Guerre a La Faim is a striking example of how this philosophy is applied and demonstrates that sometimes a simple image with less text can have a greater impact. It also shows the designer’s devotion to humanitarian causes.
Sample sketches, showing the development of Games’ ideas through to the finished product, provide glimpses of the creative process and the extraordinary skill and detail with which he worked.
Abram Games’ skill with an airbrush was so developed that in his more flamboyant moods he signed his cheques with it, and tiny sketches on display also demonstrate this talent.
When designing posters Games would first produce images in thumbnail size, as posters would need to have impact when seen from a distance.
Once the posters were recreated in full size he would hang them on his wall for several weeks, assessing their suitability. Only when he was happy with them would he then complete his signature with a full stop.
Amongst the images on display are designs for the 1951 Festival of Britain emblem and the first animated screen identity, as well as advertisements for Guinness, Shell and the Financial Times.
But Games’ obsession for design did not end with the aesthetic. Unable to operate the Cona Coffee Machine, Games ended up buying a lathe, hiring an art student and redesigning the product entirely.
Games’ association with the Gestetner Corporation also resulted in him taking one of their copiers apart and redesigning the interior to create a new copying system, which was eventually superseded by Xerox.
As part of the exhibition a symposium on graphic design was held at the University of Sunderland and attended by Abram Games’ children Naomi and Daniel, who gave a lecture on their father’s work.
Naomi is a designer herself and designed children’s books before her father died in 1996. Since then she has carried on her father’s legacy by helping to organise the exhibition and publishing a book.
“Since he died this has been a full time job for me. The plan is to have the work shown outside of London for the next three years and to show it in America, on the continent and hopefully Israel. Then the work will just be put in an archive which students can come and visit.”
For more information on Abram Games, his work and the book which supports the exhibition visit www.abramgames.com.