Niels Hartmann: Difference between revisions

From Research Realm
No edit summary
 
(6 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
| image =
| alt =
| caption =
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1932|4|9|df=y}}
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1932|4|9|df=y}}
| birth_place = [[Wikipedia:Gentofte Municipality|Gentofte]], [[Wikipedia:Capital Region of Denmark|Hovedstade]], [[Wikipedia:Denmark|Denmark]]
| birth_place = [[Wikipedia:Gentofte Municipality|Gentofte]], [[Wikipedia:Capital Region of Denmark|Hovedstade]], [[Wikipedia:Denmark|Denmark]]
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1978|||1932|4|9|df=y}}
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1978|||1932|4|9|df=y}}
| death_place =
| occupation = Graphic designer
| occupation = Graphic designer
| years_active = 1950–1978
| years_active = 1950–1978
Line 12: Line 8:
}}
}}


'''Niels Hartzack Hartmann''' (9 April 1932–1978) was a Danish [[Wikipedia:Graphic designer|graphic designer]]. He worked with [[the LEGO Group]] during the late 1960s and 1970s designing packaging and catalogues.
'''Niels Hartzack Hartmann''' (9 April 1932–1978) was a Danish [[Wikipedia:Graphic designer|graphic designer]] and [[Wikipedia:Art director|art director]]. He worked in advertising in Denmark and Sweden and was known for his symbol and typography designs. During the late 1960s and 1970s he created packaging and print material for [[the LEGO Group]], and is sometimes credited with co-designing the 1973 [[LEGO]] logo. He is one of around 500 artists to have been a member of [[Wikipedia:Alliance Graphique Internationale|Alliance Graphique Internationale]].


== Biography ==
== Biography ==
Niels Hartmann was born on 9 April 1932 in the [[Wikipedia:Hellerup|Hellerup]] district of [[Wikipedia:Gentofte Municipality|Gentofte Municipality]], Denmark. He was the third child of Svend Hartzack Hartmann and Elna Tilling, and was considered to be part of the seventh generation of the Danish-Norwegian Hartmann family.<ref name=Fabritius/> He was educated in art at the [[Wikipedia:Danmarks Designskole|School of Arts and Crafts]]{{efn|{{lang-da|Kunsthåndværkerskolen}}, also called the School of Arts, Crafts and Industrial Design;<ref name="Bernsen"/> known since 1991 as the Danish Design School ({{lang-da|Danmarks Designskole}}).<ref name=dkds/>}} in [[Wikipedia:Copenhagen|Copenhagen]] from 1946–1950. In 1950 he established the studio Hartmann Design with his older brother Jørgen Hartzack, who was also a graphic designer.<ref name="DLPS Lego"/><ref name=Cooper/> Niels moved his work to [[Wikipedia:Helsingborg|Helsingborg]] in [[Wikipedia:Skåne|Skåne]], Sweden in 1958, to the Danish island [[Wikipedia:Als (island)|Als]] in 1959, and to [[Wikipedia:Malmö|Malmö]] in Skåne again from 1960–1963. From 1963–1964 he worked with advertiser Thomas Bergsøe, then with Morten Peetz-Schou from 1965–1966; he was a freelancer at the Danish Agricultural Marketing Board's advertising department.<ref name="DLPS Arcodan"/><ref name="DLPS Lego"/>
Niels Hartmann was born on 9 April 1932 in the [[Wikipedia:Hellerup|Hellerup]] district of [[Wikipedia:Gentofte Municipality|Gentofte Municipality]], Denmark. He was the third child of Svend Hartzack Hartmann and Elna Tilling, and was considered to be part of the seventh generation of the Danish-Norwegian Hartmann family.<ref name=Fabritius/> He was educated in art at the [[Wikipedia:Danmarks Designskole|School of Arts and Crafts]]{{efn|{{lang-da|Kunsthåndværkerskolen}}, also called the School of Arts, Crafts and Industrial Design;<ref name="Bernsen"/> known since 1991 as the Danish Design School ({{lang-da|Danmarks Designskole}}).<ref name=dkds/>}} in [[Wikipedia:Copenhagen|Copenhagen]] from 1946–1950. In 1950 he established the studio Hartmann Design with his older brother Jørgen Hartzack, who was also a graphic designer.<ref name="DLPS Lego"/><ref name=Cooper/> Niels moved his work to [[Wikipedia:Helsingborg|Helsingborg]] in [[Wikipedia:Skåne|Skåne]], Sweden in 1958, to the Danish island [[Wikipedia:Als (island)|Als]] in 1959, and to [[Wikipedia:Malmö|Malmö]] in Skåne from 1960–1963. From 1963–1964 he worked with advertiser Thomas Bergsøe, then with Morten Peetz-Schou from 1965–1966; he was also a freelancer at the Danish Agricultural Marketing Board's advertising department.<ref name="DLPS Arcodan"/><ref name="DLPS Lego"/>


Starting in the late 1960s Hartmann was involved in [[Dot Zero Designgroup]], a studio co-owned by the LEGO Group.<ref name="DLPS Lego"/> In 1967 he became a member of [[Wikipedia:Alliance Graphique Internationale|Alliance Graphique Internationale]]; he was the first Danish member who became an established designer after [[Wikipedia:World War II|World War II]].<ref name="AGI Niels"/> That same year he opened his own studio in Copenhagen, Niels Hartmann Industriel-grafik A/S, which he operated until his death in 1978.<ref name="DLPS Lego"/><ref name="Vem ar det 1995"/>
Starting in the late 1960s Hartmann was involved in [[Dot Zero Designgroup]], a studio co-owned by the LEGO Group.<ref name="DLPS Lego"/> In 1967 he became a member of Alliance Graphique Internationale (AGI); he was the first Danish member who became an established designer after [[Wikipedia:World War II|World War II]].<ref name="AGI Niels"/> That same year he opened his own studio, Niels Hartmann Industriel-grafik A/S, in the [[Wikipedia:Holte|Holte]] district of Copenhagen, and operated it until his death in 1978.<ref name="DLPS Lego"/><ref name="Photographis 69"/> Some of the graphic artists employed at Hartmann's studio included Folkmar Roll (1967–1969),<ref name="DLPS Lufthavn"/> [[Rolf Lagersson]] (1967–1970),<ref name="DLPS Lego"/> Flemming Nielsen (1969, 1971–1978), and Dirk Baillie (1972–1978).<ref name="DLPS Bendix"/> Lagersson and Roll were involved in his work with LEGO, and both would go on to work at Dot Zero directly.<ref name="Photographis 69"/>


Some of Hartmann's employees who were co-designers for LEGO include [[Rolf Lagersson]] and Folkmar Roll.<ref name="Photographis 69"/> Some sources co-credit him as redesigning the LEGO logo with Rolf Lagersson in 1972, used from 1973–1998.<ref name="Lego history"/>
Hartman is sometimes co-credited with Rolf Lagersson for the 1972 redesign of the LEGO logo, used from 1973 until its adjustment in 1998.<ref name="Lego history"/><ref name="DLPS Lego"/> The Alliance Graphique Internationale website claims that Hartmann was responsible for the "modular" nature of the LEGO logo, intending it to look good used anywhere and be "almost impossible" to wrongly apply.<ref name="AGI Niels"/> Other sources, however, attribute the logo solely to Lagersson.


== Gallery of works ==
== Gallery of works ==
<gallery mode=packed>
<gallery mode=packed>
Photographis 69, Packaging 740.jpg | Set no. 114 packaging, 1966
Photographis 69, Packaging 740.jpg | Set 114 packaging, 1966
Photographis 69, Packaging 738.jpg | Set no. 332 packaging, 1967
Photographis 69, Packaging 738.jpg | Set 332 packaging, 1967
Photographis 69, Packaging 741.jpg | Set no. 335 packaging, 1967
Photographis 69, Packaging 741.jpg | Set 335 packaging, 1967
Photographis 69, Packaging 735.jpg | Set no. 118 "Electronic Train" packaging, 1968
Modern Publicity 37, p120-121, Packaging 1b.jpg | LEGO rail packaging, 1967
Photographis 69, Packaging 736.jpg | Set no. 120 packaging, 1968
Photographis 69, Packaging 735.jpg | Set 118 "Electronic Train" packaging, 1968
Photographis 69, Packaging 739.jpg | Set no. 720 packaging, 1969
Photographis 69, Packaging 736.jpg | Set 120 packaging, 1968
Photographis 69, Packaging 737.jpg | Set no. 720 packaging (opened), 1969
Photographis 69, Packaging 739.jpg | Set 720 packaging, 1969
Photographis 69, Packaging 737.jpg | Set 720 packaging (opened), 1969
Modern Publicity 39, p86-87, Packaging 8.jpg | Set 345 packaging, 1969
Modern Publicity 40, p76-77, Packaging 6.jpg | Packaging for gears and Legoland cars, 1970
Graphis – Packaging 3, Pastimes 434.jpg | Legoland cars packaging, 1970–1971
Graphis – Packaging 3, Pastimes 434.jpg | Legoland cars packaging, 1970–1971
Modern Publicity 37, p120-121, Packaging 1a.jpg | LEGO decals, 1967
File:LEGO logo 1973.svg | LEGO logo (with Rolf Lagersson), 1972
</gallery>
</gallery>


Line 46: Line 47:
<ref name=dkds>{{cite web |url=http://www.dkds.dk/skolen/Skolens_Historie |title=History - The Danish Design School |date=26 January 2011 |website=The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110719122517/http://www.dkds.dk/skolen/Skolens_Historie |archive-date=2011-07-19}}</ref>
<ref name=dkds>{{cite web |url=http://www.dkds.dk/skolen/Skolens_Historie |title=History - The Danish Design School |date=26 January 2011 |website=The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110719122517/http://www.dkds.dk/skolen/Skolens_Historie |archive-date=2011-07-19}}</ref>


<ref name="DLPS Arcodan">{{cite web |url=http://danishlogo.dk/?portfolio=arcodan&pnt=366 |title=Arcodan |website=Danish Logo Preservation Society |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180221201415/http://danishlogo.dk/?portfolio=arcodan&pnt=366 |archive-date=2018-02-21}}</ref>
<ref name="DLPS Arcodan">{{cite web |url=http://danishlogo.dk/?portfolio=arcodan&pnt=366 |title=Arcodan |website=Danish Logo Preservation Society |first=Peter |last=Gyllan |year=2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180221201415/http://danishlogo.dk/?portfolio=arcodan&pnt=366 |archive-date=2018-02-21}}</ref>


<ref name="DLPS Lego">{{cite web |url=http://danishlogo.dk/?portfolio=lego&pnt=366 |title=LEGO |website=Danish Logo Preservation Society |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180221200649/http://danishlogo.dk/?portfolio=lego&pnt=366 |archive-date=2018-02-21}}</ref>
<ref name="DLPS Bendix">{{cite web |url=http://danishlogo.dk/?portfolio=bendix-nova-gruppen&pnt=366 |title=Bendix Nova Gruppen |website=Danish Logo Preservation Society |first=Peter |last=Gyllan |year=2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180221201425/http://danishlogo.dk/?portfolio=bendix-nova-gruppen&pnt=366 |archive-date=2018-02-21}}</ref>


<ref name=Fabritius>{{cite book |url=https://slaegtsbibliotek.dk/920459.pdf |title=Slægterne Hartmann i Danmark og Norge |trans-title=The Hartmann families in Denmark and Norway |first=Albert |last=Fabritius |year=1945 |publisher=Generalkonsul Hjalmar Hartmann |location=[[Wikipedia:Copenhagen|København]] |language=da |page=63 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240614051336/https://slaegtsbibliotek.dk/920459.pdf |archive-date=2024-06-14 |url-status=live |access-date=2024-08-06 |via=Danskernes Historie Online}}</ref>
<ref name="DLPS Lego">{{cite web |url=http://danishlogo.dk/?portfolio=lego&pnt=366 |title=LEGO |website=Danish Logo Preservation Society |first=Peter |last=Gyllan |year=2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180221200649/http://danishlogo.dk/?portfolio=lego&pnt=366 |archive-date=2018-02-21}}</ref>
 
<ref name="DLPS Lufthavn">{{cite web |url=http://danishlogo.dk/?portfolio=billund-lufthavn&pnt=366 |title=Billund Lufthavn |website=Danish Logo Preservation Society |first=Peter |last=Gyllan |year=2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180221194514/http://danishlogo.dk/?portfolio=billund-lufthavn&pnt=366 |archive-date=2018-02-21}}</ref>


<ref name="Lego history">{{cite web |url=https://www.lego.com/en-us/history/articles/f-a-modern-international-company |title=A modern, international company – LEGO History |website=[[LEGO.com]] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240731120752/https://www.lego.com/en-us/history/articles/f-a-modern-international-company |archive-date=31 July 2024 |url-status=live |access-date=5 August 2024}}</ref>
<ref name="Lego history">{{cite web |url=https://www.lego.com/en-us/history/articles/f-a-modern-international-company |title=A modern, international company – LEGO History |website=[[LEGO.com]] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240731120752/https://www.lego.com/en-us/history/articles/f-a-modern-international-company |archive-date=31 July 2024 |url-status=live |access-date=5 August 2024}}</ref>
<ref name=Fabritius>{{cite book |url=https://slaegtsbibliotek.dk/920459.pdf |title=Slægterne Hartmann i Danmark og Norge |trans-title=The Hartmann families in Denmark and Norway |first=Albert |last=Fabritius |year=1945 |publisher=Generalkonsul Hjalmar Hartmann |location=[[Wikipedia:Copenhagen|København]] |language=da |page=63 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240614051336/https://slaegtsbibliotek.dk/920459.pdf |archive-date=2024-06-14 |url-status=live |access-date=2024-08-06 |via=Danskernes Historie Online}}</ref>


<ref name="Photographis 69">{{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_0803857500/page/222/mode/2up?view=theater |title=Photographis '69 |year=1969 |editor-first=Walter |editor-last=Herdeg |publisher=Hastings House |location=[[Wikipedia:New York City|New York]] |isbn=0-8038-5750-0 |pages=222–223}}</ref>
<ref name="Photographis 69">{{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_0803857500/page/222/mode/2up?view=theater |title=Photographis '69 |year=1969 |editor-first=Walter |editor-last=Herdeg |publisher=Hastings House |location=[[Wikipedia:New York City|New York]] |isbn=0-8038-5750-0 |pages=222–223}}</ref>
<ref name="Vem ar det 1995">{{cite encyclopedia |url=https://runeberg.org/vemardet/1995/0628.html |title=Lagersson, Rolf H |encyclopedia=[[Wikipedia:sv:Vem är det|Vem är det: Svensk biografisk handbok]] |trans-encyclopedia=Who is it: Swedish biographical handbook |language=sv |publisher=[[Wikipedia:Norstedts förlag|Norstedts förlag]] |location=[[Wikipedia:Stockholm|Stockholm]] |edition=1995 |year=1994 |editor-first1=Hans |editor-last1=Uddling |editor-first2=Katrin |editor-last2=Paabo |page=628 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240805054837/https://runeberg.org/vemardet/1995/0628.html |archive-date=5 August 2024 |url-status=live |via=[[Wikipedia:Project Runeberg|Project Runeberg]] |isbn=91-1-943202-X |issn=0347-3341}}</ref>
}}
}}



Latest revision as of 12:10, 11 August 2024

Niels Hartmann
Born(1932-04-09)9 April 1932
Died1978(1978-00-00) (aged 45–46)
EducationKunsthåndværkerskolen
OccupationGraphic designer
Years active1950–1978

Niels Hartzack Hartmann (9 April 1932–1978) was a Danish graphic designer and art director. He worked in advertising in Denmark and Sweden and was known for his symbol and typography designs. During the late 1960s and 1970s he created packaging and print material for the LEGO Group, and is sometimes credited with co-designing the 1973 LEGO logo. He is one of around 500 artists to have been a member of Alliance Graphique Internationale.

Biography

Niels Hartmann was born on 9 April 1932 in the Hellerup district of Gentofte Municipality, Denmark. He was the third child of Svend Hartzack Hartmann and Elna Tilling, and was considered to be part of the seventh generation of the Danish-Norwegian Hartmann family.[1] He was educated in art at the School of Arts and Crafts[note 1] in Copenhagen from 1946–1950. In 1950 he established the studio Hartmann Design with his older brother Jørgen Hartzack, who was also a graphic designer.[4][5] Niels moved his work to Helsingborg in Skåne, Sweden in 1958, to the Danish island Als in 1959, and to Malmö in Skåne from 1960–1963. From 1963–1964 he worked with advertiser Thomas Bergsøe, then with Morten Peetz-Schou from 1965–1966; he was also a freelancer at the Danish Agricultural Marketing Board's advertising department.[6][4]

Starting in the late 1960s Hartmann was involved in Dot Zero Designgroup, a studio co-owned by the LEGO Group.[4] In 1967 he became a member of Alliance Graphique Internationale (AGI); he was the first Danish member who became an established designer after World War II.[7] That same year he opened his own studio, Niels Hartmann Industriel-grafik A/S, in the Holte district of Copenhagen, and operated it until his death in 1978.[4][8] Some of the graphic artists employed at Hartmann's studio included Folkmar Roll (1967–1969),[9] Rolf Lagersson (1967–1970),[4] Flemming Nielsen (1969, 1971–1978), and Dirk Baillie (1972–1978).[10] Lagersson and Roll were involved in his work with LEGO, and both would go on to work at Dot Zero directly.[8]

Hartman is sometimes co-credited with Rolf Lagersson for the 1972 redesign of the LEGO logo, used from 1973 until its adjustment in 1998.[11][4] The Alliance Graphique Internationale website claims that Hartmann was responsible for the "modular" nature of the LEGO logo, intending it to look good used anywhere and be "almost impossible" to wrongly apply.[7] Other sources, however, attribute the logo solely to Lagersson.

Gallery of works

Notes

  1. Danish: Kunsthåndværkerskolen, also called the School of Arts, Crafts and Industrial Design;[2] known since 1991 as the Danish Design School (Danish: Danmarks Designskole).[3]

References

  1. Fabritius, Albert (1945). Slægterne Hartmann i Danmark og Norge [The Hartmann families in Denmark and Norway] (PDF) (in dansk). København: Generalkonsul Hjalmar Hartmann. p. 63. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2024-06-14. Retrieved 2024-08-06 – via Danskernes Historie Online.
  2. Bernsen, Jens; Capetillo, Birgitta, eds. (1988). Profession: Designer (Search results for "Kunsthåndværkerskolen"). Copenhagen: Dansk Design Center. ISBN 87-87385-40-6.
  3. "History - The Danish Design School". The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts. 26 January 2011. Archived from the original on 2011-07-19.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 Gyllan, Peter (2018). "LEGO". Danish Logo Preservation Society. Archived from the original on 2018-02-21.
  5. Cooper, Al (1978). World of Logotypes: Trademark Encyclopedia Volume 2. Art Direction Book Co. p. H-23. ISBN 978-0-91015-834-3.
  6. Gyllan, Peter (2018). "Arcodan". Danish Logo Preservation Society. Archived from the original on 2018-02-21.
  7. 7.0 7.1 "Niels Hartmann, Denmark (1967)". Alliance Graphique Internationale. Archived from the original on 31 July 2024.
  8. 8.0 8.1 Herdeg, Walter, ed. (1969). Photographis '69. New York: Hastings House. pp. 222–223. ISBN 0-8038-5750-0.
  9. Gyllan, Peter (2018). "Billund Lufthavn". Danish Logo Preservation Society. Archived from the original on 2018-02-21.
  10. Gyllan, Peter (2018). "Bendix Nova Gruppen". Danish Logo Preservation Society. Archived from the original on 2018-02-21.
  11. "A modern, international company – LEGO History". LEGO.com. Archived from the original on 31 July 2024. Retrieved 5 August 2024.