Designer Desire: Harry Stevens

Montage of Harry Stevens poster designs

Whilst researching Kenneth Bromfield a couple of weeks ago, I was reintroduced to the work of Harry Stevens.

Stevens (1919-2008) was another talented graphic designer who produced a number of advertising posters for the General Post Office (GPO), London Transport and British Railways amongst others. Despite having no formal training in art, he won the Council of Industrial Design Poster Award in 1963.

As well as advertising posters, Steven illustrated a few children’s books including Who’s That?, Parrot Told Snake and Fat Mouse.

As we’ve been discovering, online information about many of the designers of this era is scant. There are images of Stevens’ posters in a couple of museum internet archives. Luckily, you can find a few physical examples of his work available on Etsy and eBay.

Image credits:

1st Dibs | London Transport Museum

Designer Desire: Kenneth Bromfield

Montage of vintage Kenneth Bromfield poster designs

Kenneth Bromfield is yet another hugely talented British mid-century poster designer that I couldn’t find much background information about.

There are lots more posters that I could have included however, quite a few of them included photographs of scantily-clad ladies seductively peering out from the poster encouraging the viewer to visit Sussex, Kent, Eastbourne, Dorset and Hampshire. I don’t like those ones so much; I don’t think he did so much either. Perhaps this is why in a 1962 issue of Advertiser’s Weekly he was quoted as saying:

Why is our advertising so bloody awful? Mainly because it is lacking in interest, ideas and design. And repetitive to the point of boredom…. From any cross-section of ads, the general advertiser’s attitude would seem to be: if you are a lousy, smelly, idle, underprivileged, and over-sexed status-seeking neurotic moron, give me your money.
Are You a Miserable Old Bastard? Quips, Quotes, And Tales From The Eternally Pessimistic Book – A. Andrew John and Stephen Blake

If you’re interested, original examples occasionally come up for sale at auction and sell in the low hundreds of pounds. Your best bet is to sign up for alerts at websites such as The Saleroom. Otherwise, try specialist vintage sellers such as Antikbar, Twentieth Century Posters, and Poster Editions.

Image credits:

Candlish McCleery | Pinterest | Postal Heritage | Poster Historian | Science Museum | Vintage Poster Blog

Designer Desire: Patrick Tilley

Montage of Patrick Tilley designs for The Sunday Timescredit

OK, so we’re a little late to the Patrick Tilley appreciation party. Our friend, 365posterblog, mentioned him in a recent article about Artist Partners so we investigated him further. That’s when we discovered that our other friend, Vintage Poster Blog, had talked about him way back in 2010. Oh well, better late than never!

In the early 1960s, Patrick Tilley (b. 1928) was commissioned to produce a poster for the Sunday Times. According to Tilley:

BBDO – the agency – commissioned me to design one poster using the line, “You are more interesting to know when you read the Sunday Times”.
I thought this was a bit of a mouthful so came up with the idea of illustrating a desirable quality possessed by the newspaper and its readers and offered six roughs which were all commissioned.
They were reduced to their simplest form and made with cut out paper. BBDO won a prize. My name was removed from the printed versions. But they made quite an impact at the time.

It’s surprising to find out that many of these poster designs for The Sunday Times weren’t even used! In 2017, the Hoxton Hotel in Holborn mounted a short exhibition of these posters.

Unfortunately, you won’t find many other designs by Patrick Tilley if you search the internet. I’ve found one he designed for Shell, one for the GPO, another for the Milk Marketing Board and a couple for McDougall’s Flour.

He began writing part-time in 1959, and in 1968 he gave up design altogether in favour of a new career as a film scriptwriter. He worked on several major British-based productions, as well as writing assignments in New York and Hollywood. His books have been translated into several languages, and have achieved cult-novel status.

Tilley is now probably most well known for his best-selling futuristic epic, The Amtrak Wars. The film rights for the series have been optioned and are currently in development.

Patrick Tilley with some of his poster designs for The Sunday Timescredit

Designer Desire: Ib Antoni

Montage of Ib Antoni designs

We’ve been publishing our weekly Designer Desire series for about 3 years now, so you’d forgive us for forgetting who we have, and haven’t, featured so far. One of the items that we get contacted about most often is a vintage Ib Antoni poster (pictured in the montage above). It advertises Danish Fortnight at Neiman-Marcus in Dallas, Texas; we could have sold it dozens of times over! We’re really surprised that we haven’t researched and shared some of the other fabulous designs that he created.

Ib Antoni (1929-1973) was born in Esbjerg, Denmark. He was commissioned by over 150 international brands and companies such as Carlsberg, UNICEF, Philips, Lurpak, Volvo and Life Magazine.

As well as advertising and illustration, Antoni designed textiles and porcelain for Royal Copenhagen and Bing and Grøndahl. In 1968, he illustrated a sweet, little children’s book, Merry Cherry, a story by Henning Nystad about a starling in love with an unattainable cherry. The cover illustration can be seen in the montage above – second from bottom, on the right.

In 1973 at the age of only 44, he tragically died following an arson attack at Copenhagen’s Hotel Hafnia. His legacy work is being reproduced for sale by his family and a small number of original examples can still be found on Etsy.

Visit the official Ib Antoni Instagram feed to see lots of other examples of his work and a few really interesting contemporaneous photographs of his designs out in the wild!

 

 
 
 
 
 
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A post shared by Ib Antoni (@ibantoni)

Additional image credits:

IbAntoni.dk