Category Archives: Picture Collection
Advertising – Paper & Printing
For the nostalgic paper chaser. Advertising – Paper & Printing. You have to feel it to believe it.
Also check out the West Virginia Pulp and Paper Company’s contributions to our collection. More “Inspiration for Printers.”

Fedrigoni

Life, June 13, 1955

Communication Arts, Vol. 13 No. 1 (illustration by Seymour Chwast)

Fortune, Oct. 1951

Print, XXXVIII: VI

Communication Arts, Vol. 13 No. 1

Kolor Skemes
People – Couples
The People – Couples folder has a whopping 222 images – right from early illustrations and etchings to contemporary photographs.
Come take a look at awkward couples, sad couples, passionate couples, pseudo couples, surreptitious couples, dramatic couples, dancing couples, frolicking couples and many other kinds of couples in between.

“climbing drainpipes to darkened windows..”, taken from The Compleat Lover (1972). Image source : Mansell Collection

“Be quiet, Sir! begone, I say; Lord bless us! how you romp and tear!”. Page from The Compleat Lover (1972). Image source : Mary Evans Picture Library.

“When you pack that lunch, remember Rheingold goes along on more picnics than any other beer in New York!” says Emily Banks, Miss Rheingold 1960
They dressed me up like this
We’ve been on a witch hunt. Look what we found.
Our witches are real. We stake our lives on it.
‘Tis the season for torture and fear. Just kidding. It’s time for costumes and pumpkins and beer. Prost.
In the Picture Collection under Mythology & Fairy Tale –> Witches & Wizards.
Sources:
1. Jong, Erica, “Witches,” Abradale Press, 1981
2. Ingpen, Robert and Page, Michael, “Encyclopedia of Things That Never Were,” Viking, 1987
3. Maple, Eric, “Witchcraft,” Octopus, 1973
Mannequins
Dress forms have been around for ages, with possibly the oldest one discovered in 1923 in King Tutankhamun’s tomb dating back to approximately 1350 B.C! What started as a basic and utilitarian human-like frame morphed through the ages from simple busts to elaborate European fashion dolls to the mannequins we see casually hanging out at store windows today. Not very casually actually, since they might actually be sizing you up for the powers that be.
Not surprisingly, these adjustable, modifiable human stand-ins also ended up in many works of art. And more recently, like this unwed lady who responded to the pressures of having a family by simply going out and buying herself the perfect one. And then spending 14 years documenting their life together.
Or this mannequin-dancer-robot-monster. Wow, that eye contact.

Jordan Wolfson’s piece at David Zwirner Gallery
As you go through the folder, you can see window displays and how mannequins changed shape over the years, including some old and abandoned ones from a mannequin factory. You will also find pictures of their modern utilitarian versions – crash test dummies.
One of the highlights of this folder is a 7-page vintage 1920s catalog for a French mannequin maker. Each Flapper era mannequin is shown here in beautifully lit, black and white images.
Including the ones below, the Mannequins folder has a total of 38 items.

Middle : Google says it means “Remember that we submit a model at home”. Left : Model No. 51005 – Resistant to all temperatures Right : Model No. 51004 – Washable and easy to maintain

Left : Model No. 51002 – Make up does not alter in light. Right : Model No. 51003 – Google thinks it means “Resistant composition and unlimited duration”

Top : Four Faces, Detroit Mannequin Factory – 1999. Bottom : Baby Faces And Hands, Detroit Mannequin Factory -1999