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![]() Ad for the Avanti, ca. 1962. Raymond Loewy is at the extreme right.
Hagley Conference to Focus on Raymond Loewy
Wilmington, Delaware - May 3, 2003
The Hagley Museum and Library and will
present a conference, "The Loewy Style: Designs for a Modern America," on
Saturday, May 3, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The conference will explore the life
and work of Raymond Loewy (1893-1986), perhaps the world's most successful
and best-known industrial designer. Open to the public and free of charge,
the conference will be held in the Hagley's Soda House. Advance reservations
are required.
The morning session will focus primarily on architecture. William Green,
an architectural historian from Virginia Tech, will talk about the
restoration of the Pennsylvania Railroad Station in Roanoke, Virginia. Green
is involved with the restoration of the station which was designed by Loewy.
Christine O'Malley, associate professor of art history at Ithaca College,
will talk about the retail architecture division of Loewy's business and the
important role architect William Snaith played in that effort. The morning's
final talk will be on Leisurama by historian Jake Gorst. Hundreds of
so-called Leisurama homes were built in Montauk, Long Island, by All-State.
These were affordable properties designed by Loewy's firm and fully
furnished and stocked by Macy's Department Stores. Gorst, and his
documentary short, will detail how the Leisurama house sparked international
controversy and pushed the bounds of consumer marketing.
The afternoon session of the conference will open with a talk by Hagley
Director Emeritus Glenn Porter. Porter was the chief curator for Hagley's
current exhibit, "Raymond Loewy: Designs for A Consumer Culture" and also
authored the book of the same title. Porter's talk will cover Loewy's work
on commercial interior design and touch on some biographical information as
well.
The conference will conclude with a panel discussion featuring four
designers who have worked for the Loewy firm. Led by moderator Phillip
Scanton, director of the Hagley's Center for the History of Business,
Technology, and Society, panelists Evert Endt, an industrial designer and
former head of Loewy's Paris office; Andrew Geller, architect and former
head of Loewy's New York City architecture department; Patricia Moore,
former industrial designer at Loewy's New York office; and Ken White, a
former Loewy industrial designer specializing in graphic identity and
merchandising programs will talk about their work and experiences with
Loewy. Questions from the audience will also be taken.
Immediately following the conference, a reception will be held in
the Hagley's Henry Clay Mill building where the Loewy exhibit will be open and
authors who spoke at the conference will be available to sign books.
The Hagley's exhibit on Loewy is open through August 3 and features
artifacts, photographs, advertisements, drawings, and films that trace his
fifty-year career. Loewy designed streamlined locomotives for the
Pennsylvania Railroad (the Hagley Library has extensive records from the
Pennsylvania Railroad), the Lucky Strike cigarette packet, the postwar
Studebaker, and countless more. The Philadelphia Inquirer described the
exhibit as 'one of the most enjoyable exhibitions of its kind that one could
ever expect to see.' The Hagley acquired at auction approximately fifty linear
feet of materials from the archives of Raymond Loewy. The Loewy papers will
be opened for research as soon as they are organized and conserved, in late
2004 or in 2005.
Some funding for the conference was provided by the Delaware Humanities
Forum, a state agency of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Conference registration is free but required. Lunch will be available
for a $10 charge. Contact the Loewy conference at the Hagley Museum and Library,
P.O. Box 3630, Wilmington, Delaware, 19807-0630, (302) 658-2400, ext. 317,
or send email to catanese@udel.edu. To attend the conference, use the Hagley's
Buck Road East entrance off Route 100 in Wilmington, Delaware, to the Soda
House.
The Hagley Museum and Library is a nonprofit educational institution
dedicated to the preservation and understanding of America's business and
technological history. Visit the Hagley at www.hagley.org.
For more info, contact:
Suzanna D. Rogers
photo credits: Hagley Museum and Library
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Copyright © 2003 Hagley Museum and Library and Joe Kunkel, www.jetsetmodern.com Jetset - Designs for Modern Living. All rights reserved worldwide. This article may not be reproduced, reprinted, reposted or rewritten without express permission in writing from the author and publisher. First posted to the Web on April 9th, 2003.