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| | Milton Glaser's SVA: A Legacy of Graphic Design
August 31 - September 26, 2009 Reception: Tuesday, September 15, 6-8pm
School of Visual Arts (SVA) presents “Milton Glaser’s SVA: A Legacy of Graphic Design,” a 50-year retrospective of nearly 100 works created by the legendary designer for the College, where he has been on the faculty since 1960 and currently serves as acting chairman. The exhibition will include the original artwork for the iconic posters seen by generations of New Yorkers as part of SVA’s ongoing subway campaign, preparatory sketches that will be on public view for the first time, and rare printed pieces like the 1963 announcement for the course Glaser taught at SVA with the late art director Henry Wolf. The exhibition is curated by Steven Heller, design historian and co-chair of the MFA Design Department, and Mirko Ilic, designer and faculty member in the MFA Illustration as Visual Essay Department. Beth Kleber, SVA’s archivist, researched and compiled the works in the exhibition, which is designed by Francis Di Tommaso, director of the Visual Arts Gallery.
To many, Milton Glaser is synonymous with American graphic design. He co-founded the revolutionary Pushpin Studios in 1954, founded New York magazine with Clay Felker in 1968, established Milton Glaser, Inc. in 1974, and designed the famous “I♥NY” campaign in 1977. Among his many contributions to visual culture, Glaser was pioneering in his bold and creative use of text, belying the idea that a large image should dominate the design of a poster. One of the best known examples of this is the poster he designed to rally New Yorkers following 9/11, which reads, “I♥NY MORE THAN EVER.”
“In any other country, Milton Glaser would have been knighted by now,” said Steven Heller, who has written over 100 books on graphic design, illustration and political art, and was an art director at The New York Times for 33 years. “He is the greatest graphic designer in this country,” said Mirko Ilic, former art director for the international edition of Time and The New York Times Op-Ed pages, and co-author of The Design of Dissent: Socially and Politically Driven Graphics (Rockport, 2005), which was the basis for a traveling exhibition organized by SVA.
As seen in the many recent and experimental works featured in the exhibition, Glaser, who turned 80 this year, shows no signs of slowing down and continues to surprise. Highlights include posters Glaser created in 2005 and 2006 to raise awareness about world poverty (“We Are All African”) and the humanitarian crisis in Darfur (“What Happens in Darfur Happens to Us”). In addition, the designer has produced a new poster for this exhibition that was inspired by his recent foray into designing textiles for the soon-to-be completed SVA Theatre. “Looking is not Seeing,” as the text reads, features a symmetrical, all-over abstract pattern in shades of near-black that marries the esthetics of a 19th-century William Morris’s wallpaper and Ad Reinhardt monochrome painting. “I believe the work I’ve done for the School is more adventuresome than anything else I’ve done, primarily because of the audience,” Glaser has said.
The works in “Milton Glaser’s SVA” are drawn from the Milton Glaser Collection at the Milton Glaser Design Study Center and Archives at SVA. A project of the Visual Arts Foundation, the Archives opened in 2006 to preserve and make accessible design works of significant artistic, cultural, and historical value by preeminent designers, illustrators, and art directors who have close ties to SVA. Glaser’s founding gift to the Archives included some 700 pieces of original art, 1700 sketches, 380 posters, 150 prints and other publications designed and/or illustrated by him.
Throughout his career, Milton Glaser has been a prolific creator of posters and prints. His artwork has been featured in exhibits worldwide, including one-man shows at both the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris and the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Among numerous professional awards, he is the recipient of The Society of Illustrator’s Gold Medal, the St. Gauden’s Medal from The Cooper Union and he was selected for the lifetime achievement award of the Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum in 2004. Glaser is also a member of The Art Director’s Club Hall of Fame and is the recipient of the American Institute of Graphic Arts (AIGA) Medal as well as 10 honorary degrees from prestigious institutions including the Royal College of Art in London and the Academy of Fine Arts in Bologna, Italy. In 1998, Glaser was presented with SVA’s Masters Series Award and Exhibition, an annual exhibition to honor the great visual communicators of our time.
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| | Visual Arts Gallery
601 West 26 Street, 15th floor New York,
NY 10001 212.592.2145
The Visual Arts Gallery is SVA's premier exhibition facility. Located in Chelsea on the 15th floor of the landmark Starrett-Lehigh Building, it comprises four state of the art galleries and a large terrace with a commanding view of Lower Manhattan and the Hudson River. Staffed by six full-time professionals, Visual Arts Gallery offers select students the opportunity to exhibit and sell their work in the same environment as some of the country's leading artists--a number of whom have exhibited there as well.
Since the Visual Arts Gallery moved from 137 Wooster Street in Soho to its present location in 2004, it has exhibited works by renowned SVA alumni such as Renee Cox, Inka Essenhigh, Joseph Kosuth, Robert Lazzarini, Sol Lewitt, Vera Lutter, Elizabeth Peyton, Alexis Rockman, Collier Schorr, Lorna Simpson and Sara Sze, Works by Richard Avedon, Milton Glaser, Anish Kapoor, Stefan Sagmeister, Sebastiao Salgado have also been exhibited at the Visual Arts Gallery.
SVA students of every discipline derive great educational benefit from being able to study the work of celebrated artists, hear them speak at lectures, or even get the chance to meet them in person -- all right here at the College.
The Visual Arts Gallery is open Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., and is closed Sunday and federal holidays*. The gallery is accessible by wheelchair. For more information, or to purchase student's work (the gallery takes no commission), please call 212.592.2145.
*Summer Hours: The gallery will be closed for the
Independence Day holiday weekend from Friday, July 2, 1pm through
Monday, July 5. June 4th
through August 20th, 2010, the gallery will be closing one hour earlier
on Fridays (5pm instead of 6pm).
For press inquiries, please call the Office of Communication at 212.592.2010 or email proffice@sva.edu
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