Pentagram

New at Pentagram

Skip to content

Abbott Miller Brings Stripes to Czechs

Brno_Chairs_Sm.jpg

Brno Echo: Ornament and Crime from Adolf Loos to Now, a design exhibition curated and designed by Abbott Miller, opens today at the Moravian Gallery in Brno, Czech Republic. Miller was invited by the Director and Curator of the 23rd International Biennial of Graphic Design Brno, one of Europe’s largest festivals of graphic design, to create an exhibition of his choice to coincide with the Biennial. The show is on view through 19 October 2008.

Brno Echo stages a lively dialogue between historical and contemporary design around the subject of “modern ornament.” Adolf Loos’ 1908 manifesto “Ornament and Crime” serves as the conceptual foundation for the exhibition that looks at the recurrence of concentric lines and patterns that constitute a fundamental grammar of modern ornament, connecting everything from the Wiener Werkstätte through Pop Art to current variants of retro-futurism. The exhibition creates a kind of graphic echo chamber in which typefaces, posters, textiles and furniture reveal a cosmopolitan dialogue that crosses time, geography and media.

In developing the exhibition Miller was drawn to the coincidence of two factors: the original 1964 Biennial logo by Jiri Hadlac and the fact that Adolph Loos, who was born in Brno, designed a very original house for the entertainer Josephine Baker that features black and white stripes. In his essay “Ornament and Crime,” Loos had launched an attack on ornament referring to it as “degenerate” and yet the house he designed for Baker took the idea of ornament and made it the most important part of the house. As a result, the house is superficially very related to much of the decorative design he claimed to hate.

Miller subsequently realized that geometric striping and concentric forms are a type ornamentation that is acceptably modern. This, in turn, led him through a kind of archaeology of concentric striping that links early modernism with other stylistic languages throughout the last century.

Brno_Echo_Series_Sm.jpg

Drawing upon various international sources, including the rich collections of the Moravian Gallery, the exhibition features a dozen galleries and over 150 works with textile pieces from Verner Panton, Josef Hoffmann and Dorothy Casonas; furniture from Loos, Hoffmann and Ron Arad; posters from Ralph Schraivogel, Martin Woodtli, Philippe Apeloig and Niklaus Troxler; and, forming the centerpiece of the show, a model of Adolf Loos’ House for Josephine Baker from 1928.

Brno_Logo.jpg

Loos_Baker_Sm.jpg

Miller has also designed the identity, catalogue and a series of posters for the exhibition. The identity is built from the “B” Hadlac designed for the original Biennial identity, while the posters utilize that letterform to create the full phrase BRNO ECHO. The posters were silkscreened for a deep color saturation that gives them an unmistakable look and feel. A set of silkscreened coasters were also printed, as, says Miller, “Brno (and Prague) are very much about beer, which I love.”

Brno_Loos_Sm.jpg

A selection of objects from the exhibition follow.

Arad_Chair_Sm.jpg

Brno_Hoffman_Sm.jpg

Dixon_Pinstripe_Sm.jpg

10_Ways_Illus_Sm.jpg

Woodtli_Poster_Sm.jpg

68_Olympics_Sm.jpg

Brno_Archigram_Sm.jpg

Morey_Poster_Sm.jpg

Yale_Poster_Sm.jpg