The Portfolio
The "Nouveau Salon des Cent" portfolio consists of a
hundred posters created by one hundred of the best graphic designers
of our
time, from 24 different countries including China, Japan, Mexico,
Brazil, Zimbabwe, the United-States and most of the European countries,
as a tribute to Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, for the Centenary of
his
death, 1901-2001. Initiated by the Toulouse-Lautrec Museum Partners'
Club. In cooperation with the Toulouse-Lautrec Museum of Albi.
The
printing was limited to only 380. The posters have been exhibited
in major museums and galleries around the world. View
Our Complete Collection »
The Designer - Milton Glaser
Milton Glaser was born in New York City on June 26, 1929. He was
educated at the High School of Music and Art, New York; the Cooper
Union Art School, New York, and later, via a Fulbright Scholarship,
the Academy of Fine Arts, Bologna, Italy. In 1954, he and a number
of classmates founded Pushpin Studios. For twenty years Glaser,
together with Seymour Chwast, directed the organization, which
exerted a powerful influence on the direction of world graphic
design, culminating in a memorable exhibition at the Louvres Museum
of Decorative Arts.
In 1968, Glaser and Clay Felker founded New York Magazine. The
publication became the model for city magazines, and stimulated
a host of imitations. In 1983, Glaser teamed with Walter Bernard
to form WBMG, a publication design firm also located in the city.
Since its inception, WBMG has redesigned many magazines. Milton
Glaser, Inc. was established in 1974. The work produced compasses
a wide range of design disciplines. In the area of print graphics,
the studio produces identity programs. In the field of environmental
and interior design, the firm has conceptualized and site-supervised
the fabrication of numerous products, exhibitions, interiors and
exteriors of restaurants, shopping malls, supermarkets, hotels,
and other retail and commercial environments. Glaser is also personally
responsible for the design and illustration of more than 300 posters.
Glaser's graphic and architectural commissions include the ILoveNY
logo; the design of a 600-foot mural for the New Federal Office
Building in Indianapolis; the complete graphic and decorative programs
for the restaurants in the World Trade Center, New York, as well
as the design of the Observation Deck and Permanent Exhibition
for the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center. He has also designed
a number of architectural projects including Sesame Palace, a children's
educational play park in Pennsylvania. For a period of fifteen
years, Milton Glaser was involved with the re-design of a principal
American supermarket, The Grand Union Company, a project that included
all the company architecture, interiors, and packaging. He was
responsible for the interior design and concept for the Triennale
di Milano International Exhibition in Milan, on the theme of 'World
Cities and the Future of the Metropolis', Glaser was responsible
for the graphic program of the Rainbow Room complexes for the Rockefeller
Center Management Corporation, New York. He also designed the World
Health Organization's International AIDS symbol and poster. He
was responsible for the graphic design, theming, and signage for
Franklin Mills, a retail mall in Philadelphia; he completed the
exterior, interior, and all graphic elements of Trattoria dell'Arte,
one of several New York restaurants he has designed. Milton Glaser,
Inc. was responsible for the overall conceptualization and interior
design of New York Unearthed, a museum located in Manhattan's South
Street Seaport. Milton Glaser is at present design consultant to
Stony Brook University, Screaming Media, Schlumberger Ltd., Brooklyn
Brewery and a number of other businesses. Glaser's illustrations
of Dante's Purgatory were exhibited at the Nuages Gallery in Milan,
Italy.
A retrospective of Milton Glaser's work opened in Venice during
the 2000 Carnival. Glaser's new book on design 'Art is Work' was
published in November 2000. Two concurrent exhibitions were held
at The American Institute of Graphic Arts and The Philadelphia
Museum of Art. |