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| April 3, 2003 Volume 33 Number 13 |
A publication for the faculty, staff, administrators, and friends of California State University, Chico | |||||
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Exhibits Explore Ubiquitous
Work
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December 1940 cover of Direction, a magazine of art and culture, designed by Paul Rand. |
Thanks to the efforts of Communication Design faculty Barbara Sudick
and Frank Armstrong, California State University, Chico will pay tribute
next month to the late Paul Rand, the professors’ former teacher
and world-renowned graphic designer.
Rand, who died in 1996 at the age of 82, was one of the pioneers of American
graphic design. In a field with little name recognition, Rand nevertheless
created symbols almost universally recognized: the familiar corporate
logos for companies such as IBM, UPS, Westinghouse, NeXt, and Enron.
Steeped in European Modernism and equally adept at whimsy and simplicity,
Rand was terrifically influential as a designer, illustrator, author,
and teacher. “He was the American graphic designer,”
said Sudick, a graduate student of Rand’s at Yale University.
Sudick and her husband, communication design instructor Frank Armstrong,
both attended classes with Rand and have written on Rand’s importance
in American graphic design.
“Paul Rand in Context,” a series of April events celebrating
his life and legacy, are as follows:
For more information about the Rand events, contact Sudick at x5028 or the Department of Communication Design at x4048.