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Bob Gill (artist)

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Bob Gill (b. Brooklyn, New York, January 17, 1931), American illustrator and graphic designer.

Biography

He played the piano at summer resorts in the Catskill Mountains, New York, to pay his school tuition. He attended the Philadelphia Museum School of Art (1948–1951), Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts (1951), City College of New York (1952, 1955). When he graduated he became a professional graphic designer in New York City.

Gill acted as a film title designer in several films, including several films of Ray Harryhausen.[1]

In 1960 after an interview in a New York hotel room for a job in London, he moved to the UK to work for Charles Hobson, at a "hack advertising agency", according to Gill, which was later sold to Grey Advertising (now Grey Global Group).

April Fool's Day, 1962, Gill, Alan Fletcher and Colin Forbes established Fletcher/Forbes/Gill design studio, the forerunner of Pentagram. More than 100,000 copies of the partnership’s book, Graphic Design: Visual Comparisons (New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1963), were sold. F/F/G soon outgrew their small studio and moved into a huge Victorian former gun factory on a canal. They started the Designers and Art Directors Association D&AD and opened a second office in Geneva.

In 1967, Gill left the partnership and assumed independent freelancing again, including teaching, filmmaking and writing children’s books. He returned to New York in 1975 to write and design Beatlemania, the largest multimedia musical up to that time on Broadway, on which he worked with Robert Rabinowitz.[2] He also proposed a peace monument for Times Square, Gill wanted to collect military junk from all over the world, pile it 40 feet high, spray it matte black, and mount it on a block of white marble. The New York City Fine Arts Commission did not like the idea.[3]

For his graphic design work, Gill has won a number of awards, sold illustrations to Esquire, Architectural Forum, Fortune, Seventeen, and The Nation magazines and has illustrated children’s books and designed film titles. He has also designed for Apple Corps records, Rainbow Theatre, Pirelli, Nestlé, CBS, Universal Pictures, Joseph Losey, Queen (now Harpers & Queen), High Times magazines and the United Nations. He was elected to the New York Art Directors Club Hall of Fame in 1991 and the Designers and Art Directors Association of London has presented him with their Lifetime Achievement Award.

He lives in New York with his wife, New York Public Radio's Sara Fishko. They have a son, Jack Gill, and a daughter, Kate Gill.[4]

Teaching posts

Awards (partial)

  • 1955, Gold Medal, New York Art Directors Club, for a CBS television title, US
  • 1999, President's Award, D&AD (British Design & Art Direction), UK

Books written

  • Bob Gill’s Portfolio, Amsterdam: Wim Crouwel / Stedelijk Museum, 1967
  • Bob Gill’s Portfolio, London: Lund Humphries, 1968
  • I Keep Changing, New York: Scroll Press, 1971. | ISBN 0-87592-025-X)
  • Bob Gill’s New York, London: Kynoch Press, 1971.
  • Ups & Downs, Reading, Massachusetts: Addison-Wesley, 1974.
  • Forget All the Rules You Ever Learned About Graphic Design, Including the Ones in this Book, New York: Watson-Guptill, 1981. | ISBN 0-8230-1863-6
  • Graphic Design Made Difficult, New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1992. | ISBN 0-442-01098-2
  • Unspecial Effects for Graphic Designers, New York: Graphis, 2001 | ISBN 1-931241-00-7
  • Graphic Design as a Second Language, Victoria: Images Publishing Group, 2003 | ISBN 1-920744-39-8
  • Illustration, Victoria: Images Publishing Group, 2004 | ISBN 1-920744-73-8
  • LogoMania, Gloucester: Rockport Publishers, 2006 | ISBN 1-59253-252-7
  • Words Into Pictures, Victoria: Images Publishing Group, 2009 | ISBN 1-86470-326-1
  • Bob Gill, so far., London: Laurence King Publishing, 2011 | ISBN 1-85669-819-X

References

  • “Bob Gill” in Morgan, Ann (1984). Contemporary Designers, New York: Macmillan. | ISBN 0-333-33524-4
  • Baglee, Patrick (1999). “Bob Gill”, an interview, Eye magazine, no. 61.