*
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
April 26, 2024, 10:29:23 PM

Login with username, password and session length

Donate

We Appreciate Your Support

Members
Stats
  • Total Posts: 1690815
  • Total Topics: 118353
  • Online Today: 947
  • Online Ever: 2235
  • (October 29, 2023, 01:32:45 AM)
Users Online

Recent

Author Topic: Turn of the Century Posters  (Read 1134 times)

Offline pocoloco

  • Scatterbrained Genius
  • Posts: 3848
Turn of the Century Posters
« on: February 24, 2016, 12:13:03 PM »
Hi,

useful link for any terrain builder who needs to decorate their cityscape etc with some posters.

http://digitalcollections.nypl.org/collections/turn-of-the-century-posters#/?tab=about

And here's what's it all about:

Many of the posters held by the Art and Architecture Collection were the gift of Anna Palmer (Mrs. Henry) Draper, who was, until her death in 1914, an important donor and supporter of the Library. The sources for much of the rest of the collection are unclear, although identification on a number of posters points to the collection of Theodore J. Taylor as their source. The total number of posters is more than 1,200; over time the entire holding will appear in Digital Gallery. In the decades of the 1930s and 40s, Library staff mounted the posters on card stock and bound them into large volumes, alphabetically by artist.

The advent of the art poster in America is traceable to the publication of Edward Penfield's poster advertising the March 1893 issue of Harper's. Unlike earlier advertising posters, Penfield's work presented an implied graphic narrative to which text was secondary. In this way, and subsequently, in the hands of major artists such as Penfield, Will Bradley and Ethel Reed, the poster moved from the realm of commercial art to an elevated, artistic position.

As a genre, posters very rapidly became the objective of aggressive collectors. As early as 1895, posters began appearing in catalogs of exhibitions and collections. As collectors increasingly sought contemporary publishing posters as discrete objects, they became more desirable than the publication they were advertising. As a result, a shift developed in the industry toward well-designed, illustrated covers of magazines and dust jackets for books; at the same time, newspaper illustration advanced. By the end of the 1890s, the art poster had helped pave the way to a rapidly developing advertising industry that reverberates on Madison Avenue yet today.

Offline Daeothar

  • Supporting Adventurer
  • Galactic Brain
  • *
  • Posts: 5825
  • D1-Games: a DWAN Corporate initiative
    • 1999legacy.com
Re: Turn of the Century Posters
« Reply #1 on: February 24, 2016, 12:18:18 PM »
Nice one!  8)

Bookmarked...
Miniatures you say? Well I too, like to live dangerously...
Find a Way, or make one!

Offline Etranger

  • Mad Scientist
  • Posts: 917
Re: Turn of the Century Posters
« Reply #2 on: February 25, 2016, 01:39:03 AM »
Yep, good find!

I do not that the NYPL can't spell architectural though....

Love this one
« Last Edit: February 25, 2016, 01:43:34 AM by Etranger »
"It's only a flesh wound...."

 

Related Topics

  Subject / Started by Replies Last post
4 Replies
2326 Views
Last post June 05, 2008, 01:35:25 AM
by lethallee61
11 Replies
3722 Views
Last post January 12, 2015, 06:04:06 PM
by nathan
9 Replies
2038 Views
Last post May 14, 2015, 06:10:58 PM
by rumacara
35 Replies
7023 Views
Last post May 25, 2016, 10:01:46 AM
by Gracchus Armisurplus
44 Replies
10339 Views
Last post July 11, 2022, 12:48:32 PM
by OSHIROmodels