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    <title>modernism on Posters.org</title>
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    <description>Recent content in modernism on Posters.org</description>
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      <title>Bauhaus and the Poster: Form Follows Persuasion</title>
      <link>https://posters.org/2026/04/03/bauhaus-and-the-poster-form-follows-persuasion/</link>
      <pubDate>Fri, 03 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
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      <description>The Bauhaus had an ambivalent relationship with the poster. Founded by Walter Gropius in Dessau in 1919 with the intention of reconciling fine art and craft production, the school&amp;rsquo;s core pedagogical commitments — truth to materials, functional form, rejection of ornament — did not map cleanly onto a medium whose entire purpose is affective manipulation. A poster that tells the truth about its own conditions of production is not necessarily a poster that works.</description>
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      <title>The Swiss International Style and the Grid That Ate Design</title>
      <link>https://posters.org/2026/04/03/swiss-international-style-and-the-grid/</link>
      <pubDate>Fri, 03 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
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      <description>The International Typographic Style, developed primarily in Zurich and Basel in the 1950s, is the most successful design movement of the twentieth century by any measure of influence. It conquered corporate identity, magazine layout, wayfinding systems, and poster design with a thoroughness that would be remarkable even if its formal prescriptions had been arbitrary — which they were not. The Swiss style solved real problems, and its solutions were good enough that they became defaults, and its defaults became invisible, and its invisibility is now so complete that most people cannot see the infrastructure it built.</description>
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