WORLD GEOGRAPHIC ATLAS A Composite of Mans Environment
Herbert Bayer
Herbert Bayer (designer/editor): WORLD GEOGRAPHIC ATLAS. A Composite of
Mans Environment. Chicago: Container Corporation of America, 1953. Only Edition ever produced (never commercially available). A near-fine hardcover book bound in original monkscloth covers with gold stamping to cover and spine. The pages are gilt-edged. The monkscloth (burlap) covers are unsoiled -- very unusual for this oversized volume (the slipcase has done an admirable job of protecting this edition). Publishers errata sheet has been stapled onto the front endpaper, and the staple has made a mild indention on several subsequent pages. One of the nicest copies I have seen of this legendary volume whose form and content guarantees use and abuse. The Bayer-designed slipcase is in very good condition with the inevitable rubbing wear to all edges.
11.25 x 15.75 hardcover book with 368 pages, including Table of
contents, maps, charts, illustrations and an enormous (88-page) index.
Illustrated throughout with color maps, renderings, free drawings,
photography & montage. This book is a triumph of the Bauhaus ideology of
clarity put into practice. It is also a high point of American book design
and production, from the rossette-inspired endpaper designs to the
incredible ten-color printing throughout (CMYK plus custom spot blues, reds
and others).
Bayer supervised a team of three designers (Martin Rosenzweig, Henry
Gardiner and Masato Nakagawa) over a five-year period in order to produce
this volume for the CCA's 25th anniversary in 1953. CCA Chairman Walter
Paepcke wanted Bayer to produce an atlas that reflected the new
geopolitical realities of post-WWII life. In order to achieve this lofty
goal, Bayer travelled throughout Europe searching out suitable maps and
data, producing a re-examination of the classic atlas with Bauhaus clarity
and concision. Jan Van Der Mack noted Bayers "fascination with the shape of
the earth resulted in an extensive use of pictorial and diagrammatic
representations in the section of geomorphology" (Cohen p.237).
Bayer chose to cross-reference his information in the following
categories:
- economics
- geography
- geology
- demography
- astronomy
- and climatology.
In doing so, Bayer's clarity of vision set a benchmark for information
graphics that has yet to be equalled. According to Bayer: " Successful map
study provides two kinds of knowledge: interpretation of landscape, and
human development in the physical setting... swiftly spreading global
communications and increasing interdependence of all peoples compel us to
consider the world as one. This Atlas places emphasis on the physical and
material background against which man is set."
This book has to be seen and experienced to be believed.
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