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âmann und maske,â heinrich campendonk
One of Franceâs most beloved and recognizable poster designers, Raymond Savignac (1907-2002) created some 600 posters over a 50 year career, working almost exclusively in advertising. His simple, whimsical, colorful designs, reminiscent of childrenâs book illustrations, famously promoted Dunlop, Bic, Perrier, Air France, Cinzano and many other companies with an ineffable charm and wit. As far as I can tell, he designed only ten movie posters during his career, all of which I have gathered here. Five of them were created for the director Yves Robert (best known for The Tall Blond Man with One Black Shoe, the poster for which was designed by Savignacâs friend and peer HervĂ© Moran) and three for the later films of Robert Bresson. In fact one of Savignacâs final works was for a retrospective of Bresson in 2000.
A protegĂ© of the great designer A.M. Cassandre, whom he met in 1933, Savignac found his own belated success as a graphic designer in 1949, at the age of 42, when he designed a poster for the soap company Monsavon. The Monsavon poster, in which a cowâs udders feed into a bar of soap (see the bottom of the page), set the tone for all of Savignacâs later work: a simple idea cleanly and wittily expressed. While most of his work is sunny and optimisticâhe claimed Chaplin as his aesthetic inspirationâit seems that Savignac worked out his dark side in his three posters for Bresson: a cartoonishly brutal Lancelot du Lac, a pessimistic Devil, Probably and most especially his unused design for Lâargent, in which a pair of French bank notes are anthropomorphized as a symbol of vicious avarice. (from MUBI)
1979 photos behind the scenes of The Empire Strikes Back
Punch Drunk Love (ăăłăăă©ăłăŻă»ă©ă) (2002; P.T. Anderson)
McCabe and Mrs Miller
star wars (russia, 1978)
Robert Altmanâs â3 Womenâ PosterÂ
Howard Hawksâ âThe Big Sleepâ French Movie Poster