
  • The influence of ukiyo-e
  • Art nouveau
  • Chéret and Grasset
  • English art nouveau
  • The further development of French art nouveau
  • Art nouveau comes to America
  • Innovation in Belgium and the Netherlands
  • The German Jugendstil movement
  • The Italian pictorial tradition
  • 12 The Genesis of Twentieth-Century Design
  • Frank Lloyd Wright and the Glasgow school
  • The Vienna Secession
  • Peter Behrens and the New Objectivity
  • Design for the London Underground
  • Part IV The Modernist Era
  • 13 The Influence of Modern Art
  • Cubism
  • Futurism
  • Dada
  • Surrealism
  • Expressionism
  • Photography and the modern movement
  • 14 Pictorial Modernism
  • Plakatstil
  • Switzerland and the Sachplakat
  • The poster goes to war
  • The maverick from Munich
  • Spanish Civil War posters
  • Postcubist pictorial modernism
  • 15 A New Language of Form
  • Russian suprematism and constructivism
  • De Stijl
  • The spread of constructivism
  • 16 The Bauhaus and the New Typography
  • The Bauhaus at Weimar
  • The impact of Laszlo Moholy-Nagy
  • The Bauhaus at Dessau
  • The final years of the Bauhaus
  • Jan Tschichold and the new typography
  • Typeface design in the first half of the twentieth century
  • The Isotype movement
  • The prototype for the modern map
  • Independent voices in the Netherlands
  • New approaches to photography
  • 17 The Modern Movement in America
  • Immigrants to America
  • The Works Progress Administration Poster Project
  • The flight from fascism
  • A patron of design
  • The war years
  • After the war
  • Informational and scientific graphics
  • Part V The Age of Information
  • 18 The International Typographic Style
  • Pioneers of the movement
  • Functional graphics for science
  • New Swiss sans-serif typefaces
  • A master of classical typography
  • Design in Basel and Zurich
  • The International Typographic Style in America
  • 19 The New York School
  • Pioneers of the New York school
  • Graphic design education at Yale University School of Art
  • An editorial design revolution
  • Editorial design after the decline
  • The new advertising
  • American typographic expressionism
  • George Lois
  • 20 Corporate Identity andVisual Systems
  • Pintori at Olivetti
  • Design at CBS
  • Raymond Loewy
  • The New Haven Railroad design program
  • Corporate identification comes of age
  • Programmed visual identification systems
  • The Federal Design Improvement Program
  • Transportation signage symbols
  • Design systems for the Olympic Games
  • The Music Television logo
  • 21 The Conceptual Image
  • The Polish poster
  • American conceptual images
  • The poster mania
  • European visual poets
  • Postrevolution Cuban posters
  • 22 Postmodern Design
  • Precursors to postmodern design
  • Early Swiss postmodern design
  • New-wave typography
  • The Memphis and San Francisco schools
  • Retro and vernacular design
  • 23 National Visions within a Global Dialogue
  • Pentagram, the formative years
  • Recent British graphic design
  • The rise of Japanese design
  • Design in the Netherlands
  • The new conceptual poster
  • The conceptual book cover
  • Design in Spain, Portugal, and Latin America
  • A new aesthetic of modern Chinese graphic design
  • South Korea
  • The Middle East
  • A voice from Africa
  • 24 The Digital Revolution—and Beyond
  • The origins of computer-aided graphic design
  • Pioneers of digital graphic design
  • Revitalizing editorial design
  • The digital type foundry
  • Digital imaging
  • Interactive media, the Internet, and the World Wide Web
  • The digital vanguard
  • Design for portable devices
  • Motion graphics and film titles
  • Typography and the built environment
  • New typographic expression
  • Letterpress revival
  • Epilogue
  • Bibliography
  • Image Credits
  • Index
  • Eula
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