Description

Book Synopsis
Dorothy Waugh's National Park Service posters comprise a striking visual record in the history of the Great Depression and mark a turning point in American graphic design. Convinced that tourism would be crucial to restoring the nation's shattered economy and morale, President Franklin D. Roosevelt invested heavily in conserving the parks and preparing them for more visitors. But jump-starting tourism during hard times, Waugh asserted, would also require bold promotion. The government's approval of her publicity campaign was a first-it had never entrusted such an ambitious project to a solo designer, let alone a female modernist. At once avant-garde and accessible, Waugh's seventeen posters issued between 1934 and 1936 helped fuel a boom in parks tourism. Her trailblazing work also placed her at the forefront of what would become the government's expansive presence in American visual culture.This book accompanies an exhibition at Poster House in New York City. The first dedicated to Waugh, the book and the exhibition explore her campaign in depth-situating it within the era's turmoil, the surge of government posters that followed her lead, and her remarkably diverse career.

Blazing a Trail

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Sat 20 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Mark H Resnick

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      Publisher: RIT Cary Graphic Arts Press
      Publication Date: 01/09/2025
      ISBN13: 9781956313352, 978-1956313352
      ISBN10:

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Dorothy Waugh's National Park Service posters comprise a striking visual record in the history of the Great Depression and mark a turning point in American graphic design. Convinced that tourism would be crucial to restoring the nation's shattered economy and morale, President Franklin D. Roosevelt invested heavily in conserving the parks and preparing them for more visitors. But jump-starting tourism during hard times, Waugh asserted, would also require bold promotion. The government's approval of her publicity campaign was a first-it had never entrusted such an ambitious project to a solo designer, let alone a female modernist. At once avant-garde and accessible, Waugh's seventeen posters issued between 1934 and 1936 helped fuel a boom in parks tourism. Her trailblazing work also placed her at the forefront of what would become the government's expansive presence in American visual culture.This book accompanies an exhibition at Poster House in New York City. The first dedicated to Waugh, the book and the exhibition explore her campaign in depth-situating it within the era's turmoil, the surge of government posters that followed her lead, and her remarkably diverse career.

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