From Voice ~ Topics: history, typography

Crimes Against Typography

Crimes against typography are committed everyday. But few typefaces have been victimized more than the late-sixties/early-seventies gothic Avant Garde – and the felonies persist. The reason is a surfeit of angular ligatures that offer too many cheap tricks. I know because I am a recovering Avant Garde abuser. Although I haven’t touched the stuff in almost thirty years, when the face was in its prime, I was hopelessly addicted. Since I had the fonts on my Phototypositor I got kicks making the most flagrantly absurd ligature combinations imaginable. Nobody, not even the face’s creator Herb Lubalin, could stop me. In fact, having seen so many abominable applications by addicts like myself, I once heard Lubalin curse the day that Avant Garde was released to the public. However, the revenue stream made from font sales gives this a disingenuous ring.

Avant Garde was not originally designed as a commercial typeface. It was the logo for a magazine that its editor and publisher Ralph Ginzburg explains was “a thoughtful, joyous magazine on art and politics” aimed at people “ahead of their time.” The goal of the magazine, however, was not merely to reflect the cultural zeitgeist but take a lead role in purveying raucous sixties culture. In other words, it was avant garde – thus the magazine’s title, coined by Ginzburg’s wife and collaborator, Shoshana, was Avant Garde.*

* The opening page of the first issue of Avant Garde bore this dedication set in Avant Garde Gothic: As most of the world's ills are traceable to old imperatives,old superstitions, and old fools, this magazine exuberantly dedicated to the future

Before launching the magazine Ginzburg was the publisher and editor — with Herb Lubalin the art director and designer—of the erotic hardcover magazine, EROS, which folded after four issues when Ginzburg was arrested and convicted on the charge of sending prurient materials (e.g. “pandering”) through the United States mails. After the trial Ginzburg wanted to start a new magazine but was prevented by his lawyers who feared it might turn out to be a “hellraiser.” Ginzburg was out on bail for the EROS conviction awaiting appeal, but the process took so long—about ten years—that the magazine ultimately went into production in mid-1967.

To help Lubalin develop the design scheme Ginzburg sent him a lengthy editorial outline and recalls, “He came up with two beautiful logos, but they were all wrong for the publication I had in mind.” One was based on the typeface used on the old original Coca-Cola bottles, another on Hebrew letters. “[Lubalin] kept associating the magazine with the nihilistic avant-garde school of art of the early 20th Century,” Ginzburg adds, “but this magazine had nothing to do with that.” Instead it was for intellectuals who might also possess a sense of humor. “Herb and I had always been on the same creative frequency. The concept of Avant Garde was the lone exception. He just couldn't get it. And though he normally produced designs for me instantaneously, no matter how complex or challenging the job, two weeks elapsed and he still didn't have a clue.”

Exasperated, Ginzburg had Shoshana visit Lubalin at his studio to explain the concept of the magazine to him one last time. “I asked him to picture a very modern, clean European airport (or the TWA terminal), with signs in stark black and white,” Shoshana recalls, “Then I told him to imagine a jet taking off the runway into the future. I used my hand to describe an upward diagonal of the plane climbing skyward. He had me do that several times. I explained that the logos he had offered us for this project, so far, could have been on any magazine but that Avant Garde (adventuring into unknown territory) by its very name was something nobody had seen before. We needed something singular and entirely new.” Ginzburg continues, “The next morning, driving to work from his home in Woodmere [New York] he pulled over to the side of the road and phoned me (the first time he ever did that). ‘Ralph, I've got it. You'll see.’ And the rest is design history.”

For his historic solution, Lubalin adapted gothic caps, something between Futura and Helvetica, and angular-ized the “A” and “V” so they fit together like a wedge of pie. He halved the “T” so that one half of it was part of the “N.” The perfectly round “G” carved into the angular “A”, which overlaid the mid-stroke and the second “A” in avant was an inclined extension of the “A” in garde, Both words were tightly letter-spaced to be perfectly stacked, and thus could fit as a block anywhere on the cover. According to Shoshana, “The distinctive slant of the "A" was exactly the line I had made in the air when showing him that ascending jet.”

Lubalin turned his rough sketch over to type designer Tom Carnase, his partner at Lubalin Smith Carnase, who rendered the final form. “Herb was a scribbler,” recalls Carnase, “but his scribbles were very readable.” So it would seem for anyone questioning its provenance, Avant Garde was entirely Lubalin’s invention. But, there were actually more intricate machinations on the way to becoming a bona fide commercial font.

Lubalin decided that all department headlines should conform to the logo, and Carnase asserts that it was he alone who designed the additional characters and created all the ligatures. After making a handful of these headlines, he further realized there were almost enough characters to complete an entire alphabet, which he eventually drew, and from which a prototype film font was made for the studio’s use.

Avant Garde
had a modest circulation but was extremely popular with, among others, New York’s advertising and editorial art directors. They were so smitten by the contemporary character of the logo they clamored for freer availability of the face. Carnase recalls that Photolettering Inc. illicitly copied many of the letters and ligatures and sold them without permission. So, to counteract this and other unauthorized use, Carnase produced a specimen card pack that offered custom settings to Lubalin Smith Carnase’s clients. Given the high volume of requests, it was clear to Lubalin and his soon-to-be partner, type director Aaron Burns, that Avant Garde should be released as a commercial font. Lubalin Burns, was founded (which prefigured Burns’ ITC) to produce and sell typefaces.

Before the font could be issued, however, a little matter of the name had to be resolved. “Herb seemed to think I held ownership in the design (I paid him for it, of course),” Ginzburg recalls, “and he asked me for permission to expand the logo into an entire alphabet and to market it under the name Avant Garde. I granted it with alacrity and gratis, with one proviso: That the face's name Avant Garde always be followed by the tiny circled letter "r" connoting that it was a registered trademark—as it was. This was necessary to protect my ownership of (I believe the legal term is to ‘police’) this valuable mark. Herb blithely ignored this ([and] I can hear him chuckling puckishly over my request) but it infuriated me and caused me legal headaches.” Ginzburg later told Burns about the trademark issues, “and he, too, seemed indifferent to my concerns.” The consummate irony, notes Ginzburg, is that Burns invited him to become an investor in ITC, chiefly on the strength of profits it stood to make with the Avant Garde faces. “But the timing of his call couldn't have been worse,” says Ginzburg, who was about to be start serving his prison term on the EROS conviction. Ginzburg’s incarceration also put an end to Avant Garde magazine, yet the face with its name became ever more successful.

“As I understand it, a number of people got really rich off that typeface, including Herb,” notes Ginzburg. But Carnase, who made and retains ownership of all the original drawings for the light, medium, and demi-bold weights (later other designers at ITC designed the additional weights), did not share in any of the profits. “I resented it highly,” he says. “This was no way to treat a partner.”

Carnase was not, however, as agitated by the way Avant Garde was used as Lubalin—even though misuse of the ligatures was indeed rampant. Carnase recalls that, among other travesties, many times the lower case “r” and “n” was so improperly set the result looked like an “m.” “When you see it you just roll your eyes,” he says, “but I didn’t want to be a policeman, not then or now.”

During every generation at least one typeface represents—often accidentally—the zeitgeist. Through widespread use the font’s style then becomes emblematic of key aesthetic points of view. Futura was “the typeface of the future.” Helvetica was the typeface of corporate modernism. Avant Garde was the adopted as symbolic of raucous sixties and me-generation seventies. While the face had roots in modernism, it was also eclectic enough so as not to be too clean or cold. As a headline face it said “new and improved,” and as a text face it added quirkiness to the printed page. It came alive on advertisements, was appropriate for editorial design too. Eventually, after excessive overuse and rampant abuse, its quirkiness became simply irksome—something like the paisley of type faces—no longer fashionable, but not entirely obsolete either. Today, Avant Garde is having something of a revival on the pages of some magazines. For some it may even be an alternative to the more elegant, contemporary gothics.

As for me, I’m happy to say I kicked the habit.

About the Author: Steven Heller, co-chair of MFA Designer As Author at School of Visual Arts, is the author of Merz to Emigre and Beyond: Avant Garde Magazine Design of the Twentieth Century (Phaidon Press), The Education of a Comics Artist co-edited with Michael Dooley (Allworth Press), The Education of a Graphic Designer, Second Edition and The Education of an Art Director with Véronique Vienne (Allworth Press). http://www.hellerbooks.com

  1. link to this comment by art chantry Thu Aug 05, 2004

    it wasn't the actual typrface design of avant-garde that was so awful - it was how it was used and abused. personally, i needed avant-garde to inspire me to understand type when i was a beginner. without my early feeble attempts to draw it (templetes and straight edges), i would never have begun to understand typography at all. but, even i knew that i did it all wrong when i saw the results. and i knew nothing about type then.

    avant garde (along with good ol' souvenir) were among the first typefaces supplied with the purchase of every compugraphic typesetting machine purchased. the result was everybody used it like it was just another typeface on a typewriter. every amateur and fledgling business that popped up with a compugraphic assumed you could use those face sas casually as typing. of course, that wasn't true and the results were that those 'supplied' typefaces designs were abominably abused and the (at least ten years of) truly awful incompetant use of those faces destroyed their reputations forever. it takes at least that long for new technology to finally be absorbed into the mainstream.

    those compugraphic machines came into extremely wide use in the late 60's and quality typography was virtually destroyed until the mid-late 70's when designers and amateur typographers finally began to understand type. it's a very similar process to what we've been going through for the last 15 years absorbing the personal computer in design. unfortunately, computer technology is SO powerful, that the learning curve for the culture may take much longer. i guesstimate about 20 years. that means we have at least another 5 years of this teribble wretched typographic design phase before the design culture absorbs it well enough to stop the incompetant use of type that we are now experiencing. i just hope i not too low on my guesstimate.

    - art chantry.

  2. link to this comment by wren Sun Aug 22, 2004

    i was first exposed to this typeface in the pages of Spin magazine, which set most of its text in a very small and hard-to-read italicized Avant Garde mutation. thus, i can't help but cringe as my subconscious connects the awful writing and content of Spin magazine with the all-uppercase italicized Avant Garde text contained therein.

  3. link to this comment by Capt.CaveMan Fri Sep 03, 2004

    er...
    the slanted A thing...
    Is this made.. or is it within the typeface somewhere?

  4. link to this comment by steve heller Fri Sep 03, 2004

    If I understand your question: The slanted A was designed as an element of the typeface the logo, then adopted as one of the signature characteristics when avant garde became a bonefide typeface.

  5. link to this comment by Capt.CaveMan. Fri Sep 03, 2004

    so are you saing if you own the typeface the slanted A is in the character set? I have looked and have not seen it
    ...

  6. link to this comment by steve heller Mon Sep 06, 2004

    It was once part of the many ligatures available on typositor. It may no longer be available. Lubalin was not happy about the way they were used.

  7. link to this comment by rastergrafik Thu Sep 09, 2004

    I am looking for the font of the LOGO used with the cover of "avantgarde." Please let me know a formal font name. And please let me know the site of the Internet which sells it. Thank you for your consideration.

  8. link to this comment by Riki Fri Sep 10, 2004

    I fear that I, too, have been responsible for crimes against typography at least once or twice within my time as a graphic design student. Though I've never used Avant Garde, my favorites tend to be fonts like Papyrus and Mistrel, either script-like or decorative print. I cannot say if I will continue to commit these crimes or not, as I still love those fonts, but I will try to be more cautious when choosing my typeface.
    -Riki

  9. link to this comment by Joseph Fri Oct 22, 2004

    the slanted 'A' and the other unique characters/ligatures are included in the 'Alternative' set of the typeface, this is much harder to get ahold of however.

  10. link to this comment by Dermot - Ireland Mon Jan 24, 2005

    What about 'meta' nice face, totally overused, every second financial institution here in Ireland seems to use it. Dax and DIN are both also being exploited and bastardised, ah well, I got a nice one called Pakenham recently.

  11. link to this comment by Dermot - Ireland Mon Jan 24, 2005

    Sorry my last comment appears totally out of context, i forgot to mention Avant Garde. I've never been able to find an appropriate project to use Avant Garde, the 's' is too narrow in my opinion, the face seems so mechanical. I would always plump for Frutiger or even Avenir over it.

  12. link to this comment by Stephen Coles Wed Mar 09, 2005

    Elsner+Flake has remastered Scangraphic's digital Avant Garde Alternates and it's now offered again at FontShop: http://www.fontshop.com/showfont.cfm?fid=EF.101895.0.0

    The floodgates have been reopened.

  13. link to this comment by Nicole Sat Aug 13, 2005

    Spotted: on the trashy "Dancing with the Stars" TV sham on Australia's 7 network. Also, ModelCo are getting right into it with their beauty line (see modelco.com.au/TanAirbrushinacan.asp). Although I have to admit I do quite enjoy it on the shock-pink packaging.

  14. link to this comment by Paul Carahan Thu Aug 18, 2005

    I don't believe the typeface, avant-garde, is anywhere near awful, but what do I know? I haven't even finished my typography class! I enjoy the clean asethetics of the design.

  15. link to this comment by kamran samimi Tue Sep 13, 2005

    i'm wondering if anyone knows where i can purchase this Avant Garde. i already own Avant Garde demi, bold etc.. however, neither of these include the slanted A, V, M etc...

    does anyone know where i can find these slanted letters?

    so far i've had to make them in illustrator but it always looks a bit off.

    thanks!

  16. link to this comment by Willie Sun Dec 25, 2005

    When use porperly you can produce some beautiful logos with this font. Alot of people have yet to find a reason to use it. And only share the abuse storys. I say use it! But have a good reason for any type crime you make.

  17. link to this comment by Bob Mercer Mon Apr 10, 2006

    No question Avant Garde was a watershed typeface. Was it any good? Don't beat yourself up, Mr. Heller, I think the problems run deeper than its misuse, opinions on which are just that. Rather, I think the problem is that it was perfect. The character fit was so tight it produced a kind of visual paralysis. Words locked up, you got eye strain prying them apart. Then you had to travel on to the next word. A fascinating type experiment, well above my capacity. But characters should be just that — characters — not puzzle pieces. Avant Garde was too perfect for words.

  18. link to this comment by Kristy Pennino Wed Jun 21, 2006

    There's a right time and a wrong time to use every typeface. Yes, even Avant Garde.

    And would somebody moderate this discussion forum already? The spammers have taken over the discussion with their ad postings.

  19. link to this comment by Charlie Trotter Mon Sep 11, 2006

    It's really interesting to know the back-story of that font. I'm a big Lubalin fan.

  20. link to this comment by Jeff Akins Wed Nov 08, 2006

    I don't think that Avant Garde is that bad of a font but like every font it is all in the way you use it. With the slanted "A" I like it because it is different and makes me look at it just that much longer.

  21. link to this comment by LEE Sat Mar 31, 2007

    hey can u guys tel mi th story behind adidas using avant garde! is ther ne story at ol?

  22. link to this comment by samba Tue Jul 03, 2007

    Seems to me no one is asking a cogent question-how did the font function to convey the aesthetics in which it was used.Avant Garde magazine was out to have an impact on the culture.Not looking at he context is like judging a hammer withot seeing if it will pound in a nail.

  23. link to this comment by Nadia Jaramillo Tue Nov 25, 2008

    I didn't know there was so much history behind a single typeface. Although Avant Garde does appear to be an interesting font I for one never thought of Futura and Helvetica as anything great. Then again I suppose these things are fads like everything else we see around us.

  24. link to this comment by PrintPlace.com Mon Dec 01, 2008

    I believe Avant Garde is used on the video game Rock Band as well. It looks good there, but only because it’s large and easy to read. I wouldn’t like it in smaller sizes. Interesting post – who knew a typeface could have such a storied history? Redsun.com has a nice history and timeline of typefaces broken down into round, blackletter, serif and sans serif types.

  25. link to this comment by EzPrintSolutions Wed Jan 07, 2009

    Avant Garde always had that industrial corporate look to it in my opinion. I also think it looks better as a larger scale size, in standard logo. Smaller size makes it a bit strange of a font to read. Today fonts are being designed from the strange to the cartoonish and flashy. If you've ever been to dafont*com you'd see what I mean by that. Nice article

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