Title: Milton Glaser
1Milton Glaser
2Credits
- First I must give credit Chip Kidd a Graphic
Designer and his interview with Milton Glaser. - This interview gave me more information on Milton
Glaser then just his interviews that can be found
on You Tube.
3Milton Glaser as a child.
- I was born in 1929, a critical year in the United
States at the beginning of the Depression. And I
grew up in the Bronx, in a radical left-wing
neighborhood that was called Little Moscow by
people outside of the area. It was a climate of
left-wing activity, the beginnings of the labor
movement, the beginnings of the civil rights
movement, in the first integrated housing in the
U.S. - I feel this has an impact on who Milton is. We
are the sum of our parts. - (Gesture theory in art.)
4Milton age Five
- How do you know at the age of five that thats
what you want to be-what have you seen, what have
you heard? Its very mysterious. Particularly
when this decision occurs in early childhood,
with nothing to do with anything except the sense
of pleasure I derived from doing it. I was
overcome I just wanted to do nothing else. - ( Here Milton talks about the desire to be an
artist at that age, and about his parents.)
5Milton's Parents
- Yes. I tell the story At the age of five I made
that decision. In my parents I had the perfect
combination-a resistant father and an encouraging
mother. My mother convinced me I could do
anything. And my father said, Prove it. He
didnt think I could make a living. Resistance
produces muscularity. And it was the perfect
combination because I could use my mothers
belief to overcome my fathers resistance. My
father was a kind of a metaphor for the world,
because if you cant overcome a fathers
resistance youre never going to be able to
overcome the worlds resistance. Its much better
than having completely supportive parents or
completely resistant parents.
6Milton age Eight.
- When I was eight I had rheumatic fever and I was
in bed for almost a year. And my life consisted
of working on a wooden board that my mother would
bring to me-it was a plank about this tall-and
several pounds of clay. And every day I would
make either a city or an army, or animals or
figures, and so on. At the end of every day I
would pound them down hits table and I would
spend the night dreaming of starting again the
next day. And I realized that art had redeemed my
life, because I was never bored for a minute that
whole year.
7Milton age Twelve
- I never had a construct in my mind what being an
artist meant obviously, you have to learn that
later. And I never had an idea that painting was
a way for me to be in the world, because I
couldnt imagine the idea of making things to
sell to people. I just couldnt get that-you make
a painting and someone buys it because its shown
in the gallery. But I loved the idea of making
things that were useful to people. And I started
out doing comic strips, like most people do.
8So why not become a cartoonist?
- I would have loved that, and I thought that was
what I was going to be. Early on I had obtained
the name of a cartoonist-what was his name?
Sheffield?-who was a cousin of somebody. So I
took my comic strips down to 42nd Street, where
he had an atelier-a room about half this
size-covered with cigarette butts. I went up to
see him I was wearing a blue double-breasted
suit and a vest, and it was a day like
this-eighty-five degrees-midsummer. - I was twelve and I got on the subway from the
Bronx. Sweating. I came there about two hours
early, I was so excited. I lugged this portfolio
up to see him. And he was smoking a cigarette,
doing these dreadful drawings, whatever he was
doing, and he opened my portfolio and he looked
at it, and he said, Kid, the next time you do
one of these strips, use a ruler for the boxes. - That was it. (MY comment WOW!)
9Milton age Fourteen
- But thats what I wanted to do I wanted to be a
cartoonist. I went to an extraordinary high
school here, the New York High School of Music
and Art, which in those days was fantastically
interesting and sophisticated. I met kids who
were from every kind of family in the city,
because it was, I suppose, a meritocracy
Everybody who had the talent got in.
10New York High School of Music and Art
- It was a marvelous school, very high academic
grading you did art or music for half a year,
four hours a day. It was fantastic. I remember
the first day I went to school, the teacher was
giving a lecture on Cezanne. I was fourteen or
fifteen years old. And by the time I got through
with music and art, I realized there was another
kind of world that went beyond my dream of being
a cartoonist. I didnt know exactly what it was
yet, that there was such a thing called design. - (Wow enter the world of design.)
11Entering the world of Design
- Chip Kidd So you did learn about design at that
point. - Milton Glaser Yes, I did, they had courses on
poster design, and other kinds of design, as well
as painting. - Chip Kidd And dealing with type?
- Milton Glaser The beginning of typography, not a
lot of it, because there werent enough people
teaching it in those days. - Chip Kidd I wouldnt think so.
- Milton Glaser So at that time I began to see
that there was a range of opportunities. In
between cartooning and painting there was a lot
of other stuff going on that also interested me.
After I got out of school, I flunked the entrance
examination to Pratt.
12Interesting
- Milton will create a type face of his own later.
Glaser stencil, 1967 a font family tree displays
different foundries versions of basically the
same typeface design.
13So he flunked the entrance examination to Pratt
- I was promised a scholarship but I flunked the
entrance examination, so I went to the dean and I
said, You promised me a scholarship. He said,
I cant give you a scholarship if you cant even
pass the entrance exam. So I said, What can I
do, I didnt apply to anyplace else. So he says,
Well, I have an idea. Take the night school
entrance examination. Youll come to school,
youll go for a year, then Ill give you a
scholarship to the daytime. So I took the
nighttime examination, and I failed that. Laughs
14WHY?
- Chip Kidd Wait a minute. What are you failing,
are you failing math, English, what? - Milton Glaser No, the art exam!
- Chip Kidd What?!
- Milton Glaser Yes, the art exam. It was a
series of five questions that you filled out I
thought I did them rather well. - Chip Kidd That seems impossible to me.
- Milton Glaser No, its not. Thats what
happened, who knows why.
15Now what!
- So then I went to work, because I hadnt applied
to any other school, and I took a job at a
packaging company. I also attended the Art
Students League at the same time. Then I learned
a little about professional life-I was an
apprentice, and at the end of the year, they made
me the art director of this packaging outfit. But
of course I was doing the same thing whether they
called me an art director or an apprentice-I was
wrapping packages and schlepping them to the post
office. But it gave me a real sense of what I
wanted to be doing professionally. Then I went to
Cooper Union. And there I got a wonderful
education.
16Cooper Union
- At Cooper, I got a terrific grounding in
typography, and in design, and I continued
painting. Cooper really is a superb school. - It was full of interesting people and completely
devoted teachers, teaching out of passion and
devotion to their ideals. In fact, my education
in New York has been superb. I got the most
fabulous education in this city. It really shaped
my life. But after that I got a Fulbright, and
went to Bologna for a couple of years, and I
studied etching with Giorgio Morandi. That was a
big influence on me. After I was married I went
back and lived in Rome and did lithography for a
while, but I came back here and started Pushpin.
17Recap
- Born in 1929
- Went to school at New York City High School of
Music and Art - Graduated from Copper Union in 1951
- Got a Fulbright scholarship and went to the
Academy of fine Arts in Bologna, Italy. - In 1954 Push Pin Studios is founded
18Push Pin Studios
- Push Pin Studios was started in 1954 with
Miltons classmates from Copper Union Seymour
Chwast, Ed Sorel and Reynold Ruffins. - Chip Kidd When you first started Pushpin, did
you find it hard to work up a big client base?
Was it hard to get started?
19Getting Started
- Yes, it was, but not any harder than it is for
anyone just entering the field. We had the great
advantage of having the little publication we
produced-at first the Pushpin Almanac and then
the Pushpin Graphic. That was, in retrospect, a
tremendous device for getting clients. - It was tremendously beneficial to us. It really
was the single thing that accounted, I think, for
our success. Because it was constant. It came out
every month or two, whereas everybody else would
send out a promotion and then wouldnt send out
anything for a year. The frequency of the Pushpin
Graphic made a big difference.
20Milton Glasers Art Style
- Glaser's work is characterized by directness,
simplicity and originality. He uses any medium or
style to solve the problem at hand. His style
ranges wildly from primitive to avant garde in
his countless book jackets, album covers,
advertisements and direct mail pieces and
magazine illustrations.
211966
- Bob Dylan with the kaleidoscope hair, poster for
CBS records, that was included in the singer's
greatest hits album, 1966.
221968
- In 1968, Glaser and Clay Felker founded New York
Magazine. Glaser was president and design
director until 1977 (as well as its underground
gourmet - writing about good, cheap restaurants
in N Y). publication design had become a big
interest. - Poster on right
- olivetti ad, 1968
23 - CHIP KIDD You write in Art is Work that the very
famous I Heart New York logo you designed was
originally proposed as something else. - It was just a little typographical solution with
two lozenges and a word in it, two ovals, and the
word inside it it was not in any way
distinguished. But I always thought the whole
thing was going to be a three-month campaign.
It was like one of those things you bang out
because it didnt seem to merit any more
attention.
24But even so, I said, This the first solution
isnt good enough, And I tell the anecdote. You
just never understand what makes certain ideas
that you have cling to people. I have to say that
when you do something that you really feel is
useful-when you have a positive social effect-it
makes you feel great. Milton Glaser did this
logo Pro-Bono (No Money)
259/11 adaptation of the logo
- I woke up one day, a few days after 9/11. I
thought, you know, I love New York isnt the
story anymore. Something happened. And I realized
that what had happened was an injury, like when a
friend of yours, somebody you love, gets terribly
sick. You suddenly become conscious of how much
you care for them. Thats the inevitable
consequence of somebody you have affection for.
And I realized that my feeling about the city had
deepened
269 -11 Logo
- The black mark on the heart represents where the
trade center had once been. Milton called in a
lot of favors from old friends to have this
poster produced and distribute all the city. - Pro bono again many people worked for free to get
this new logo into circulation.
27Could we use it in a fundraiser?
- I said, Great, and Ill sign some for you, and
you can offer it on the air to raise money. So
they offered it for a hundred dollars unsigned or
a thousand signed. That little piece of dreck! - And they raised 190,000.
- Every penny that was made on it went to either
the firemens fund, or to restore the antenna on
WNYC or something.
28No good deed goes unpunished.
- Long story yet as an artist you must be careful.
Seems Milton had no right to use the logo the way
that he did. New York City Commerce Department at
one point wanted to use the logo without the
black mark. Milton said no. They let him know he
was in violation of a trade mark. Got ready to
sue him. But in the end dropped it and lets just
forget about us getting ready to sue you for
using that logo that way. - ( This was interesting to read about, but in the
end it had a happy ending. That poster raised a
190,000.)
29Recap
- Pushpin Studios 1954 - 1974
- Bob Dylan poster 1966
- Glaser stencil 1967
- New York magazine 1968 - 1977
- I heart New York Logo 1973
- Milton Glaser, Inc 1974
30Milton Glaser, Inc
He started his own studio, Milton Glaser, Inc, in
1974. This led to his involvement with an
increasingly wide diversity of projects, ranging
from the design of New York Magazine, of which he
was a co-founder, to a 600 foot mural for the
Federal Office Building in Indianapolis.
31So much about Milton
- Throughout his career he has had a major impact
on contemporary illustration and design. His work
has won numerous awards from Art Directors Clubs,
the American Institute of Graphic Arts, the
Society of Illustrators and the Type Directors
Club. In 1979 he was made Honorary Fellow of the
Royal Society of Arts and his work is included in
the Museum of Modern Art, the Victoria and Albert
Museum, the Israel Museum and the Musee de
l'affiche in Paris. Glaser has taught at both the
School of Visual Arts and at Cooper Union in New
York City. He is a member of Alliance Graphique
International (AGI).
32(No Transcript)
33He has so many posters done.
This one from the world health organization's
international AIDS symbol and poster, 1987
34- hummingbird,
- celebrity created holiday cards -world hunger
year, 2003 - inside may your holiday be full of beautiful
surprises
35Any plans to retire?
- Oh god, no. There is nothing I fear more than the
idea of having to retire. I fear retirement more
than death.
36any advice for the young ?
- it's a tough business,you have to be amazingly
consistent and persistent.you have to work like
hell.you cannot become an excellent practioneer
without constantly working hard all your life. it
is not an easy way to earn your money.and... you
have to be well trained and you have not to be
narrow to references, because everybody else is
doing that at the same time.the richness of
understanding comes from the deep historical,
philosophical idea.
37Identity Projects
38Full Credits
- CHIP KIDD
- http//www.believermag.com/issues/200309/?readint
erview_glaser - Wikipedia
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milton_Glaser
- Designboom
- http//www.designboom.com/eng/interview/glaser.htm
l - Milton Glaser Inc.
- http//www.miltonglaser.com/pages/identproj/id_ind
ex.html
39Movies can be found at.
- http//testing123.info/milton_glaser.html
- This report was done in 2008
- By Gloria Cochran for class project
- CGR 230 Modesto Junior College.