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Imperial Airways : Europe, Africa, India, The Far East, Australia

Trade Literature
1930s (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Imperial Airways : Europe, Africa, India, The Far East, Australia.

Publisher:
England : Imperial Airways Ltd., [1938?].
London : Ben Johnson & Co. Ltd., [1938?].

Description:
1 folded sheet : colour illustrations, colour map ; 50 x 75 cm folded to 25 x 25 cm.

Notes:
Title from cover
Unfolds to provide wall chart of Imperial Airways plane with cutaway diagrams.

Names:
Hilder, Rowland, 1905-1993 illustrator.
Armstrong Whitworth Aircraft (Firm)
Armstrong Siddeley Motors
Short Brothers & Harland Limited
Bristol Aeroplane Company


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleImperial Airways : Europe, Africa, India, The Far East, Australia (published title)
Brief description
Imperial Airways : Europe, Africa, India, The Far East, Australia.
Physical description
Imperial Airways : Europe, Africa, India, The Far East, Australia.

Publisher:
England : Imperial Airways Ltd., [1938?].
London : Ben Johnson & Co. Ltd., [1938?].

Description:
1 folded sheet : colour illustrations, colour map ; 50 x 75 cm folded to 25 x 25 cm.

Notes:
Title from cover
Unfolds to provide wall chart of Imperial Airways plane with cutaway diagrams.

Names:
Hilder, Rowland, 1905-1993 illustrator.
Armstrong Whitworth Aircraft (Firm)
Armstrong Siddeley Motors
Short Brothers & Harland Limited
Bristol Aeroplane Company


Dimensions
  • Closed height: 244mm
  • Closed width: 250mm
  • Opened height: 746mm
  • Opened width: 497mm
Style
Production typeMass produced
Gallery label
(2018)
Imperial Airways: Europe, Africa, India, the Far East, Australia
London, 1938
Stuart Advertising Agency produced promotional material and timetables for Imperial Airways, employing both promising young artists and established designers. This poster folds down to form a booklet. The cutaways demonstrate two key messages about air travel, still very novel at the time: safety and comfort. The idea of speed is conveyed through the acclaimed Speedbird logo, designed in 1932 by Theyre Lee-Elliott.
Colour offset lithography
Designed by Rowland Hilder (1905–93)
Produced by Stuart Advertising Agency for Imperial Airways Limited
Museum no. 38041800870198
From 'The New Line', De La Warr Pavilion, 2016-17

Imperial Airways
1938
Designed by Rowland Hilder (b.1905 New York, USA; d.1993 Greenwich, UK)

In 1931, Imperial Airways followed advertising’s new trend: the promotion of aspirational dreams, hiring Stuart Advertising Agency to handle their account. In 1932, a logo was introduced across all material, the ‘Speedbird’, designed by Theyre Lee-Elliott. Imperial Airways employed new technologies such as documentary film to promote their services, working with young artists such as Ben Nicholson, John Piper, Rowland Hilder and Edward McKnight Kauffer to create a distinct, modern identity.

On loan from the Victoria and Albert Museum
From 'The New Line', De La Warr Pavilion, 2016-17

This exhibition of commercial print from the 1930s includes material designed by Serge Chermayeff, Edward McKnight Kauffer, Paul Nash, Eric Ravilious, Graham Sutherland and László Moholy-Nagy, alongside films by Len Lye commissioned by the General Post Office Film Unit and Churchman Cigarettes.
Europe in the 1930s underwent enormous social, political, cultural and technological change. To capture some of these changes through contemporary commercial print, Philip James at the National Art Library at the Victoria and Albert Museum developed the ‘Jobbing Printing Collection’. He requested samples of work from high-profile companies, artists and designers in Europe and North America, including items designed by members of the Bauhaus school, made for shops such as Fortnum & Mason, and for companies such as Elizabeth Arden, Shell and Imperial Airways.
The New Line presents a selection of items from the NAL’s collection, including lifestyle and trade magazines, beauty catalogues, tourism brochures and a sample chart for stockings. It highlights how the movement of people across borders, often escaping oppressive political regimes, led to the exchange of ideas and aesthetics, and the formation of new expressions of modernity. It also shows how interconnected art, design and industry were throughout the 1930s.
Alongside material from the V&A National Art Library’s Jobbing Printing Collection are items from private collections.
Researcher: Sandy Jones
From 'The New Line', De La Warr Pavilion, 2016-17

Colours: Decoration of Today no.3
1936
Designed by Serge Chermayeff (b.1900 Grozny, Russia, d.1996 Wellfleet, Mass., USA)

Serge Chermayeff was multi-disciplinary designer and architect. Whilst in Britain (1924-40) he worked on significant projects such as the De La Warr Pavilion, designed with German architect Erich Mendelsohn. Chermayeff was an active member of groups such as the Modern Architectural Research Group (MARS) that supported British-based practitioners who shared the ideals of the European modern movement. This leaflet is a guide to applying colour to modern buildings.

On loan from the Victoria and Albert Museum
From 'The New Line', De La Warr Pavilion, 2016-17

die neue linie (cover proof)
September 1929
Cover designed by László Moholy-Nagy (b.1895 Bácsborsód, Hungary; d.1946 Chicago, USA), art director Herbert Bayer (b.1900 Haag am Hausruck, Austria; d.1985 Montecito, USA)

Madam,
You and we are standing at a point, from which three paths go out into the world:
On one path, men and women with heads and wigs march and strike up the tune of the ‘good old days’.
On the other path, snobs wander and proclaim with a frown that in Paris, one now extends one’s eyelashes with the legs of flies and that Gloria Swanson should be the ideal of every lady.
Madam, you sense as we do, that the ‘good old times’ have irretrievably passed, and that a lady does not acquire her ideal from Hollywood. You know that there is a third way, that of the true lady.
die neue linie, first issue editorial, September 1929

die neue linie was a lifestyle magazine, published in Germany from 1929-43. It was designed to appeal to the middle class ‘new woman’ in her ‘fashion, leisure time and cultural as well as professional activities.’ It included contributions from leading designers, artists and writers such as Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, Walter Gropius and Thomas Mann. die neue linie showcased a range of new creative techniques such as the ‘new photography’ with its unexpected vantage points, photomontages of abstract and fragmented images, combining this with modern typography. Published monthly by Beyer Press in Leipzig, its art director was Herbert Bayer who had been a student and master at the Bauhaus.

Founded in 1919 in Weimar, Germany, by architect Walter Gropius, the Bauhaus was one of the most influential art schools in Europe in the twentieth century. Combining fine and applied arts, the Bauhaus aimed to unite creativity with manufacturing, believing that good design should be integrated into everyday life. In 1933, when the Nazi Party came to power, the school closed. The kind of cosmopolitan modernism that the Bauhaus championed was seen by the Nazi regime as ‘degenerate’. Many members of the Bauhaus fled abroad to countries such as Britain and the United States, continuing to spread their influence as well as drawing from the different aesthetics and practices they found in these places.



JOBBING PRINTING

‘The acquisition and display of items of commercial printing positioned the Victoria and Albert Museum directly in the debate on modern design for the manufacture or ‘art and industry’ as it was often termed at the time.’ _

Credit line
Acquired from Imperial Airways Ltd, July 1937.
Object history
Collection of examples of commercial printing and design including catalogues and books as well as a variety of ephemera such as magazine covers, promotional cards, loose sheets, book plates, book jackets, trade cards, advertisement proofs, wine labels, menu cards etc. Firms include Shell-Mex, Austin Reed, Guinness, Heals, Imperial Airways, Orient Line. Designers include McKnight Kauffer, El Lissitsky, Bawden, Bayer, Gill, Tschichold. Categories of material include architecture, broadcasting, costume, interior design, motor industry, food and drink.

In 1936 the National Art Library decided to lay the foundations of a "collection of commercial typography and to exhibit contemporary specimens from time to time so that the trend of typographic design, both in this country and abroad, could be appraised by students of industrial art". The Keeper of the Library, Philip James was largely instrumental in acquiring the material. The bulk of the collection consists of examples from the 1930s, especially 1936 - 1939, with a smattering of items from the 1940s.
The collection is further supplemented with material from the 1960s which the Library inherited from the Circulation Department of the Museum after its closure in 1978. As these two groups of material stand as historic collections in their own right, any further examples acquired by the Library have been catalogued individually and not added to this designated 'closed collection'.
Other numbers
  • Jobbing Printing Box 6 - NAL Pressmark
  • 905942 - Horizon bib. number
Collection
Library number
38041800870198

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Record createdMay 16, 2016
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