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Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Ladislav Sutnar's Assistant
Posted by Steve
Yesterday, I received a surprise e-mail from the painter
Philip Pearlstein
about his time as
Ladislav Sutnar'
s
assistant. Here is an exerpt:
Dear Steven,
I have had the
book on Ladislav Sutnar
for a while. It is a fine document and very handsomely designed and produced. I just went through it again, and decided to write you now, to add to the documented record.
The most significant omitted name was
Audrey Flack
(yes, the artist). When I had to spend a couple of terms full-time at NYU Institute of Fine Arts (and it was Mr. Sutnar who encouraged me to study art history as I had time left on the GI Bill, as a veteran of WW 2), I recommended Audrey to Sutnar and he hired her--she had previous experience doing mechanicals. I heard ... that she drove Sutnar nuts.
Of the works reproduced [in the book], I remember drafting the original logo of
"addo-x"
... But the most interesting of the projects I worked on within the first couple months of when I started working there was the booklet on
Transportation for the Next Fifty Years
. Sutnar assigned me to work with Buckminster Fuller. (He had just come up from Black Mountain College and was broke. The booklet was Sutnar’s way of helping him out.) Mr. Fuller brought in his original drawings on vellum and proceeded to explain to me the physical science involved in his plans of everything to be included in the booklet, though my only real job was to make the stylized drawings of each airplane, car, etc. We spent about a week together huddled over his drawings, and occasionally he would tell me the subsequent history of the design in the real corporate world. I did a lot of the final drafting of the page designs of Sutnar, as well as of Fuller’s designs. For me, the climax was that Sutnar asked me to re-cast Buckminster’s essay into lower-level readable English. I showed my version to Mr. Holmes, of Sweets, who approved it, but had it edited properly by their in-house editor. When I showed my version (which I had typed up) to Buckminster, he said, “Why didn’t they ask me to do that?”
Sincerely yours,
Philip Pearlstein
Books
7/22/2008 7:24:30 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
Comments [3]
7/22/2008 10:09:57 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
I've been enjoying this new blog, but I'm not enjoying the emails--all the body copy is set centered, which makes it a bit more annoying to read. Is that a conscious decision? It's much easier to read on the site.
David
|
bivAT NOSPAMpipeline dot com
7/22/2008 10:38:50 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
Look forward to "the Daily Heller" everyday. Thanks for bringing Sutnar to the forefront. Of all my books, the most prized is a parts catalog done by him. A designers main role is to communicate and Sutnar was able to take information (as boring as it was in some cases) and make it work. I'm not sure if Sutnar understood at the time that he was establishing himself as the pioneer in information graphics, but he has done so and his work should be a mandatory study in any class on design. Please keep these informative articles
coming.
Gregory Thomas
|
gthomasAT NOSPAMku dot edu
7/22/2008 10:39:16 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
Wonderful story. Love the logo!
Great blog and thank you.
Lisa Powers
|
lisa_powersAT NOSPAMyahoo dot com
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