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Author:
Gehl, Paul F., author.
Title:
Chicago modernism & the Ludlow Typograph : Douglas C. McMurtrie and Robert Hunter Middleton at work / Paul F. Gehl
Publisher:
Opifex,
Copyright Date:
2020
Description:
vii, 127 pages : color illustrations ; 23 cm
Subject:
McMurtrie, Douglas C.--(Douglas Crawford),--1888-1944.
Middleton, R. Hunter--(Robert Hunter),--1898-1985.
McMurtrie, Douglas C.--(Douglas Crawford),--1888-1944.
Middleton, R. Hunter--(Robert Hunter),--1898-1985.
Ludlow Typograph Co.
Society of Typographic Arts (Chicago, Ill.)
27 Chicago Designers (Organization)
27 Chicago Designers (Organization)
Ludlow Typograph Co.
Society of Typographic Arts (Chicago, Ill.)
1900-1999
Type designers--Chicago.--Chicago.
Type and type-founding--Chicago.--Chicago.
Graphic design (Typography)--History--20th century.
Design--History--20th century.
Modernism (Art)
Advertising--Type and type-founding.
Design.
Graphic design (Typography)
Modernism (Art)
Type and type-founding.
Type designers.
Chicago (Ill.)--History--20th century.
Illinois--Chicago.
History.
Type specimens.
Other Authors:
Facsimile of (manifestation): McMurtrie, Douglas C. (Douglas Crawford), 1888-1944. Some modern Ludlow typefaces.
Notes:
Includes color reproduction of the type specimen: Some modern Ludlow typefaces / Douglas C. McMurtrie. [Chicago, Ill.] : [Ludlow Typograph Co.], [1929]. Includes bibliographical references.
Contents:
Some thoughts on the literature. Type markets and type men -- McMurtrie kicks off a Modernist campaign -- McMurtrie's first Modernist claims, presented in Some modern Ludlow typefaces -- Professional modernism -- Two men, two missions -- Middleton speaks up -- Not just Mutt and Jeff -- Some thoughts on the literature.
Summary:
"This is the first book to provide a narrative account of type design in Chicago during the years 1925-50, when American typographers and graphic artists confronted the arrival of European modernism. Robert Hunter Middleton and Douglas McMurtrie were prominent in the period and spoke for Chicago in the national debates. Neither man was a Chicago native yet both worked for the Ludlow Typo­graph Co., a manufacturer of type­setting machinery. As Paul Gehl examines their years of working side by side, it be­comes clear that differing experiences of the city and its design world created two different modernisms that can be traced in the beautiful types on which they collaborated, Middleton as artist and McMurtrie as 'promotional man extraordinary'. Gehl shows how the new typography--championed loudly by McMurtrie and practised quietly by Middleton--took root in Chicago a decade before the arrival of the New Bauhaus, usually described as the singular turning point in Chicago design history. The 'Bauhaus Boys', as Chicagoans called them, introduced new ideas, but the seeds of their success were sown in the work of Ludlow's two modernist pioneers."--Publisher's description.
ISBN:
0648680711
9780648680710
OCLC:
(OCoLC)1225150465
Locations:
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)

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