Design Observer

Archive
Books + Store
Job Board
Email Archive
Comments
About
Contact
Log In
Register



Observatory

Resources
Submissions
About
Contact


Featured Writers

Michael Bierut
William Drenttel
John Foster
Jessica Helfand
Alexandra Lange
Mark Lamster
Rick Poynor
John Thackara
Rob Walker


Departments

Advertisement
Audio
Books
Collections
Dialogues
Essays
Events
Foster Column
Gallery
Interviews
Miscellaneous
Opinions
Poetry
Primary Sources
Projects
Report
Reviews
Slideshows
Today Column
Unusual Suspects
Video


Topics

Advertising
Architecture
Art
Books
Branding
Business
Cities / Places
Community
Craft
Culture
Design History
Design Practice
Development
Disaster Relief
Ecology
Economy
Education
Energy
Environment
Fashion
Film / Video
Food/Agriculture
Geography
Global / Local
Graphic Design
Health / Safety
History
Ideas
Illustration
India
Industry
Info Design
Infrastructure
Interaction Design
Internet / Blogs
Journalism
Landscape
Literature
Magazines
Media
Museums
Music
Nature
Obituary
Other
Peace
Philanthropy
Photography
Planning
Poetry
Politics / Policy
Popular Culture
Preservation
Product Design
Public / Private
Public Art
Religion
Reputations
Science
Social Enterprise
Sports
Sustainability
Technology
Theory/Criticism
Transportation
TV / Radio
Typography
Urbanism
Water


Comments (4) Posted 09.15.05 | PERMALINK | PRINT

Paula Scher

Remembering Henryk Tomaszewski



Henryk Tomaszewski, Amsterdam, Holland, 1991
Photograph by Almar Seinen


Designer Henryk Tomaszewski died on Sunday in his native Warsaw at the age of 91.

In his lifetime, Henryk Tomaszewski accomplished the nearly impossible: he made a body of work that was equally beloved by both designers and illustrators.

For designers, it was the power of the simplicity of the forms he created, his economy of line, his perfect use of scale and his brilliant wit. For illustrators, it was that the power of the simplicity of the forms he created, his economy of line, his perfect use of scale and his brilliant wit could only be the product of someone who really knew how to draw.

His posters looked so simple, so easy, and sometimes so incredibly dumb they were laughable. Looking at the work, I'd think, "Why, anyone can do it, can't they? Just pick up a big, fat, scratchy brush and glob it up with some india ink, make a funny face out of three black lines and a red blob for a hat. Hand paint the type. How hard can it be?"

The answer: hard. Tomaszewski was the Fred Astaire of poster art. Everyone loved him because he made it look so easy and like so much fun. We all thought that we could do it, too. So we tried it once, twice, and then we keep trying for a working lifetime. And every time we try, we are confronted with his unquestionable genius.

I will miss Henryk Tomaszewski.

Paula Scher is a partner in the New York office of Pentagram and the author of Make It Bigger.

|
Share This Story

RSS Subscribe to Comment Feed

Comments (4)   |   JUMP TO MOST RECENT >>

Very sad news indeed, Ms. Scher.
Over here in France, Henryk Tomaszewski had a huge influence on the local graphic scene, particularly through his teaching in Warsaw Fine Arts Academy, where some of the leading figures in French graphic design studied in the 60s and 70s. It wouldn't have been the same without him.
Stéphane Darricau
09.16.05 at 08:07

The flame isn't all the way out... his son (Filip Pagowski) is a regular in the pages of the New Yorker and extremely talented.
felix sockwell
09.18.05 at 01:18

His Ilustrstration and Design possessed the IMPACT of A Minimalist Auteur.

A Goldsmith in the Deft and Sureness of his line.

Deceptively Simple but not Simplistic.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Robert Wise is also deceased, passing on September 14, 2005

Henryk Tomaszewski and Robert Wise lived 91 years.

I'll miss them both and will continue to live and grow through their Art.

DM

DesignMaven
09.19.05 at 11:56

A great article about Tomaszewski by Andrea Marks has been posted on AIGA Voice.
Michael Bierut
04.20.06 at 06:12


|
Share This Story



ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Paula Scher is a partner in the New York office of Pentagram, a recipient of the AIGA Medal, and the author of Make It Bigger.
More >>

DESIGN OBSERVER JOBS









MORE BY Paula Scher

11.03.11: All Maps Lie
07.17.08: It's How You Said It
More by Paula Scher >>

RELATED POSTS


Gene & Jackie Lacy
Gene and Jackie Lacy, Indianapolis-based graphic designers and illustrators practicing from the 1950s through the 1980s.

The Poster that Launched a Movement (Or Not)
In the age of social media, does political graphic design matter?

Studio Culture: The Materialism of Matter
Studio, print shop, dance club and store: a photographic essay on Matter's design HQ in Denver.

The Enduring Influence of Richard Hollis
An exhibition of Richard Hollis’s work provides the first public opportunity to assess the entire shape of his output.

Design Indaba 2012
Design Indaba 2012 gathered creative people from graphic and product design, architecture and landscape, film and video, not to mention Danish gastronomy and Bollywood movies.