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John Vassos - Industrial Design for Modern Life (Paperback)
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John Vassos - Industrial Design for Modern Life (Paperback)
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Total price: R787
Discovery Miles: 7 870
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What should a television look like? How should a dial on a radio
feel to the touch? These were questions John Vassos asked when the
Radio Corporation of America (RCA) asked him to design the first
mass-produced television receiver, the TRK-12, which had its
spectacular premier at the 1939 New York World's Fair. Vassos
emigrated from Greece and arrived in the United States in 1918. His
career spans the evolution of central forms of mass media in the
twentieth century and offers a template for understanding their
success. This is Vassos's legacy-shaping the way we interact with
our media technologies. Other industrial designers may be more
celebrated, but none were more focused on making radio and
television attractive and accessible to millions of Americans. In
John Vassos: Industrial Design for Modern Life, Danielle Shapiro is
the first to examine the life and work of RCA's key consultant
designer through the rise of radio and television and into the
computer era. Vassos conceived a vision for the look of new
technologies still with us today. A founder of the Industrial
Designers Society of America, he was instrumental in the
development of a self-conscious industrial design profession during
the late 1920s and 1930s and into the postwar period. Drawing on
unpublished records and correspondence, Shapiro creates a portrait
of a designer whose early artistic work in books like Phobia and
Contempo critiqued the commercialization of modern life but whose
later design work sought to accommodate it. Replete with rich
behind-the-product stories of America's design culture in the 1930s
through the 1950s, this volume also chronicles the emergence of
what was to become the nation's largest media company and provides
a fascinating glimpse into its early corporate culture. In our
current era of watching TV on an iPod or a smartphone, Shapiro
stimulates broad discussions of the meaning of technological design
for mass media in daily life.
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