“A rose-tinted trip back to the golden age of advertising.”
ShortList
This volume deliversa complete and nostalgic overview of 1970s advertising. As television and other media began to compete for advertising dollars, new ideas were incorporated intoa post-hippie worldwhere disco clashed with punk, and social consciousness, health and environmental awareness went head-to-head with the Me Generation.
Hardcover, 7.7x10.0in., 4.72 lb, 640 pages
Disco and Discovery
Ads of the 1970s get funky and socially conscious
Both eclipsed and influenced by television,American print ads of the 1970sdeparted from the bold, graphic forms and subtle messages that were typical of their sixties counterparts. More literal, more in-your-face, 70s ads sought to capture the attention of a public accustomed toblaring, to-the-point TV commercials.
All was not lost, though; as ads are a sign of the times,racial and ecological awarenesscrept into everything from cigarette to car advertisements, reminding Americans that everyday products were hip to the modern age. In an attempt to discover how best to communicate with a mass audience, marketing specialists studied focus groups with furious determination, thus producing such dumbed-down gems as "sisters are different from brothers," the slogan used for an African-American hair product. By the end of the decade, however, print ads had begun to recoup, gaining inoriginality and creativityas they focused on target audiences through carefully chosen placement in smaller publications.
A fascinating study of mass culture dissemination in a post-hippie, television-obsessed nation, this weighty volume delivers an exhaustive and nostalgic overview of 70s advertising.
The author
Steven Hellerhas produced over 200 books on visual communication and published countless articles in international design magazines. Currently he is cofounder and cochair of the MFA Design program at the School of Visual Arts, New York.