Alan Fletcher (graphic designer)

Alan Fletcher (graphic designer)

Alan Gerard Fletcher (27 September 193121 September 2006) was a British graphic designer. In his obituary, he was described by "The Daily Telegraph" as "the most highly regarded graphic designer of his generation, and probably one of the most prolific".

Early life

Fletcher was born in Nairobi, Kenya, where his father was a civil servant. He returned to England aged 5 with the rest of his family, when his father was terminally ill. He lived with his grandparents in Shepherd's Bush in West London, before being evacuated in 1939 to Christ's Hospital in Horsham.

He studied at the Hammersmith School of Art from 1949, then at the Central School of Art, where he studied under Anthony Froshaug and befriended Colin Forbes, Theo Crosby, Derek Birdsall and Ken Garland. After a year teaching English in Barcelona, he returned to London to study at the Royal College of Art from 1953 to 1956, where he met Peter Blake, Joe Tilson, Len Deighton, Denis Bailey, David Gentleman and Dick Smith.

He married Paola Biagi, an Italian national, in 1956, and took up a scholarship to study at the School of Architecture and Design at Yale University, under Alvin Eisenman, Norman Ives, Herbert Matter, Bradbury Thompson, Josef Albers and Paul Rand. He visited Robert Brownjohn, Ivan Chermayeff and Tom Geismar in New York, became friends with Bob Gill, and was commissioned by Leo Lionni to design a cover for Fortune magazine in 1958. After a visit to Venezuela, he returned to London in 1959, having worked briefly for Saul Bass in Los Angeles and Pirelli in Milan

Professional career

He founded the design firm Fletcher/Forbes/Gill with Colin Forbes and Bob Gill in 1962. An early product was their 1963 book "Graphic Design: A Visual Comparison".

Clients included Pirelli, Cunard, Penguin Books and Olivetti. Gill left the partnership in 1965 and was replaced by Theo Crosby, so the firm became Crosby/Fletcher/Forbes. Two new partners joined, and the partnership evolved into Pentagram in 1972, with Forbes, Crosby, Kenneth Grange and Mervyn Kurlansky, with clients including Lloyd's of London and Daimler Benz. Much of his work is still in use: a logo for Reuters made up of 84 dots, which he created in 1965, was retired in 1992, but his 1989 "V&A" logo for Victoria and Albert Museum, and his "IoD" logo for the Institute of Directors remain in use.In last years he designed the logo for the Italian School of Architecture "Facolta` di Architettura di Alghero".

He left Pentagram in 1992, and worked from the home in Notting Hill that he had occupied since the early 1960s, where he was assisted by his daughter Raffaella Fletcher, Leah Klein and Sarah Copplestone, and worked for new clients, such as Novartis. Much of his later work was as art director for the publisher Phaidon Press, which he joined in 1993. For him, life and work were inseparable: "Design is not a thing you do. It's a way of life." (quoted in his obituary in "The Times"). He would continue working, even on holiday, drawing on a notepad with a pencil.

A book of his designs, "Beware Wet Paint", was published by Jeremy Myerson in 1994. Fletcher also wrote several books about graphic design and visual thinking, most notably "The Art of Looking Sideways" (2001), which had taken him 18 years to finish. An exhibition of his life's work opened at the Design Museum in London on 11 November 2006 till 18 February 2007, alongside the posthumous publication of a new book, "Picturing and Poeting".

He won the Prince Philip Prize for Designer of the Year, was President of the Designers and Art Directors Association in 1973 and International President of the Alliance Graphique Internationale from 1982 to 1985. He was elected to the Hall of Fame of the New York Art Directors Club in 1994, was a senior fellow of the Royal College of Art in 1989 and became an honorary fellow of the London Institute in 2000.

The December 2006 limited-edition cover of Wallpaper* magazine featured one of his last works omitting his calligraphic signature in the compliments slip accompanying his completed work for he was too frail by then.

He died of cancer in London, and is survived by his wife and daughter.

References

* "Beware Wet Paint: Designs by Alan Fletcher", by Jeremy Myerson, David Gibbs and Rick Poynor, Phaidon Press Ltd, 2004. (ISBN 978-0714843780)

External links

* [http://www.designmuseum.org/design/index.php?id=102 Alan Fletcher -Designing Modern Britain] (1931-2006) from the British Council Design Museum
* [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,60-2374473,00.html Obituary] , "The Times", 26 September 2006
* [http://arts.guardian.co.uk/news/obituary/0,,1880229,00.html Obituary] , "The Guardian", 26 September 2006
* [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;jsessionid=S1CDDLCZIGAPZQFIQMFSFF4AVCBQ0IV0?view=DETAILS&grid=&xml=/news/2006/09/29/db2904.xml Obituary] , "The Daily Telegraph", 29 September 2006
* [http://news.independent.co.uk/people/obituaries/article1757239.ece Obituary] , "The Independent", 26 September 2006
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=meKUDU0sH5w The Art of Looking Sideways by Alan Fletcher] , a video interview concerning the preparation of the book


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Fletcher — may refer to one of the following:Ideas and companies* A fletcher makes arrows, see fletching. * The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, the graduate school of international relations of Tufts University, located in Medford, Massachusetts *… …   Wikipedia

  • Colin Forbes (graphic designer) — Colin Forbes is a British graphic designer. He is notable as a former head of the graphic design program at London s Central School of Arts and Crafts and as one of the founders of the Pentagram design studio. Forbes was born in London in 1928.… …   Wikipedia

  • Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design — ] Central Saint Martins establishes links between artistic practice leading to research projects and employs graduates onto international design consultancy schemes through its Innovation Centre and Design Laboratory. Central Saint Martins has… …   Wikipedia

  • Royal College of Art — Established 1967 gained University Status by Royal Charter 1896 Royal College of Art 1837 Government School of Design Type Public Provost Sir …   Wikipedia

  • Communicate: Independent British Graphic Design since the Sixties — An exhibition curated by Rick Poynor at the Barbican Art Gallery (2004) charting over 40 years of graphic design in the United Kingdom. The first major attempt to reflect on how the smaller independent studios and agencies marked and shaped the… …   Wikipedia

  • Joe Kubert School of Cartoon and Graphic Art — The Joe Kubert School of Cartoon and Graphic Art, or Joe Kubert School, located in Dover, New Jersey, is a three year technical school that teaches the principles of sequential art and the particular craft of the comics industry as well as… …   Wikipedia

  • Phaidon Press — is one of the leading publishers of books on the visual arts, including art, architecture, photography, and design worldwide. Competitors include other major art publishers such as Taschen, Abbeville Publishing Group (Abbeville Press, Inc.),… …   Wikipedia

  • Guiding Light (1980–1989) — Guiding Light Main article Guiding Light (1937–1949) Guiding Light (1950–1959) Guiding Light (1960–1969) Guiding Light (1970–1979) Guiding Light (1980–1989) Guiding Light (1990–1999) Guiding Light (2000–2009) …   Wikipedia

  • List of Baseline magazine issues — Following is a list of Baseline magazine issues compiled from the Baseline website [http://www.baselinemagazine.com] and printed magazines.Only content with attributed authors is included in the table.mall format Baselines published by TSI and… …   Wikipedia

  • List of Dartmouth College alumni — This is an incomplete list, which may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by expanding it with reliably sourced entries. The Dartmouth College class of 1920, posing in the Bema …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”