Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Tibor Kalman

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Full Name
  
Tibor Kalman

Died
  
May 2, 1999, Puerto Rico

Nationality
  
American

Education
  
Name
  
Tibor Kalman

Known for
  
Graphic design

Role
  
Graphic designer


Tibor Kalman Tibor Kalman ADC Global Awards amp Club


Born
  
July 6, 1949 (
1949 -07-06
)

Books
  
(Un)fashion, Chairman, Low cost high tech

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Tibor Kalman (July 6, 1949 – May 2, 1999) was an American graphic designer of Hungarian origin, well known for his work as editor-in-chief of Colors magazine.

Contents

Tibor kalman video biography


Early life

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Kalman was born in Budapest and became a U.S. resident in 1956, after he and his family fled Hungary to escape the Soviet invasion, settling in Poughkeepsie, New York. He later attended NYU, dropping out after one year of Journalism classes.

Career

Tibor Kalman Tibor Kalman MampCo Test Pressing

In the 1970s Kalman worked at a small New York City bookstore that eventually became Barnes & Noble. He later became the supervisor of their in-house design department. In 1979 Kalman, Carol Bokuniewicz, and Liz Trovato started the design firm M & Co., which did corporate work for such diverse clients as the Limited Corporation, the new wave group Talking Heads, and Restaurant Florent in New York City's Meatpacking District. Kalman also worked as creative director of Interview magazine in the early 1990s.

Tibor Kalman MoMA Celebrating Tibor Kalman and 20 Years of Blue Skies

Kalman became founding editor-in-chief of the Benetton-sponsored Colors magazine in 1990. In 1993, Kalman closed M & Co. and moved to Rome, to work exclusively on the magazine. Billed as 'a magazine about the rest of the world', Colors focused on multiculturalism and global awareness. This perspective was communicated through bold graphic design, typography, and juxtaposition of photographs and doctored images, including a series in which highly recognizable figures such as the Pope and Queen Elizabeth were depicted as racial minorities.

Later life

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Kalman remained the main creative force behind Colors, until the onset of non-Hodgkins lymphoma forced him to leave in 1995, and return to New York. In 1997, Kalman re-opened M&Co and continued to work until his death in 1999 in Puerto Rico, shortly before a retrospective of his graphic design work entitled Tiborocity opened its U.S. Tour of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. A book about Kalman and M&Co's work, Tibor Kalman: Perverse Optimist, was published by Princeton Architectural Press in 1999.

Personal life

From 1981 up until his death, Kalman was married to the illustrator and author Maira Kalman.

Legacy

Today the influence of M&Co is still strong, both as a result of its work and that of the many designers, like Stefan Sagmeister, Stephen Doyle, Alexander Isley, Scott Stowell, and Emily Oberman, who worked there and went on to start their own design studios in New York City. Howard Milton and Jay Smith who worked with Kalman in 1979 went on to found Smith & Milton in London. Tibor Kálmán was a member of Alliance Graphique Internationale (AGI) and one of the 33 signers of the First Things First 2000 manifesto.

References

Tibor Kalman Wikipedia


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