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A Designed Life: Contemporary American Textile, Wallpapers, and Containers & Packaging, 1951 – 1954

A Designed Life: Contemporary American Textile, Wallpapers, and Containers & Packaging, 1951 – 1954

A Designed Life: Contemporary American Textile, Wallpapers, and Containers & Packaging, 1951 – 1954
September 13 – December 8
Opening Reception: Thursday, September 13, 5 – 7 p.m.
UMBC Center for Art, Design and Visual Culture

The Center for Art, Design and Visual Culture presents A Designed Life: Contemporary American Textile, Wallpapers, and Containers & Packaging, 1951 – 1954, an exhibition based on three historically significant traveling exhibitions of contemporary mass-produced, American-designed consumer goods that were commissioned by the U.S. Department of State in the early 1950s. It recreates and interprets those early Cold War exhibitions — including American textiles, wallpapers, containers, and packaging — restating and interpreting part of each display as it might have appeared in the early 1950s.

The three historical exhibitions — Contemporary American Textiles designed by Florence Knoll; Contemporary American Wallpapers designed by Tom Lee, and Containers and Packaging designed by Will Burtin — were each developed as collections of industry-specific consumer goods, designed and manufactured in the spirit of American modernism. The Traveling Exhibition Service (TES), an organization later known as the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service, organized these exhibitions for display in post-WWII Germany on behalf of the U.S. Department of State in order to help promote the grown of democratic governments within postwar Europe.

Margaret Re, an associate professor of visual arts who teaches design, is both the exhibition curator and principal investigator of A Designed Life. Re is excited for the potential of the exhibit to help audiences explore the U.S. Department of State’s decision in the early 1950s “to connect consumer choice with political choice as well as the reception of European audiences to such cultural diplomacy in the post WWII years.”

An Opening Reception (free and open to the public) will be held on Thursday, September 13, from 5 to 7 p.m., and the exhibition will open for regular viewing hours on Friday, September 14.

Plan Your Visit:

Admission to the exhibition and all related programming is free and open to the public.

The Center for Art, Design and Visual Culture is open Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and is located in the Fine Arts Building.

For more information call 410-455-3188.

For evening and weekend visits to the CADVC (including the Opening Reception), free parking is available near the Fine Arts Building in Lot 8. For daytime visits, we recommend parking at paid visitor parking in either the Walker Avenue Garage or the Administration Drive Garage. Please visit here for additional information: https://artscalendar.umbc.edu/about/center-for-art-design-and-visual-culture/

Event Contact

Symmes Gardner
410-455-3188

Event Details

Thursday, September 13, 2018, 5:00 PM – 7:00 PM
Repeats weekly Tuesday and Wednesday and Thursday and Friday and Saturday -- until Saturday December 8, 2018.
Free

Location

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