Swiss Graphic Design Histories offers a redefinition of Switzerland's
graphic design landscape. Based on extensive research by international
scholars of design history and with a collaborative approach, it reaches
beyond the usual canon and the well-known epicenters of Basel and Zurich
to the Germanophone fathers of what has become famous as the Swiss Style
of the 1950s and 1960s. In three volumes, the book features visual
artifacts and archival documents, the majority published here for the
first time; extracts and quotes from conversations and interviews with
designers who have contributed to defining and shaping Swiss graphic
design; and new essays discussing a range of aspects of and new
questions about the art of graphic design in this country. The three
tomes are linked and indexed through a system of keywords to allow
cross-references and navigation between all parts of the work. An
additional fourth volume with an index of the keywords, glossary, and
bibliography rounds out this long-awaited new survey of graphic design
in multilingual Switzerland, shedding new light on previously ignored
networks, practices, and discourses.