For immediate release

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MELCHER MEDIA TO PUBLISH
MICHAEL GRAVES DESIGNS
The Art of the Everyday Object

the first book in a new publishing program

"The democratization of design is the great design story of our age, and Graves is the only serious architect who has participated in it with total, unconflicted zeal. Indeed it is no exaggeration to say that he is as much a cause as an effect of this phenomenon."
-- Paul Goldberger, Metropolis (February 2004)

Melcher Media is pleased to announce the forthcoming publication of MICHAEL GRAVES DESIGNS: The Art of the Everyday Object (June 2004, $24.95, 128 pages), written by Phil Patton and designed by Pentagram. A world-famous architect, Graves has created more than 1,000 consumer products over the last three decades, elevating everyday objects÷from toasters to toilet brushes÷into icons that have redefined the American home. MICHAEL GRAVES DESIGNS offers an exclusive look at what Patton describes as Gravesâ "generous and humanistic approach that links him with sources as varied as the Renaissance, the Bauhaus, and the Arts and Crafts movement."

In recent years, thanks to the commercial success of his landmark collaboration with Target Stores÷a partnership that recently marked its five-year anniversary÷Michael Graves has become a household name, equivalent in the public eye with the very concept of "good design." In this new book he states, "In designing everyday objects, I want to encourage the impression of familiarity and also allow those objects to be seen in a slightly different way." In four original essays÷Figurative Design, Domesticity, Color, Scale÷Graves describes the thinking and themes behind his work, illuminating his unparalleled ability to create eye-catching, witty, and formally beautiful products with popular appeal.

Generously illustrated with more than 200 color images, MICHAEL GRAVES DESIGNS surveys a fascinating career in design and retail. Featured are instantly recognizable projects with the Walt Disney Company and the Italian tableware manufacturer Alessi, maker of Gravesâ playful and sophisticated chrome "Singing Bird" teakettle. Since 1985, a staggering amount of two million of these teakettles has been sold worldwide. Also seen are projects with Sunar, Steuben, Belvedere Studio, and Dansk, among others.

BOOK SPECIFICATIONS:
  • Title
    MICHAEL GRAVES DESIGNS:
    The Art of the Everyday Object
  • Author
    Phil Patton, with Michael Graves Design Group
  • Designed by
    Pentagram
  • Retail price
    $24.95
  • Pages
    128
  • Illustrations
    More than 200 in color
  • Binding
    Hardcover
  • Trim size
    6 x 12 inches (vertical)
  • Publication date
    June 2004
  • Press images
    Available upon request
    julia@juliajoern.com
And of course, this book documents the Graves-Target phenomenon. Presented are toasters, jewelry, clocks, watches, packaging, telephones, frames, fans, games, a wireless computer mouse, and even a prefabricated modular home. Also included are examples of Target's whimsical advertising campaigns and Gravesâ architectural renderings of store displays. As Paul Goldberger recently wrote in Metropolis, "Gravesâ work for Target may be his most enduring legacy·thanks to mass merchandising, a tiny piece of an architect's oeuvre is within the reach of everyone. There is also a look, a feel, to the products that is consistent, which comes largely from Gravesâ own aesthetic. His objects have a playfulness and warmth to them. And almost all of them do something that is wonderful for any object to do, which is make you smile."

Gravesâ relationship with Target began when the company contributed to the Graves-designed scaffolding that enveloped the Washington Monument during its historic restoration in 1998. Both structural and stunning, the scaffolding provided the proper support and gravitas for this important project, which is also featured in this new book.

MICHAEL GRAVES DESIGNS is bound in a special high-tech rubberlike blue material, called Shadow and manufactured by Fibermark. When Graves determined the color scheme for the Target kitchen appliances÷blue for touch and yellow accents for dials÷the "Graves blue" not only corresponded to the productsâ cool and comfortable handles and knobs, but also became a signature color familiar to millions of shoppers.

Among the book's illustrations are technical drawings, product models and prototypes, rare examples of personal sketches, and specially commissioned photographs that give a behind-the-scenes look at Gravesâ Princeton, New Jersey offices. All of these elements, and the book's affordable price, make MICHAEL GRAVES DESIGNS a must-have for the professional, student, and general consumer alike.

MORE ABOUT MICHAEL GRAVES

Born in Indiana in 1934, Gravesâ father was a cattle dealer and his mother was a nurse. When a young Graves told his mother that he wanted to be an artist, she said, "If you are not as good as Picasso, you will starve," and suggested that he become an architect or engineer. When he learned what an engineer did, he said heâd become an architect and started making sketches of the houses in the neighborhood.

Graves graduated with a degree in architecture from the University of Cincinnati in1958. He then went on to the Harvard Graduate School of Design, which had become a center for modernist thinking in the United States under the leadership of Walter Gropius, the former director of the Bauhaus. After receiving his masters degree, he worked in the office of designer George Nelson, famed for his tables and sofas for Herman Miller and his playful Atomic and Ball clocks. In 1960, Graves won the coveted Prix de Rome, which brought him to the American Academy of Rome for two years.

Upon returning to America, he became a professor of architecture at Princeton University÷where he taught from 1962 to 2001, and where currently he is professor emeritus÷and set up his own architectural practice. Since 1964, Michael Graves & Associates has undertaken a wide variety of architectural projects worldwide, including multi-use urban developments, corporate headquarters, hotels, libraries, theaters, museums, academic buildings, healthcare facilities, sports and recreational facilities, and housing and private residences. Located in two former houses across the street from one another, the architectural practice takes place in one and the product design division, established in 1991, in the other. In 1994, he opened his own store to display and sell his products. In 2003, the Michael Graves Design Group became an independent company within the larger practice.

Gravesâ first major public commission was the Portland Office Building in 1982. This was followed by the Humana Building in Louisville, Kentucky (1982), the Team Disney Building in Burbank, California (1986), the Walt Disney World Dolphin and Swan Hotels in Lake Buena Vista, Florida (1987), and the Denver Central Library (1991).

Recent honors include the National Medal of Arts, presented by President Clinton in 1999, and the A.I.A. (American Institute of Architects) Gold Medal in 2001. About the A.I.A. award, Robert Ivy, Editor in Chief of Architectural Record, wrote, "For Michael Graves, an architect, teacher, and industrial designer, selection as the Gold Medallist brought peer recognition to a man who has elevated the visibility of architecture and architects around the world. His wildly successful foray into product design has proved that design intelligence can breed value for the larger culture."

Gravesâ award-winning work for Target was showcased in the exhibit US Design 1975-2000 at the Museum of Arts and Design in New York in 2003.

ABOUT PHIL PATTON

Phil Patton is the author of BUG: The Strange Mutations of the World's Most Famous Automobile, DREAMLAND: Travels Inside Roswell and Area 51, MADE IN USA: The Secret Histories of the Things that Made America, OPEN ROAD: A Celebration of the American Highway, and the recently reissued VOYAGER, the official story of the world's first around-the-world un-refueled airplane flight.

He writes regularly for the "Design Notebook," "Public Eye," and automotive columns of The New York Times and is a contributing editor of ID magazine, Wired, and Esquire, for which he writes on design and automobiles. He also has written for The New York Times Magazine, Smithsonian, Artforum, Vogue, and many other publications.

He has contributed to catalogs and developed exhibitions at museums around the United States, notably Different Roads: Automobiles for the Next Century, the landmark 1999 exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art for which he was curatorial consultant, and On The Job: Design and the American Office at the National Building Museum in Washington, D.C. He has served as a commentator for CBS News, the History Channel, and several public television series.

He has taught and lectured at the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism in New York, Montclair State University in New Jersey, California College of the Arts in San Francisco, and the School of Visual Arts in New York. He has spoken at the Aspen Design Conference, the IDSA (Industrial Design Society of America) national conference, American Center for Design's "Living Surfaces" conference, the Design Institute at the University of Minnesota, the Cranbrook Academy of Art, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and other venues.

ABOUT PENTAGRAM

Pentagram is an award-winning multi-disciplinary design firm with offices in London, New York, San Francisco, Austin, and Berlin. One of the world's most respected and prestigious firms, Pentagram's range of clients includes multi-national corporations and museums, book and magazine publishers, restaurants, and airlines, among others. They work on design graphics, exhibitions, products, packaging, environments, buildings, and communications programs.

ABOUT MELCHER MEDIA

Founded in 1994 by Charles Melcher and based in New York, Melcher Media is a content producer and packager with more than 40 titles and 4.5 million books in print. With a reputation for extending the craft of bookmaking and pushing the genres of traditional publishing, Melcher Media combines innovative ideas with exceptional design.

Melcher Media has created successful books for a variety of companies and institutions, such as HBO, MTV, Comedy Central, VH-1, National Geographic, the Smithsonian Institution, Lexus, and Nike for a range of publishers, including Broadway Books, Crown, HarperCollins, Penguin Putnam, Pocket Books, St. Martin's Press, Virgin Publishing, Miramax Books, William-Morrow & Company, Alfred A. Knopf, and Chronicle.

In 2003, Melcher Media produced two hugely popular books, in collaboration with two of today's most successful and favorite magazines: SECRETS OF STYLE: InStyle's Complete Guide to Dressing Your Best Every Day and THE LUCKY SHOPPING MANUAL: Building and Improving Your Wardrobe Piece by Piece, which appeared on The New York Times bestseller list. Another recent top seller was 100 Years of Harley-Davidson, part of a larger publishing program Melcher Media developed exclusively for the iconic motor company. And the most playfully perverse genre-bending titles to date, The Pop-up Book of Phobias and The Pop-up Book of Nightmares, have become cult classics.

MICHAEL GRAVES DESIGNS: The Art of the Everyday Object is the first book to be published solely under the Melcher Media imprint. In fall 2004, the company will launch a new list of original titles.


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