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Paul Rand 1914-1996 Lauren Fisher Image here
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Early Life Paul Rand was born Peretz Rosenblum in Brooklyn in 1914 Being born into a strict Orthodox Jewish family was an obstacle for him since the religion did not allow drawing or representations of the human form He took night classes at Pratt during high school against his parents’ will He attended Parsons School of Design in 1932-33 as well as the Art Students League in 1933-34 Peretz changed his name to Paul Rand in order to fit into the advertising world which was dominated by Protestants
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Influences Paul always felt he was a self taught designer He credits Gebrausgraphik, a German advertising magazine, for early influences on his work Modernists, like Picasso, Leger, DuChamp and Paul Klee He drew on many European art movements: Cubism, Constructivism, and De Stijl to produce his own style
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Graphic design career Wrote several books on design Wrote and illustrated several children’s books Consulted for companies Taught at Yale
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First job at Apparel Arts Magazine setting the page layouts Became known for “transforming mundane photographs into dynamic compositions”
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A page from Apparel Arts Magazine Influence of European Modernists Engages viewer in the creative process
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A cover he designed for Direction Magazine, an anti- fascist magazine of art & culture Christmas issue 1940 “presents the magazine as both a war torn gift and a crucifix”
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Advertisement: Coronet Brandy ‘Man’ photo, collage, print & drawing bold graphics whimsical humor
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(page 2 of logos) Advertisement for Dubonnet Company cubism influence prominent label
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Advertisement for El Producto Cigar Company combines photo of cigar & label with whimsical line drawings used this mascot over & over in ads for the company, close to 100 of them
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1956 redesigned the IBM logo they did not ask him to change the logo, he felt it needed to be updated took the label from 3 solid capitals to the 3 striped capitals he saw a problem with the sequencing of the letters going from narrow capital I to the wide capital M, stripping tied them together
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A poster done in 1981 for an in house event for the company initially officers at IBM did not like because took away from their official logo known as one of his best works
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Original Westinghouse logo was made with a “gothic” typeface “w” Rand choose not to depart totally from the original, instead he changed the “w” to a circuit board “w” and kept the circle around it
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UPS approached Rand in 1961 he took their antiquated shield logo, and decided to make it more modern he streamlined the shield, used lower case gothic lettering, and placed the outline of a package with a bow on top
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1962 the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) approached Rand to redesign their logo original logo was three capital letters in black: ABC Rand decided to change them all to lower case gothic typeface and based his design on 3 equal circles of white on a black background Rand loved the idea of minimalism
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Rand collaborated with Steve Jobs for the NeXT computer in 1986 Steve Jobs wanted to have a logo designed for his educational computer company, he went to IBM to seek special dispensation so that Rand could design a logo for him The computer came in a black box/cube “decided to frame the word itself within a cube to evoke the product itself” changed “e” to lowercase because he felt all capitals would be misinterpreted as EXIT
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“A logo cannot survive unless it is designed with the utmost simplicity and restraint”. - Paul Rand
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Sources Heller, Steven, and Paul Rand. Paul Rand. London: Phaidon, 2000. Print.
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