CHRONICLING THE EMERGENCE OF BRAND CONSULTANCY, THIS BOOK EXPLORES HOW
THE DEVELOPMENT AND PROLIFERATION OF BRAND IDENTITY SYSTEMS
TRANSFORMED THE WORKING METHODS AND IDEALS OF PRACTICING GRAPHIC
DESIGNERS WORKING IN POST-WAR BRITAIN.
Practitioners in Britain were at the forefront of efforts to transform
corporate identity design into a recognised practice with its own
codified methods. Focussing particularly on the British experience,
the book also draws on the influences and developments in this
formative era in other countries, including the US and Germany. During
this period designers were struggling with two conflicting paradigms -
the socially motivated, free spirited artist-designer and the design
entrepreneur as corporate agent.
David Preston uses three key design agencies as the springboard to
explore this foundational period in the history of graphic design
labour practices - the practical rationality of Hans Schleger &
Associates, the systematic methods of Henrion Design Associates and
the Design Research Unit and their design manual as an instrument of
control. These design agencies created some of the most striking and
successful brand identities of the era - the KLM logo, the British
Rail double arrow, the John Lewis branding of the 1960s, Glenfiddich's
iconic triangular bottle, the Post Office's house style, the National
Theatre logo and many more. The case studies look at the power at
play, how branding became systematic, the struggle between motives and
standards, and draws on first-hand interviews with key actors and
archival material.
A valuable contribution to our understanding of British post-war
graphic design and the history of branding.
Les mer
Brand Identity, Graphic Design and Professionalism in Post-war Britain
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781350384705
Publisert
2025
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter