The first comprehensive museum presentation of the work of graphic designer and provocateur Tibor Kalman (b. 1949) will be on view at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) from July 16 to October 19, 1999. Tiborocity: Design and Undesign, 1979-1999 is organized by Tibor Kalman, in collaboration with Aaron Betsky, SFMOMA curator of architecture, design and digital projects. The exhibition will consist of approximately 200 works drawn from Kalman's personal collection and the archives of M&Co, Kalman's design firm in New York. Tiborocity will feature Kalman's ideas and projects in a setting designed by Kalman to evoke a mythical "village" located in a non-industrial country. The village is divided into nine sites that serve as metaphors for various themes that have influenced Kalman's oeuvre. These include a classroom, a humor house, a vernacular store, a coffee shop, an international post office, a jail cell, a music and video shop, a museum of practical ideas and-with a vision toward the future-a forest beyond the village. Each theme will be presented visually, experientially and in three dimensions. The look of the village and the exhibition will be an unlikely mixture of Modernism and the vernacular, the past and the future. Kalman and M&Co's projects relating to each theme will be displayed within the settings. Film and video projects will be displayed on video monitors, and listening stations will be available for visitors to hear excerpts from M&Co-designed CDs and albums. Over the past twenty years Tibor Kalman and the work of M&Co have rejected the slick, superficial application of design that was so widespread in the 1980s for a sort of "undesign" that embraced the vernacular. In his goal to use design as a language that communicates something meaningful, Kalman's work has explored and encompassed not just the print medium, but also film, video and product design. This presentation acknowledges the iconoclastic genius of a designer whose practice has had an enormous impact upon our culture. Born in Budapest and a resident of the United States since
1956, Kalman was raised in Poughkeepsie, New York and educated
at New York University. In the 1970s, he worked at a small bookstore
that eventually became Barnes & Noble. He soon supervised
their in-house design department, a position he held for eleven
years. In 1979 Kalman established the multidisciplinary In 1990 Kalman became the founding editor-in-chief of Colors, a Benetton-sponsored magazine. Published as "a magazine about the rest of the world," more than 500,000 copies of the magazine were distributed globally. Colors explored the ways in which people are both similar and at the same time very different. Controversial images, including a white Spike Lee, a black Queen Eizabeth and an Asian Pope John Paul II, served to raise readers' own consciousness of racism. Colors' design mantra was to present vast amounts of information as clearly and concisely as possible; the magazine was image-driven so it appealed to the widest possible audience. In fact, Kalman's last issue of Colors was designed without any text, only images. At the time of his departure from Colors in 1995, Kalman had, in the words of one critic, "evolved a design language that functioned on a global level, by allowing a culturally diverse readership to contemplate both the particular and the universal concept." Kalman returned to New York in 1995 and re-established M&Co in 1997 and has since engaged in a range of design work, including book projects and nontraditional art exhibition designs for NYNY: City of Ambition ~996) at the Whitney Museum of American Art and Keith Haring (1997) both at the Whitney and SFMOMA. Tiborocity: Design and Undesign, 1979-1999 is accompanied by the 1998 Princeton Architectural Press publication Tibor Kalman: Perverse Optimist, a 420-page overview of Kalman's work. The exhibition is organized by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Support has been generously provided by Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Riggio. There are current plans for Tiborocity: Design and Undesign, 1979-1999 to travel both nationally and internationally |