Chinese Graphic Design in the Twentieth Century

Chinese Graphic Design in the Twentieth Century

  1. Scott Minick
  2. Jiao Ping
See Inside
  • ISBN 9780500288733
  • 25.40 x 22.00 cm
  • Paperback with flaps
  • 160pp
  • 285 Illustrations, 150 in colour
  • First published 2010
‘A charming and informative retrospective that should shine some light on an underappreciated facet of graphic design’ – Grafik

From posters and advertisements to book covers and magazines, here is an astonishing collection of graphics, brilliantly uncovered by the authors, the long-forgotten sources, mostly in China itself, having survived innumerable upheavals: natural catastrophes, war and revolution.

Beginning with the basic traditions of Chinese graphics, the authors show how the writer and artist Lu Xun became the centre of cultural revival in the new China. We see Art Deco coming to China in the Shanghai Style; and the birth of a dynamic national design style, born of Russian Constructivism and China's own drive for new technology. The Socialist Realist art of Mao in turn adopted folk traditions to fuel the Revolutionary machine, while the continuing search for a new identity can be seen in the graphic images of protest from the summer of 1989.

Scott Minick spent more than a decade in Paris as a creative director and a Professor of Design at Parsons Paris School of Design before relocating to Hong Kong in 1996 to establish his own consulting firm, Minick Jiao Design. He is married to Jiao Ping, who is a partner in Minick Jiao Design overseeing brand development for numerous international clients.

Also of interest
Hong Kong: Front Door | Back Door
China: The World's Oldest Living Civilization Revealed
China Contemporary
The Russian Experiment in Art 1863-1922
Posters: A Concise History