Wim Crouwel
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Wim Crouwel, born in 1928 in Groningen, Netherlands, is a Dutch graphic designer and typographer.
He is known for his posters and exhibition design for the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam. Crouwel has designed several font sets, of which the New Alphabet (1967) is best known. New Alphabet is a highly abstract font, based on a dot-matrix system. Crouwel intended it to be easily read by computers.
Fonts designed by Crouwel
- New Alphabet 1, 2 and 3
- Stedelijk Alphabet
- Fodor Alphabet
- Gridnik Alphabet.
Important works by Crouwel
- 'Cut-up' Calendar for the Van der Geer printing company (1963-1964)
- Logo Rabobank (1973)
- Number Postage Stamps for the PTT in the Netherlands (In circulation 1976-2000).
He has been and still is one of the most important designers in Dutch graphic history. In the years 1985-1993 he was director of the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam
Crouwel is still an active member of the Dutch graphic design scene.
[edit] Literature
Hugues Boekraad et al., Wim Crouwel: Mode en Module, 010 Publishers, Rotterdam (1997) (in Dutch).
Kees Broos, Wim Crouwel: Alphabets, BIS Publishers, Amsterdam (2003) (in English) (ISBN 90-6369-037-1).
Catherine de Smet and Emmanuel Bérard, Wim Crouwel: Architectures Typographiques / Typographic Architectures, Editions F7, Paris (2007) (French/English).