NEW YORK, NY.- The Museum of Arts and Design presents Vera Paints a Scarf: The Art and Life of Vera Neumann, the first museum exhibition to comprehensively examine the career of American artist and designer Vera Neumann (1907-1993). On view from August 8, 2019 through January 26, 2020, the exhibition spotlights one of the most successful female design entrepreneurs of the 20th century, and tells the story of an originator of the American lifestyle brand through more than 200 worksfrom a selection of Neumanns paintings, the source of her whimsical design motifs, to her signature scarves, fashions, textiles, and table linens signed with a cursive Vera and stamped with a ladybug.
Created in a fresh, modern style that combined simple yet expressive lines with a vivid palette, Veras distinctive designs, ranging from the nature inspired to the abstract, struck a chord with women consumers at mid-century and beyond, driving her popular and commercial success, said Elissa Auther, Windgate Research and Collections Curator at MAD. Vera firmly believed that fine art should be accessible to all, and that this goal could be realized by injecting good design at an affordable price point into everyday life.
Following her graduation in 1928 from The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art with a fine arts degree in painting, Neumann went on to study at Manhattans Traphagen School of Design. There she was introduced to the idea of a career in design that bridged the fine and commercial arts. Inspired by the Bauhaus philosophy, which encouraged the union of art, craft, and industry, Neumann and her business partner and husband, George Neumann, launched Vera Industries in 1942 with reproductions of her artworks silkscreened onto napkins and placemats.
Sections of the exhibition highlight Neumanns biography and the history of the company she helmed from 1942 until her death in 1993; the fine art that fueled her designs, painted using the East Asian sumi-e technique; the scarf, a hallmark accessory of the company, produced in an array of sizes, shapes, fabrics, and color ways; the companys use of clever marketing, especially the Vera Paints
tagline that associated Neumanns work as a designer with her identity as a fine artist; promotional materials inspired by her international travels; samples of the labels sportswear range, including its first foray into fashion with the 1957 Jollytop; and the coordinated patterns of tablecloths, napkins, placemats, and tablewares that enlivened everyday dining.
Vera Industries, built on the foundation of her joyful and inventive aesthetic, democratic design ethos, fusion of craft and mass production, and ingenious marketing strategies, remains a relevant business model today. During the fifty active years of Neumanns enterprise, she maintained close control over every aspect of product development and manufacture, trademarked her name, copyrighted some 8,000 designs, and grossed more than $100 million in retail sales revenue.
Programs and events at the Museum related to Vera Paints a Scarf will extend the exhibition content, and includes a series of exclusive, private tours led by special guest docents, beginning on August 16 with comedian and downtown New York icon Murray Hill and a Design Happy Hour with a September 18 workshop led by artist, designer, and educator Karen Fuchs, inspired by Neumanns botanical textiles.
In partnership with Bard Graduate Center, MAD will host The Rational Dress Societys History of Counter Fashion, an immersive presentation combining a slide lecture, music, and models wearing examples of historical counter-fashion from the sans-culottes of revolutionary France to the Italian Tute Bianche of the 1990s. A panel discussion about Vera Neumanns career and legacy, moderated by the host of the Design Matters podcast Debbie Millman, will be held on November 23.
Vera: The Life and Art of an Icon, a 208-page tome written by Susan Seid with design journalist and editor Jen Renzi accompanies the exhibition. The books pages are filled with the designers original sketches and paintings, personal and commercial photographs, marketing materials, and contemporary photographs by Steven Meckler.