Henry Dreyfuss Associates (founded 1929) is from United States.

We have 131 objects that Henry Dreyfuss Associates has had a hand in. Here's the break-down:

These are a couple of those things by Henry Dreyfuss Associates in our collection:



Cooper Hewitt

Henry Dreyfuss left the company in 1969. The company was known as Henry Dreyfuss from 1929 - 1966.

Wikipedia

Henry Dreyfuss (/ˈdraɪfəs/; March 2, 1904 – October 5, 1972) was an American industrial designer.

Career

Dreyfuss was a native of Brooklyn, New York. As one of the celebrity industrial designers of the 1930s and 1940s, Dreyfuss dramatically improved the look, feel, and usability of dozens of consumer products. As opposed to Raymond Loewy and other contemporaries, Dreyfuss was not a stylist: he applied common sense and a scientific approach to design problems. His work both popularized the field for public consumption, and made significant contributions to the underlying fields of ergonomics, anthropometrics, and human factors. Until 1920 Dreyfuss studied as an apprentice to theatrical designer Norman Bel Geddes, his later competitor, and opened his own office in 1929 for theatrical and industrial design activities. It was an immediate and long-lasting commercial success. As of 2005 his firm continues to operate as Henry Dreyfuss Associates with major corporate clients.

Designs

Significant original Dreyfuss designs include:

  • the "Western Electric 302" tabletop telephone for Bell Laboratories (1930, produced 1937-1950)
  • the Hoover "Model 150" vacuum cleaner (1936)
  • the classic Westclox "Big Ben" alarm clock (1939)[1]
  • the New York Central Railroad's streamlined Mercury train, both locomotive and passenger cars (1936).
  • the NYC Hudson locomotive for the "Twentieth Century Limited" (1938)
  • the popular "Democracity" model city of the future at the 1939 New York World's Fair at the Trylon and Perisphere
  • the styled John Deere Model A and Model B tractors (1938)
  • the Wahl-Eversharp Skyline fountain pen (1940).
  • the Royal Typewriter Company's Quiet DeLuxe (late 1940s).
  • the "500" desk telephone (1949), a Bell System standard for years
  • the Honeywell T87 circular wall thermostat (1953).
  • the spherical "Model 82 Constellation" vacuum cleaner for Hoover (1954) which floated on an air cushion of its own exhaust.
  • the "Princess" telephone (1959)
  • the Bankers Trust Building at 280 Park Avenue in Manhattan, New York City, with Emery Roth & Sons (1963)
  • the "Trimline" desk telephone (1965).
  • the Polaroid SX-70 Land camera (1972).

Later life

In 1955 Dreyfuss wrote Designing for People, an autobiography which features his "Joe" and "Josephine" simplified anthropometric charts. In 1960 he published The Measure of Man, an ergonomic reference.

Dreyfuss was the first President of the Industrial Design Society of America (IDSA).

Death

On October 5, 1972, at their home in South Pasadena, California, Dreyfuss and his wife, Doris Marks, who was terminally ill, committed suicide. They were found in a car, killed by self-inflicted carbon monoxide poisoning. Earlier that year, Marks had been diagnosed with liver cancer. The design company, Henry Dreyfuss Associates, remains after his death.

References

Notes

Bibliography

  • Dreyfuss, Henry. Symbol Sourcebook: An Authoritative Guide to International Graphic Symbols. New York: John Wiley & Sons. 1984. ISBN 0-471-28872-1
  • Dreyfuss, Henry. Designing for People. Allworth Press; illustrated edition edition, 2003. ISBN 1-58115-312-0
  • Flinchum, Russell. Henry Dreyfuss, Industrial Designer: The Man in the Brown Suit. Rizzoli, 1997. ISBN 0-8478-2010-6
  • Innes, Christopher. Designing Modern America: Broadway to Main Street. Yale University Press, 2005. ISBN 0-300-10804-4

External links

  • Video on Dreyfuss's design for Honeywell thermostat and for his Bell Telephone, at Wikimedia Commons
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<ref name=CH>{{cite web |url=http://collection.cooperhewitt.org/people/18041029/ |title=Henry Dreyfuss Associates |author=Smithsonian Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum |accessdate=18 May 2013 |publisher=Smithsonian Institution}}</ref>