Most Influential Graphic Designer of the era
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1
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 Milton Glaser
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- Milton Glaser
- Paul Rand
- Saul Bass
- Massimo Vignelli
- David Carson
- Stefan Sagmeister
- Herb Lubalin
- Tibor Kalman
- Paula Scher
- Margo Chase
- Lou Dorfsman
- Ivan Chermayeff
- Joe Duffy
- Neville Brody
- Walter Landor
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 Since his graduation from Cooper Union in 1951 and the founding of Push Pin Studios soon thereafter, Milton Glaser has been known for creating iconic imagery that becomes a symbol of its time and place.
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Others Who Received Multiple Votes, in Alphabetical Order
Sean Adams, Charles S. Anderson, Peter Behrens, Art Chantry, Seymour Chwast, William Drenttel, Ralph Eckerstrom, Shepard Fairey, April Greiman, Kit Hinrichs, Zuzana Licko, McRay Magleby, Bruce Mau, Clement Mok, Morteza Momayez, Vaughn Oliver, Woody Pirtle, Peter Saville, Deborah Sussman, Rick Tharp, Bradbury Thompson, Steve Tolleson, Edward Tufte, Rudy VanderLans, Andy Warhol, Hermann Zapf
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4
Massimo Vignelli. Born and educated in Milan, Massimo Vignelli helped create Unimark, the first truly international design firm, and has had a pioneering multidisciplinary design career at Vignelli Associates in New York. He and his wife, Leila, have been called "total designers."
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9
Paula Scher is a partner at Pentagram, a former president of the New York chapter of AIGA, an AIGA medal holder and a member of the Art Directors Club Hall of Fame. Her projects and clients are wide-ranging. She is perhaps best known for her design for The Public Theater.
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"Paula Scher is a fricken rockstar."
— Tricia Christiansen, christiansen:creative
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