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Milton Glaser Designs Season 7 Poster For Mad Men - a Q&A With The Designer.
At 84 legendary graphic designer Milton Glaser is still creating and was enlisted to design the promotional ads for the upcoming season of AMC's Mad Men. As the advertising drama moves into the late 60's, the show's creator, Matthew Weiner and the Mad Men promotional team began thinking about the appropriate advertising aesthetic as the show approached its final two years.
above: the final promotional image will appear in ads for AMC's season 7 of Mad Men.
According to the New York Times "...someone took one of Mr. Glaser’s best-known images, a 1966 Bob Dylan poster inspired by a Duchamp silhouette self-portrait, and cut out the psychedelic flowing hair with which Mr. Glaser had crowned Mr. Dylan. The hair was then pasted upside down, like a Technicolor eruption, and sent to Mr. Glaser as an inspiration."
above: The graphic designer Milton Glaser, left, in his Manhattan office with Matthew Weiner, the creator of “Mad Men,” for which Mr. Glaser has designed ads that will start appearing next week. Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times
“There is a dreamlike quality to it, and believe it or not, it is related to the show, and not because it’s psychedelic,” said Mr. Weiner, dressed appropriately for the period, with a buttoned-up suit vest but also a bright pink patterned tie. “That’s not what it’s about. What it’s about is the material and the immaterial world, and that’s what I loved.”
above: Milton Glaser's 1966 Bob Dylan poster
Weiner, who rarely discloses details abut the show, added, “It maintains the idea that this is somehow going on in Don Draper’s mind, which is what the story is always about — and what the back of his head is about, on some level.”
AMC interviewed Mr. Glaser about creating the poster. Here is a reprint of that exclusive interview:
Q: You’re responsible for so many iconic images — the I Love New York logo, Bob Dylan’s Greatest Hits album poster, the DC Comics logo. Is there a piece of work you’re most fond of?
A: It’s a lot like having a lot of children — it’s very hard to pick the one that I love the most. But when I’m finished with a job, I’m finished with it. And it just sort of goes into the storage room, and I’m on to the next… Truthfully, I’m more interested in what I’m going to do than what I’ve already done.
Q: Were you a fan of the show before being asked to contribute art?
A: Yes! I watch it all the time. It was an environment that I grew up in. I had a lot of friends in the advertising business, and it was a growth of a particular moment in the advertising world… I used to work for ad agencies frequently — a lot more then than I do now. So I knew the world. And Mad Men is a really wonderful re-evocation of that time.
Q: Tell us about your process. Was it any different for this project?
A: I liked the show, and I like the intelligence of the people who were approaching me. And I thought, let’s give it a try. And the boundaries seemed well-established, which is to say that they wanted something suggestive and powerful and certainly vigorous in color. And it had to be very assertive. It also had a technical problem of reintegrating the figure [of Don Draper] that has become symbolic of the program and making it look as though it worked together with a totally separate piece of art, which that’s not so easy. The two things have to be harmonious and convincing as a single experience.
Q: The idea was originally to do an abstract. How did the figure of the woman that Don Draper is facing come back into play?
A: In the process of doing it, it just felt more convincing and more interesting to have some figurative element, notably the head of a woman and the wine being poured. So we moved away from the idea of having a sort of wallpaper extraction that would sort of symbolize the moment towards having a bit of narration where the characters in the image are related to a story that as going on.
Q: What was it like trying to re-evoke your style from that era?
A: Sometimes the problem you have is that you can’t do what you once did, especially at my age. But the real issue is the definition of the problem itself: This was supposed to evoke a feeling of what that moment in time felt like for people who actually experienced it, right? But most of the people who watch the show didn’t live through that era, so it’s a funny idea of simulating for people of what they don’t have any memory of and convincing them in a way that this is what it was like… It’s a complex philosophical issue.
Q: How important is it to you that a new generation of viewers connect with what the era was about?
A: Everything we know is in the brain and not actually out there. There’s no reality out there. So that era was different for everybody, but, for me… I was being influenced by very strange things like Art Nouveau and other things that seemed significant at the time because they were deviations from modernism. But it was that departure from all the modern work that was going on at the time that made my work characteristic.
Q: What do you remember most about those years?
A: I knew [Bob] Dylan, and I worked a lot for Albert Grossman who was a friend who represented the band and represented Peter, Paul and Mary. I was sort of in the middle of it. I helped Dylan find a house in Woodstock, and to some degree I was part of that in terms of the friendships that I had developed during the period… A lot of people know the Dylan poster, and to large degree because it’s Dylan, but also because it circulated by the millions with that last album of his and became — if you want to use the phrase — iconic of the period.
Don takes off with the Mad Men Season 7 premiere, Sun. April 13 at 10/9c. images courtesy of AMC and the New York Times.
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