The New York School – Paul Rand

Due to World War II, the world witnessed a shift from Europe to America. Suddenly Modern design began pouring in with the wave of European immigrants who were escaping the horrors of the war. “America was now provided with a first hand introduction to the European avant-garde”. (Meggs & Purvis, 2011)

Since America wasn’t as critically affected by the war as other countries in Europe, by the 1940’s and 50’s the economic growth started picking up, attracting individuals of great talent, enabling them to nurture creativity into a different society, whilst enabling themselves to realize their own potentials.

Moreover the 1940s brought a radical change towards design in America. We began to see a shift towards a more modernist approach. European design was structured and disciplined in organising space, whilst American design was pragmatic, spontaneous and more informal in its approach to organising space.

There was also a shift in mentality. Designers sough to solve communication problems by expressing their own personal views and styles. They emphasised mainly on the manifestation of ideas and an open, direct presentation of information. 


All these sudden changes and influences brought on the birth of The New York School. Paul Rand, an American graphic designer, was at the front of the new American approach, helping to establish Swiss Design in the United States.

Rand kicked off his career at 23, creating mainly promotional and editorial work for magazines. His main inspirations came from exploring the formal vocabulary of the European Avant Garde movements: Cubism, Constructivism and De Stijl to which he developed them into a distinctively American graphic language.

Poster for the film 'No Way Out', Paul Rand

Rand rejected traditional narrative illustration and symmetrical layouts in his designs. He found new ways to make use of the shape, the visual appearance, and how this is applied onto the surface area of the design to communicate the idea. His designs were rendered with simplicity and wit. For Paul Rand visual communication should be the embodiment of form and function. He gradually distanced himself from the 1920’s functionalism and started concentrating more on the fusion of the ‘functional and the beautiful’.

Logo for IBM


Remarkably, Rand specialised in logos and trademarks, epitomising the meaning of what is understood by good design: clarity, sophistication and legibility. Rand understood the kind of power signs and symbols had on viewers and he used them to visually communicate a message. In fact Paul Rand forever changed corporate identity and logo design with his principles still applied today by graphic designers.

Designers nowadays are not specifically inspired by Rand, but rather influenced by his principles. We continue to see the simple, not over-complex format of logos, all influenced by the vision of Rand.

Bibliography

California State University, 2010. New York School. [Online] Available at: http://www.csun.edu/~pjd77408/DrD/Art461/LecturesAll/Lectures/Lecture09/NewYorkSchool.html [Accessed 2 December 2014].
Meggs, P.B. & Purvis, P.W., 2011. Meggs' History of Graphic Design. 5th ed. Wiley. 

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