| |
     
|
|

From Letterspace Fall/Winter
2004
"The
Neuland Question comes up regularly, and alas without much
resolution...."
—Jonathan Hoefler
The
"Neuland Question" to which Jonathan Hoefler refers involves
not just Neuland, a "display" typeface hand-carved in
1923 by Rudolf Koch (Plate 1), but also Lithos, another "display"
typeface digitally created in 1989 by Carol Twombly (Plate 2).
The Question can be put simply: How did these two typefaces come
to signify Africans and African-Americans, regardless of how a
designer uses them, and regardless of the purpose for which their
creators originally intended them? The investigation of this question
has four parts: first, an examination of the environments in which
Koch and Twombly created the original typefaces; second, an examination
of the graphic culture that surrounded African-Americans prior
to the creation of Neuland through a close viewing of tobacco ephemera;
third, an examination of the Art Deco (French Modern) style, the
graphic culture most prevalent in the United States at the time
of Neuland's release; and finally, an examination of the ways designers
use Neuland and Lithos today.
Plate 1
Plate 2
Rudolf Koch was born in 1876 and had a career that was both uninteresting
and undistinguished until he enlisted in the German Army in 1907
to fight in World War I. Upon returning from the war, he commented
to his close friend Siegfried Guggenheim that he was "profoundly
stirred"
by his experiences (10). The horrors of war inspired Koch to seek
religion for himself and then preach the benefits of a religious
life to his countrymen. Having experimented with the art of calligraphy
shortly before enlisting, Koch returned to the art after WWI with
the intention of making bold, noticeable typefaces that would shout
to other Germans that following God's path would help them find
comfort from the trauma of war. Guggenheim notes, "Koch's
fonts after the war were designed for broadsides, postcards, etc.—not books...[they
were designed] to demonstrate his religious fervency" (11-13).
Neuland was such a face. Yale University Printer John Gambell suggests
that Koch designed the face with the intent of making a modern
version of the German black letter (or black face) style. Black
letter fonts were used at the time for the setting of important
texts, especially Bibles and church-related documents. Koch's "new
black face" attempted to preserve the flared, interlocking
forms of the traditional black letter style, while at the same
time adopting the sans-serif style around which modernists, like
Paul Renner, were building their typefaces. Renner's Futura, the
quintessential example of modernist typography, was designed in
1927, only four years after the Klingspor Type Foundry released
Koch's Neuland (Rock).
Koch's settings of Neuland in the original German specimen book
published by the Klingspor Type Foundry support Gambell's suggestion.
He sets the type with minimal leading and kerning as black letter
was typically set (Plate 3). He inserts woodcuts and Greek cross-shaped
(+) ampersands as well (Plate 4), a common practice with black
letter texts. However, Koch broke with black letter typesetting
standards by stripping Neuland of the delicately interlocking serifs
commonly used in black letter typography. The result, a font composed
of heavy black forms, was visible from great distances and easily
distinguishable from lighter-weight typefaces on a page. These
qualities made Neuland suitable to advertising. Koch even attempted
to set a classified ad in Neuland at the end of the German specimen
book (Plate 5).

Plates 3, 4 & 5
By the time Neuland reached the United States, its distributor,
the Continental Typefounder's Association, had little interest
in Neuland's uses as a modern black letter, and the specimen book
that they prepared promoted Neuland as exclusively an advertising
typeface, a "type that attracts attention" (Koch, Loose
File, "Klingspor Type Foundry"). The American specimen
book showed Neuland used in advertising settings from bank bonds
to drywall contracting (Plate 6). Because of the absence of a black
letter tradition in the United States and because of the way the
Continental Typefounder's Association promoted Neuland, Koch's
intentions for the font were entirely lost immediately after its
introduction in America.

Plate 6
Just
as Koch was trying to modernize an ancient form of writing with
Neuland in 1923, so too was Carol Twombly with Lithos in 1989.
Jonathan Hoefler suggests that "Lithos [is] an interpretation
of ancient lapidary writing." Twombly herself corroborates
this:
Inscriptions
honoring public figures or dedications for temples were intended
for public viewing in ancient Greece. Geometric letterforms,
free of adornment were chiseled into the stone. These basic
shapes are the inspiration for Lithos.
Letterforms like those that inspired Lithos can be seen not only
on ancient Greek temples, but also on many modern buildings
built in the Classical or Gothic styles, such as on the front
entrance to Sterling Memorial Library at Yale University. In
his famous book The Elements of Typographic Style, critic
Robert Bringhurst notes that many modern typefaces take their
inspiration from architectural sources, and, indeed, many of
Twombly's typefaces, like Lithos, come from ancient architecture:
Trajan, a serifed face, evolved from carvings on columns in
ancient Rome; and Charlemagne, another serifed face, evolved
from carvings found in Byzantine temples.
Although Twombly left Trajan and Charlemagne relatively unaltered
from their original forms, she made a substantial alteration in
Lithos. Twombly decided to create a bold weight for Lithos in addition
to its book weight, even though bold-weighted letterforms were
nonexistent in ancient Greece. John Gambell suggests that Twombly "may
have felt the font was not marketable today without a bold weight." Regardless
of her reasons, Lithos' bold-weighted anachronism is now Neuland's
bastard child. Lithos' flared edges, heavy lines, square characters,
and pen-like strokes are analogous to Neuland's trademark elements,
and the fonts are virtually identical to the untrained eye. Indeed,
Lithos' close formal approximation to Neuland makes it virtually
interchangeable with Neuland for designers working on African and
African-American projects.
Because Lithos follows Neuland historically and formally, and because
printers and designers used Neuland in African and African-American
projects before Twombly even conceived Lithos, the resolution of
the Neuland Question rests in reconstructing Neuland's history.
Primarily because of both constant anti-African-American sentiment
and the socioeconomic status of African-Americans during and after
the Civil War, African-American graphic culture in the United States
prior to Neuland's release in 1923 and before the Harlem Renaissance
in general was unimportant at best and nonexistent at worst. In
short, African-Americans did not have the buying power or the social
acceptance required to cultivate a significant graphic culture.
What graphic culture they did have centered around their depiction
in advertisements for products associated with slavery: tobacco
and cotton.
Tremendous amounts of ephemera surrounded the tobacco industry
from the 1850s until the 1930s, much of which involved racist uses
of African-Americans as mascots. Much of this ephemera took the
form of trading cards given out in general stores, on street corners,
or wherever tobacco was sold (Plate 7). These trading cards were
common media for advertising from the 1850s to the 1930s, and generally
involved a caricatured picture of a "Negro" and a slogan
in dialect ("Sho' fly, git away from dar") on the front
and information about the product on the back (Plate 8). As tobacco
companies had to make these cards cheaply and copiously, the text
on the back of these cards was often poorly set with cheap woodblock
type rather than with more expensive metal type.
While today woodblock type has a certain nostalgic appeal, designers
and typophiles (typographic historians and typography enthusiasts)
into the 1950s saw woodblock letters as nothing but lower-class.
Immediately upon its release, designers and typophiles linked Neuland's
forms with woodblock type and responded accordingly. In his book Typographic
Milestones, typophile Allan Haley charges "Neuland is
not considered a particularly practical, useful, or attractive
typeface"
(70). He later reiterates his point, saying, "[Neuland is]
not especially attractive, nor even very useful...its realistic
applications are quite limited" (73). Typophiles like Haley
frequently omitted Neuland from typographic histories altogether,
and Neuland soon became a member of the family of fonts that designers
call "garbage type": esoteric, inelegant, difficult to
set, and destined, like tobacco ephemera, for the garbage. Neuland's
figurative status as "garbage type"
became a literal truth when, as popular design legend has it, printers
threw the face away after becoming frustrated with the extraordinary
weight of the thick lead letters and the large amount of space
the alphabet consumed in their often small print shops.

Plate 7

Plate 8
Apart from being perceived as cheap "garbage," woodblock
type carried with it a legacy of cultural stereotype. Woodblock
type was also known as "circus type" because of its
frequent use in promoting circuses. An entire culture of "stereotypography"
developed around these playful woodblock typefaces as certain "circus
types" came to stand for stereotypical visual associations
that Americans held about the cultures that the "circus
types"
were designed to represent. For example, circus promoters used
the woodblock type Tokyo when promoting performers from the Orient
(Plate 9). Hometown, another "circus type," is a near
match for Neuland (Plate 10), as is Othello, a heavy (black)
sign-lettering typeface whose name alludes to the black hero
of Shakespeare's tragedy (Plate 11).
Plate 9
Plate 10
Plate 11
Beyond the circus' stereotyping of non-Western cultures via woodblock
type, cigarette packages, in addition to their advertising, often
employed stereotyped and racist themes on their packaging. Two
cultures often stereotyped were Egypt (on the packages of Oasis,
Café-Noir, Zima, Egyptian Heroes, and Crocodile cigarettes)
and Turkey (on the packages of Fatima, Omar, and Turkey
Red cigarettes) (Plate 12). The dominance of these cultures
in antiquity ties them to Lithos' Greek forms. Their use on cigarette
packaging ties them to Neuland. Finally, their status as cultural "Others" to
the West, in the same way that Africa was seen as a cultural "Other," figures
prominently into determining the cultural implications of the
Neuland Question. Jonathan Hoefler explains,
I
suspect that designers who use Neuland or Lithos as an approximation
of the Africanesque are being unimaginative at best, and jingoistic
at worst. [This use of] Neuland...still survives on that appalling
cigarette package [Note 1].

Plate 12
Before Neuland's release, the graphic culture of African-Americans
exemplified by trading cards, "circus type," and cigarette
packaging typified the racial and socioeconomic stereotype of the "Po'
Negro."
However, the extent to which that attitude continued, and whether
the predominant graphic culture in America at the time of Neuland's
release, Art Deco, altered that attitude, remains to be discussed.
Art Deco, a school of art that "responded to the changing
taste of society during the 'Jazz Age'" (Janson 856), started
in France shortly after 1900, but its development was postponed
until after WWI, when, in 1925, the French dubbed it Le Style
Moderne. This is why Art Deco was also known as the French
Modern style. This name existed for a short time, but as the style
became more international it came to be known as "Art Deco," getting "Deco"
from "decorative," since the style applied mainly to
the decorative (rather than high) arts. Thus, Art Deco, like the
woodblock and "circus"
typography that came before it, was considered lower-class. Art
Historian Anthony F. Janson echoes this point, "[Art Deco's]
everyday objects catered to the lowest common denominator" (856).
Having grown up in France around the turn of the century, Art Deco
adopted much of the fantasy of Art Nouveau. Oftentimes this fantasy
included "a taste for the exotic...[including] ancient Egypt" (Janson
856). Like cigarette packaging that drew much from ancient Egypt,
Art Deco's Egyptian elements drew heavily on stereotyping the "Other," a
category that included Africa. Finally, Art Deco's references to "primitive"
cultures like Africa created a romanticized ideal that echoed references
to "primitive" cultures made by the Primitivists in France
a generation before.
Primitivist and Art Deco elements show up in Koch's own work. In
terms of Primitivism, two histories of Koch, Friedrich Matthaus' Rudolf
Koch, ein Werkmann Gottes, and Oskar Beyer's Rudolf Koch,
ein schpferisches Leben include drawings and photographs
of Koch's sculpture, which is nothing if not Primitivistic
(Plate 13). Like much of African sculpture, Koch's sculpture
is carved out of dark wood and supported by small animal figurines.
Koch savagely scratched out Christian messages into the sculptures
in a typeface remarkably similar to Neuland. Koch created Neuland
in a similar fashion, creating the letterforms by carving them
directly on the metal punches (type blocks), rather than making
drawings from which to work (Haley 73). In its original metal version,
each character set of Neuland was subtly different from all the
others; this wonderful quality has been lost since the type's adaptation
into phototype and then digital forms.

Plate 13
Apart from Neuland, typophiles commonly group another of Koch's
typefaces, Kabel, with Art Deco fonts. Kabel's quirky lower-case "e"
and upper-case "G," and the entire face's low x-height
position it squarely in the Art Deco typographic aesthetic. Kabel's
German specimen book includes a number of interesting suggestions
for its use, most notably for a page of cigar advertisements (Plate
14). The following page continues the tobacco merchandise theme
as it predominantly displays a Turkish star-and-crescent symbol
(Plate 15).

Plates 14 & 15
Though Neuland is not technically an Art Deco
typeface, many typophiles group it with Art Deco typefaces anyway.
In his Advertising Typographers of America Type Comparison Book,
typophile Frank Merriman groups Neuland under the heading "Informal
Sans" with true Art Deco faces such as Banco, Studio, Cartoon,
Ad Lib, and Samson [Note 2] as well as the
sign-lettering face Othello discussed earlier. On the page facing
the "Informal
Sans," he shows some Greek pottery fragments found in Corinth
from the second half of the 8th century BC (Plate 16). Although Koch
was fascinated by Greek lettering—Matthaus' book displays lettering
Koch drew in the manner of Greek tablets (Plate 17) and a book about
Koch bears some of his hand-drawn Greek letterforms (Plate 18)—Merriman's
comparison is not based on this fact. He explains the juxtaposition
of the "Informal Sans" and the Greek pottery fragments
in this way:
These
[fragments] are nearly as old as any Greek inscription or writing
found to date. Their informal nature, whether through ineptitude
or choice, is remarkably like that of our informal sans-serifs
nearly three milleniums later (71, emphasis mine).

Plate 16

Plates 17 & 18
Merriman's juxtaposition clearly links Neuland
and Lithos to one another and to the formal aesthetics of Art Deco,
which were positioned in the lower-class and tied to antiquity and
stereotypical views of the "Other." Merriman's use of
the word "informal" to describe the faces marks the cultural
snobbery typophiles displayed toward Neuland and faces like it [Note
3]. Merriman explicitly suggests this quality by calling the
"Informal Sans" "inept." Implicitly, he suggests
it by his name for the group, "Informal Sans." "Informal"
here means "not according to prescribed, official, or customary
forms; irregular; unofficial; suitable to or characteristic of casual
or familiar speech or writing" (Urdang 683). "Informal"
is inartistic, lower-class, and outside the establishment. "Informal"
is Merriman's judgment of American society's perception of African-American
art and, indeed, of African American people themselves.
The book publishing world of the 1920s, 30s, and early 40s, well-versed
in Art Deco, did nothing if not underscore the culturally stereotypical
qualities that Neuland had already assumed. Book publishers often
mockingly coupled the font's use with titles like "Illiterate
Digest," "Cannibal Cousins," and, in a visual pun,
with the pulp fiction mystery "The Case of the Black-Eyed
Blonde" (Plate 19, emphasis mine).

Plate 19
By the mid-1940s, long after Art Deco had left, Neuland's use in
African-American texts remained. Famous African-American books such
as Richard Wright's Native Son and Wulf Sachs' Black
Anger (Plate 20) use Neuland on their covers. Critic Ellen
Lupton notes, "Neuland has appeared...on the covers of numerous
books...about the literature and anthropology of Africa and African-Americans"
(37). Even today, books that fit into the category that Lupton outlines
bear Neuland or Lithos on their covers (Plates 21). While the stereotypes
associated with the fonts have remained, their applications have,
in fact, increased in the present day beyond just book publishing.
Neuland has found its way into Hollywood, used in such films as
Jurassic Park, Tarzan, and Jumanji. Subaru used
Lithos prominently in the logo for their new car, the Outback. Both
fonts appear frequently on all sorts of extreme sports paraphernalia.
These uses seem to indicate that in addition to Neuland and Lithos'
prior associations with informality, ineptitude, ugliness, cheapness,
and unusability, they have since acquired qualities that suggest
"jungle," "safari," and "adventure"—in
short, Africa. Moreover, "stereotypography"—the
stereotyping of cultures through typefaces associated with them—has
been increasing as graphic design becomes a greater cultural force:
just this year, House Industries, a type foundry in New Jersey,
released a family of typefaces called "Tiki Type," which
is meant to signify Polynesia (Plate 22); at the same time, Abercrombie
& Fitch, a clothing store catering to twentysomethings, created
shirts with meaningless Chinese ideograms on them, meant to look
as if they came directly from New York's predominantly Chinese garment
district.

Plate 20

Plate 21
Plate 22
But away from the white-controlled industries of book publishing,
movie making, car dealing, adventure seeking, font designing, and
designer clothing, in small African-American-controlled sectors
of business and culture, no sign of Neuland or Lithos appears. The
first issue of Ebony magazine takes more from the classic
1950s typography of Life magazine than from African-American
books published at the same time, and other African-American magazine
published before Ebony like Common Ground and
Lamplighter do the same. Jazz album covers from labels
like Blue Note and Verve are steeped in the playful
modernism of designer Saul Bass and employ modern typefaces revamped,
like Futura, Trade Gothic, and Clarendon, in ways that melt their
Modernist frigidity and heat them with the hot beat of Jazz. From
Motown in the 1970s to the Fugees today, African-American
musicians do not simply ignore Lithos and Neuland on their album
covers-they have excised them completely from their visual vocabulary.
As Michael Rock points out, an intrinsic difficulty confronts all
designers as they set out to design new cultural texts with the
tools of old Modernist typography. "Inevitably," he observes,
"you end up having to refer to other aesthetic systems, and
those systems are subject to stereotype." However, African-Americans
from Common Ground to the Fugees seem comfortable reinventing
old Modernist typography in new ways rather than developing new,
separate systems. Indeed, typography today is still a separate-but-equal
world, and prominent African American authors like Terrance McNally
still have their work branded as "different" simply as
a result of the typeface used on the cover. If, as John Gambell
suggests, the typefaces we as a society choose in which to set our
messages are meant to stand in for the speaker of the words themselves,
than how should we see a speaker with Koch's "new black face"?
If we want to know why the words of African-Americans continue to
be lost, we must come to recognize that the "new black face"
that voices in Neuland adopt is not a new face at all: it is simply
a mask for the old black stereotypes that still persist today.
Notes
[Note 1]. Hofler is referring to the American Spirit cigarette packaging,
a perfect latter-day example of what I've discussed [Back].
[Note 2]. Samson's creator clearly felt the typeface carried as
much visual weight as the character Samson (a strongman for Biblical
times) could actually carry. Thus, in the same way Othello is named
for its blackness, Samson is named for its strength [Back].
[Note 3]. This snobbery is explained earlier in the discussion of
"garbage type" [Back].
© 2004 Rob Giampietro.
|