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Pentagram, founded in 1972, is one of the best known and
most influential graphic, product, and architectural design firms in the
world. Its partners are distinguished members of the international design
community, consistently generating award-winning work of the highest quality.
Profile is
the first Pentagram book to include the design firm’s “new
guard,Epartners Fernando Gutiérrez, DJ Stout, Lisa Strausfeld,
and Abbott Miller. The book is a unique collection of essays on Pentagram’s
nineteen partners by best-selling authors, revered design critics, editors,
and other well-known cultural figures. Eloquent and insightful explorations
into the personalities, thought processes, careers, and work of the different
partners, the essays are generously illustrated with examples of both
key projects and lesser-known works. As a whole, Profile not only sheds
light on nineteen individual talents, but also provides a comprehensive
overview of the legendary firm that has influenced the course of design
for over thirty years.
Included is a foreword
on Pentagram’s history and evolution by Rick Poynor, one of today’s
most respected design critics and founder of the incisive British graphic-design
magazine Eye.
Pentagram began with
five partners; today, there are nineteen, working in London, New York,
Austin, San Francisco, and Berlin. Following the firm’s unique partnership
structure, they each have their own clients, and work in their own way
with their own teams. They share equally, and contribute equally. Similarities
in style, temperament, and aspiration between them are few.
What these designers
do have in common, however, is Pentagram itself, and the shared commitment
to producing high-quality, relevant work in the fields of graphic, product,
and architectural design. As design critic Rick Poynor points out in his
introductory essay for Profile, “No other design company can boast
Pentagram’s concentration of fully engaged design horsepower at
the highest operational level.EIndeed, with a list of clients that
reads like a Who’s Who of both the commercial and cultural world,
the firm has over the last several years continued to produce influential,
diverse, award-winning work: Justus Oehler’s corporate identity
for the Star Alliance, Fernando Gutierrez’s editorial designs for
Colors and Matador magazines, Lorenzo Apicella’s mobile tourist
pavilion for the Hong Kong Tourist Authority, Abbott Miller’s exhibition
design for Harley Davidson, and Lisa Strausfeld’s media wall project
for New York’s Penn Station are but a few examples.
Since Pentagram’s
inception, the firm has taken care to document its work and evolution
(Pentagram: The Compendium was published by Phaidon 1993). Profile follows
this tradition, showcasing both recent and classic projects, introducing
new partners, and analyzing the company’s position in the design
world as it embraces the new millennium. But it is more than “justEthe
latest Pentagram survey: Rather than painting another group portrait,
Profile takes a new approach and focuses on the individual partners who
together make up the whole.
In nineteen individual
and well-illustrated essays by acclaimed writers, critics, and journalists,
the different partners are profiled with wit and insight. What emerges
is a sharper understanding of the unique talents whose commonalities and
idiosyncrasies inflect the character of Pentagram. |