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Max BillMax Bill

Max Bill

Hans Rudolph Bosshard, Christoph Bignens, Gerd Fleischmann

About this book

The book at hand offers a comprehensive view into an area of work from Max Bill that has so far received little attention: typography, advertising and book design. One discovers Max Bill as the tireless creator of highly individual types and commercial logos as well as a designer with a sense of visual humor – not exactly a common aspect of constructive design in this country. Bill pursued two opposing principles and accordingly left behind two lines in his work: a graphic one and a sculptural one. Taking Herbert Bayer’s universal type as a point of departure, Bill developed two lettering schemes for the Neubühl housing development and the firm “wohnbedarf”, which departed from all then-known forms. The reason for the stretched “o” in “wohnbedarf” may well have been grounded on how one perceives the text from the side; yet, behind this understanding lie formal ideas and the reductionist concept of the Bauhaus.

Details

OL Work ID
OL18222720W

Subjects

Commercial artCriticism and interpretationHistoryAdvertising layout and typographyComputer graphicsCatalogues raisonnés

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.