Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Richard Eckersley (designer)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Richard Eckersley


Richard Eckersley (designer) Richard Eckersley 65 Graphic Designer Dies New York Times

Born
  
February 20, 1941
Lancashire, England

Died
  
April 17, 2006 (2006-04-18) (aged 65)Lincoln, Nebraska, US

Occupation
  

Richard Hilton Eckersley (20 February 1941 – 16 April 2006) was a graphic designer best known for experimental computerized typography designed to complement deconstructionist academic works.

Richard Eckersley (designer) RIP Richard Eckersley The Type Desk

Born in Lancashire, England, his father Tom Eckersley was a noted poster designer during and after the Second World War, later to become head of the School of Art and Design at the London College of Printing in the 1960s. After attending Trinity College in Dublin, Eckersley began his design career at Lund Humphries, the publisher of Typographica and The Penrose Annual, where E. McKnight Kauffer had once been art director.

He later joined the state-sponsored Kilkenny Design Workshops in Ireland. After six years there, Eckersley took a teaching position in the United States, and in 1981 he got a job at the University of Nebraska Press, where he shook up the field with computer-designed typography for Avital Ronell's Telephone Book: Technology, Schizophrenia, Electric Speech. The unorthodox design had the intended effect of breaking up the text's readability.

References

Richard Eckersley (designer) Wikipedia