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Content includes:
Manuel Gasser, Zurich: Richard Lindner
Jerome Snyder, New York: David Levine
Stanley Mason, Zurich: The Construction Barrier as a Design Medium
Hans Neuburg, Zurich: Swiss Posters 1970
Jack Dillon, New York: Charles Saxon
Rudolf C. Hoenig, Zurich: The Calendar as a Publicity Medium
Rene Creux, Paudex: Popular Art in Switzerland
Olaf Leu, Bad Homburg: Josse Goffin
Peter Knapp, Paris: Maurice Garnier

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Graphis 152, 1971
Graphis 152, 1971. Cover design by Richard Lindner
More graphic design artefacts
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
More graphic design history articles

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A collection of letterpresses German brochures from 1959/1960 designed by Hans Geipel for Süddeutsche Rundfunk (SDR), the South German Radio Network based in Stuttgart.

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A total of 24 posters were created for the campaign during 1964, using the arrow symbol as a key features, representing power, motion and speed. The handmade lithographs use up to 19 colours, which were individually printed at large scale. The posters also utilise the brand colours red and yellow from Shells corporate identity.
When Fritz Gottschalk and Stuart Ash joined forces in Montreal, it was a partnership ideally suited to the city's hybrid environment. Gottschalk's training in graphic design in Switzerland, Paris and London was rigid, his background European; Ash, Canadian born and educated, was trained in the North American fashion, though he was influenced by his work with European designers

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The advertising agency played a crucial role in shaping consumer culture by acting as a bridge between businesses and the media and was stated to have started in the mid-19th century.