ZUSAMMENARBEIT SCHAFFT ERFOLG. MACHT MIT-HELFT GEWINNEN!
Dos imprentas (ahora desaparecidas), Parker-Holladay Company y Mather & Co., estuvieron a la vanguardia de este creciente negocio de motivación. Ambas compañías crearon una línea de materiales de motivación a los que los dueños de negocios podrían suscribirse (los nuevos carteles y tpostales llegarían cada mes) para colgar y entregar en el lugar de trabajo. Las dos compañías contrataron a algunos de los mejores ilustradores de la época, como Willard Frederick Elmes y Hal Depuy para crear estos atractivos carteles motivacionales.
Detalles del producto
Ficha de datos
- Año
- 1929
- Altura
- 71
- Ancho
- 56
- Pais
- Alemania
- Conservación
- B+
- Impresión
- Litografía
- Soporte
- Entelado
- Autor
- DOVAL
Descripción
CLASIFICACIÓN DE LOS CARTELES SEGÚN SU CONSERVACIÓN (en negrita la correspondiente a este ejemplar):
A+ Perfecto estado de conservación, muy raro encontrar un ejemplar en este estado impecable.
A Cartel en muy buen estado de conservación. Puede presentar algún desgarro inapreciable en los márgenes, no presenta ninguna falta de papel. Los colores son frescos y no se aprecian manchas.
A- Puede presentar alguna leve marca de doblez, desgarro o pequeña falta de papel en los márgenes. Si presenta restauración, está realizada con éxito.
B+ El cartel puede estar restaurado. Se aprecian levemente los defectos.
B Cartel en buen estado de conservación. Presenta desgarros, algunas manchas y algunas faltas de papel, jamás afectando al área crucial del diseño. Los colores son frescos y el cartel tiene una apariencia general muy buena.
B- El cartel está restaurado, se aprecian algunos defectos y leve pérdida de color en las marcas de doblez.
C+ Las restauraciones son visibles.
C Cartel en regular estado de conservación. Presenta desgarros, manchas, marcas de doblez y o faltas de papel que puede afectar parcialmente al área crucial del diseño, los colores pueden estar algo desvaídos y el cartel tiene una apariencia general de regular a buena.
C- Requiere restauración.
Motivational posters…
This new, entrepreneurial definition of manhood reached a peak in the decade before the Great Depression. It was a time of idealism and optimism, and people were bullish both about the future of the economy and people’s ability to change their behavior and develop their character. Pithy maxims were popular (for example, Henry Ford was fond of saying, “Chop your own wood and it will warm you twice”), and it was felt that constructive encouragement could helps folks from any walk of life improve themselves. During this time, businesses began hanging beautifully illustrated posters with the same slogans that authors like Orison Swett Marden shared with readers a decade earlier. There were even trading cards with similar “go get-em” language that were handed out to employees like baseball cards. Business owners hoped that these posters and cards would help boost productivity and morale and inculcate uneducated and immigrant workers with the virile values needed to thrive in the world of business.
Two (now defunct) printing companies — Parker-Holladay Company and Mather & Co. — were at the forefront of this burgeoning motivation business. Both companies created a line of motivational materials that business owners could subscribe to (new posters and cards would arrive each month) and hang up and hand out in the workplace. The two companies hired some of the best illustrators of the day such as Willard Frederick Elmes and Hal Depuy to create these handsome motivational posters.
The Great Depression dealt a serious, if temporary, blow to the Self-Made Man archetype. With the crash in the market, and consequently in morale, the motivational craze fizzled, and the posters produced by Parker-Holladay and Mather & Co. became tattered ephemera that collected dust in antique stores and attics. Recently, however, there’s been a renewed interest in these unique pieces of 20th century history. Traveling exhibitions containing these vintage posters have criss-crossed the country and auction houses are selling them for thousands of dollars.
I can understand the appeal. The vivid artwork and graphic design is top-notch, and while the copy is sometimes ham-fisted, I actually find it inspiring as a man — perhaps because I’m still a believer in the self-made ideal. The advice is pretty timeless and just as applicable today as it was then. The posters teach the sort of stuff your grandpa would tell you: simple, time-tested principles, that if lived, can lead to a life of success.