Graphic Design 12, 1963

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Content includes:
Alexandre Alexeieff / Masaru Katsumi
Louis Dorfsman and CBS / Katsumi Katsuta Naka Ikko Kazumasa Nagai
Design Policy of Geigy / Masaru Katsumi
parade of light
Japan Design Committee
Printing Design Laboratory ⑫ / Hayakawa Design Office staff (Tadahito Nadamoto, Teijiro Nakaide, Masamichi Obama, Takao Yamada, Tsugutsugu Obashira)
World Rookie Prospects ⑫ / Masaru Katsumi
 Heinz Waibl
Yoshiko Hirohashi
Koichiro Inagaki
Portfolio World Bibliography

Graphic Design / グラフィックデザイン, delved into the world of graphic design and visual culture. The magazine featured a broad range of content, including coverage of cutting-edge Japanese design and its history, as well as international graphic design.

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Graphic Design 12, 1963. Cover design by Atsuko Anzai
Graphic Design 12, 1963. Cover design by Atsuko Anzai
Graphic Design / グラフィックデザイン, delved into the world of graphic design and visual culture. The magazine featured a broad range of content, including coverage of cutting-edge Japanese design and its history, as well as international graphic design.
More graphic design artefacts
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
More graphic design history articles

Members Content

In my previous article about the design work produced for Insituto di Tella, I touched upon the artists Juan Carlos Distéfano, Ruben Fontana and Juan Andralis. After further research, I found a suite of other designs they had produced, including exhibition posters, concert programmes and record sleeves.

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Yoshio Hayakawa was born in Osaka, Japan, in 1917 and became a leading designer and artist in postwar Japan. His work was a harmonisation of traditional Japanese art with Western art.

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Ikko Tanaka (田中一光, 1930–2002) was a celebrated Japanese graphic designer. His client list included Mazda, Hanae Mori and Issey Miyake, Expo '85 in Tsukuba, World City Expo Tokyo '96, and the Victoria and Albert Museum.
I came across two sample books containing printed examples of the work executed by the students in the Composing and Machine Departments of the Polytechnic School of Printing, between 1907 and 1910. I couldn't resist adding these to the archive.