Browsing by Author "Thomas, Patricia Ann"
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- ItemI am a typographical genius! : an investigation into the work of Robert William Lowry : a thesis presented in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Design, M.Des., at Massey University(Massey University, 2000) Thomas, Patricia AnnRobert William Lowry was a printer and typographer whose working life spanned the thirty-one years from his schoolboy printing days in 1929 until his death in 1963. He was not a tradesman, but a scholar/printer, a member of that group of men whose interest in the art compelled them to be ever vigilant in pursuit of a particular aesthetic of the printed page. He was known in his day for the excellence of his work, the tardiness of his delivery, the generosity of his spirit, and the capacity he had for alcohol. He was, in his time, surrounded by the myths which often shroud such men. Lowry is a part of New Zealand design history and, as such, his work requires to be documented, the myths exploded, or at least, the shroud drawn back to reveal the genuine Lowry, typographer and printer, and the actual, rather than perceived, quality of his work. His contribution to the fostering of New Zealand literature is also an area which requires evaluation. Lowry lived in a time in our history when the struggle to get into print was an almost insurmountable one. Thus he becomes, in turn, a part of New Zealand publishing history. Lowry was a man whose philosophies relied heavily on his own interpretation of the rules, displaying a 'looseness of attachment' to an aesthetic canon. It would only be fair to have used a methodological approach to this project which was equally loose. 'An investigation' was just that, a qualitative analysis approach based on the grounded theory of Glaser and Strauss1 GLASER, B and STRAUSS, A. The Discovery of Grounded Theory: Strategies for Qualitative Research. Chicago: Aldine, 1967. (1967) which allows for discovery and development, rather than one based on a central proposition which then must be proved, or disproved. Much of this study has relied on the typographical experience of the researcher, but primary sources were utilised to put the resulting analyses and evaluations into a contextual framework. These sources have included interviews, correspondence and the writings and reminiscences of people who lived and worked with the printer. Biographies, monographs and the like—secondary sources— have been approached warily and used mostly for background. Such, too, was the use to which the wealth of information concerning parallel events in other countries and the contemporary social and cultural arena of our own was put. The study is presented in two parts. The first is essentially chronological and traces Lowry's life as printer and publisher. The second, is thematic. These strategies are used, in the first instance, to place the works into the context of their time and place, and, secondly, to observe particular genre in their own context, in addition to that of time and circumstance. This has allowed for observations of change and the charting of maturity in the man and his work.
- Item'Large letter'd as with thundering shout' : an analysis of typographic posters advertising emigration to New Zealand 1839 - 1875 : a thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Visual and Material Culture, Massey University, Wellington, New Zealand(Massey University, 2014) Thomas, Patricia AnnThis thesis examines the role of ephemeral, typographic material in the promotion of emigration to New Zealand in the nineteenth century. It focuses on the advertising posters produced by the New Zealand Company, the Otago and Canterbury Associations, the provincial governments and Government of New Zealand. It aims to identify how advertising and typography contributed to the transfer of the promotion message from the producer to the audience in this specific historical context. For the first time a comprehensive data set of emigration posters of this period has been gathered together and examined. The posters are analysed in the context of their contemporary visual, material and print cultures, with particular reference to ephemeral printing. To account for all the historical, textual and graphic properties of the posters, the thesis develops and applies a novel, multilayered system of analysis, drawing on communication theory, social semiotic principles and Gestalt principles of composition. The posters afforded emigration promoters a visual medium for distributing audienceappropriate messages through typographic strategies. They provided promoters with the facility for fast and inexpensive messaging that was otherwise unavailable in nineteenth century communication. The thesis concludes that posters were a significant part of an early, coherent and systematic advertising campaign which utilised processes and persuasive tools that have traditionally been seen as emergent only in the late nineteenth century. This thesis establishes the value of ephemeral material and the study of graphic language when applied to the examination of historical phenomena. As well as shedding new light on these particular forms of historical design and modes of communication, it also adds a further valuable dimension to the more well-known story of nineteenth century emigration promotion by focussing on its graphic and advertising languages rather than its pictorial aspects. The investigation undertaken provides a new analytical system through which a combination of historical, ephemeral, typographic and advertising material can be examined in the future.