Pentagram

Pentagram

‘Revolution of the Eye’

Exhibition and catalogue design for a show at the Jewish Museum that explored the relationship between modern art and American television in its formative years.

Large pools of light—really white graphic “spotlights” painted on the walls and floor—highlight individual works and bodies of text. 

Opening spread of the catalogue essay by Maurice Berger.
Television graphics by Saul Bass.
The timeline details the overlap between milestones in the development of television and modern art.
Opening spread of the cultural timeline that closes the book.
Stills from films directed by Andy Warhol, including a short for "Saturday Night Live," 1981.
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Retrospective: Shakespeare in the Park

In 1954, impresario Joe Papp began a summer tradition of staging free outdoor performances of Shakespeare, inaugurating the Public Theater’s beloved Shakespeare in the Park festival. Pentagram partner Paula Scher, whose relationship with the Public spans four decades, has designed a new identity for the series for thirty consecutive summers. Each campaign is customized to the season’s theme, creating a highly visible graphic vocabulary for outdoor advertising, social media, and on-site signage.
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Retrospective: Shakespeare in the Park

In 1954, impresario Joe Papp began a summer tradition of staging free outdoor performances of Shakespeare, inaugurating the Public Theater’s beloved Shakespeare in the Park festival. Pentagram partner Paula Scher, whose relationship with the Public spans four decades, has designed a new identity for the series for thirty consecutive summers. Each campaign is customized to the season’s theme, creating a highly visible graphic vocabulary for outdoor advertising, social media, and on-site signage.