Cross Out Slums

Lester Beall

Cross Out Slums, lithograph poster, 1941.

Images of Cross Out Slums

  1. Image 1 — beall6 (Cross Out Slums)

    Lester Beall, USA (1954)

    Lester Beall was born in Kansas City, Missouri, and studied at Lane Technical School and Chicago University. In 1927, he set up his office in Chicago. Two aspects of his...

    Read full biography
    https://a-g-i.s3.eu-west-3.amazonaws.com/lesterbeall/_1600xAUTO_crop_center-center_75_none/beall6.jpg
    1/1
    • Cross Out Slums, 1941

      1 items,

    • Close

    Cross Out Slums, lithograph poster, 1941.

    • Details:

    • Illustration
    • Poster
    • Print
    • Typography
    Lester Beall, USA (1954)

    A self-taught graphic designer who grew up in Chicago and freelanced there (1927–35), before moving to New York. He has been called a ‘trailblazer of American design’. Was the first to receive a one-man exhibit at NY MoMA (1937) and post humously a Lifetime Award by the AIGI in 1993. He did it all: identities, advertising, packaging, product styling, posters, books, reports, magazines, murals and interiors for clients like the Rural Electrification Administration, Container Corporation of America (CCA), Chicago Tribune, Collier’s and Time magazine. In 1955 he moved his studio to Dumbarton Farm in Brookfield, CT. Lester read a lot, and blended Jan Tschichold’s New Typography with Dada’s intuitive placement of elements and also made playful use of 19th-century American wood type. He was an early innovator in the development of the design manual as a major tool in corporate identity programmes. On top of all this, he was the chief proponent of the American modernist design movement.