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Travel by train

Travel by train

by Michael E. Zega, Michael E. Zega, John E. Gruber

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"America's railroads produced a body of poster work significant both for the artists involved and for the range of images created. The railroads used the poster medium from their founding. Early posters took the form of broadsides dominated by text and intended to convey practical information. Then, during the 1890s, as the European lithographed display poster began to influence American advertisers and artists, this vivid new medium was adopted. For the next fifty years American railroads produced posters designed to spur the popular imagination and thereby induce travel. Artists such as Adolph Treidler, Maurice Logan, Sascha Maurer, and Leslie Ragan designed images of intensity, depicting exotic destinations, dramatic architecture, featured trains, and travel comfort.". "Although a great deal has been written about European railway and travel posters, their American counterparts have remained obscure. Travel by Train focuses on the artists, railroad men, and advertising agencies that created and produced the work. It presents the work in the context of the historical trends and competitive strategies that shaped the development of the railroad industry. It also follows the development of the advertising business and graphic design in the United States and Europe. It features 164 poster images, personal photographs, and sketches, many of them never before published."--BOOK JACKET.
Categories:
["American Posters" "Posters" "Railroads" "Poster Art" "Railway transport industries" "Trains & railways: general interest" "Railroads" "Art" "Art & Art Instruction" "USA" "American - General" "Commercial - Advertising" "Railroads - History" "General" "Railroads - General" "19th century" "20th century" "Posters" "Posters American" "Railroads pictorial works"]

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