Erberto Carboni, Publicité Pour La Radiotelevision, 1959

Information

132 pp. 242 black and white illustrations. 2 color plates. Introduction by Gio Ponti.

Details

Linked Information

Erberto Carboni, Publicité Pour La Radiotelevision, 1959
Erberto Carboni, Publicité Pour La Radiotelevision, 1959

 

Erberto Carboni, Publicité Pour La Radiotelevision, 1959
Erberto Carboni, Publicité Pour La Radiotelevision, 1959

 

Erberto Carboni, Publicité Pour La Radiotelevision, 1959
Erberto Carboni, Publicité Pour La Radiotelevision, 1959
More graphic design artefacts
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
More graphic design history articles

Members Content

Industrial design was an American design magazine featuring furniture, ceramics, housewares, appliances, automobiles, buildings, radios, projectors, televisions, and many other objects designed for the postwar middle class. First published in the 1950s by Charles Whitney with Alvin Lustig as art director.

Members Content

Japan's first foreign film venue, Shochikuza Theatre (1923) is an icon of Modernism. Its Art Deco-influenced advertising, showcased in the 1925 Shochikuza News magazine, offers a glimpse into Japans influences from the West.

Members Content

Advances in production and 1950s chewing gum marketing. From Wrigley's iconic "Spearman" ads to Hiroshi Ohchi's designs for Harris Chewing Gum.
Last month (March 2022), I spoke to over fifty Graphic Design undergraduates about the archive and my passion for design history, after which the students had full access to items in the collection and participated in discourse amongst their peers and lecturers. As part of their critical studies unit, the students will be producing essays and content related to the impact, history and aesthetics of selected artefacts.