Dutch Art + Architecture Today 15, 1984

Information

Content includes:
JETTEKE BOLTEN – Marlene Dumas
PAUL DONKER DUYVIS – Jan Schoonhoven, the poetic beauty of imperfection
DORINE MIGNOT – Video art in Rembrandt’s country
DAAN VAN GOLDEN – Artist’s pages
RAINER BULLHORST – Jan Hoogstad, synthesis of emotion and dogma
TINEKE REIJNDERS – Artists’ Initiatives
GEURTIMANSE – List of publications

Details

Linked Information

Dutch Art + Architecture Today 15, 1984. Designed by Jan van Toorn
Dutch Art + Architecture Today 15, 1984. Designed by Jan van Toorn
More graphic design artefacts
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
More graphic design history articles
In the ambitious new monograph Rational Simplicity: Rudolph de Harak, Graphic Designer, Volume shines a light on the complete arc of the exceptionally rich and varied career of Rudolph de Harak, showcasing his vibrant, graphic, formally brilliant work, which blazed a colourful trail through the middle decades of the twentieth century.

Members Content

Little is known about the talented designer Günther Glückert. Born during the 1930s, a period that proved less than conducive to nurturing youthful artistic endeavours, did not halt Glückert's path of becoming a talented designer.

Members Content

He designed stamps from around 1955 and in the book Karl Oskar Blase, Briefmarken-Design, Verlag für Philatelistische Literatur, 1981, he was described as one of the most influential stamp designers in Germany.
Ken was born in 1929, in Southampton and grew up in a small market town in North Devon. He was a principled man, with strong values and views against the hyper-consumerism we live with today. Ken studied at the London Central School of Arts and Crafts in the 1950s and was taught by Herbert Spencer, Anthony Froshaug and Jesse Collins. Whilst at the School he studied alongside designers Ken Briggs, Alan Fletcher and Colin Forbes.