Although Nicolas Lowry lives in America, he is close to the Czech Republic. His great-uncle founded the Primeros factory in Prague, which was already famous for its high-quality packaging design during the First Republic. Lowry himself can be described as a passionate collector whose weakness is graphic design. Now, in the new feature film Identity, he decided to map the history of Czech graphic design and followed in the footsteps of famous authors.
“Czech graphic design is known all over the world and as a nation you can rightly be proud of it,” says the man in the tartan suit who first visited the Czech Republic in 1988 with his parents and brother. The American with Czech roots became interested in the history of the visual language of the post-communist country in the early 1990s. It was then that he went to see the General Czechoslovak Exhibition and fell in love with vintage banners there.
Now he has returned here from the position of president of the Swan Galleries auction house in New York to try to convey how important the legacy of local graphic artists and designers is at home and abroad. “During the filming, I traveled almost the entire country and met not only a lot of exceptional designers, curators and artists, but also got to know the national sense of humor. And I also met a lot of great and funny chefs,” says Lowry about the filming of the new documentary, which is called Identity is now in theaters.
Project as a school textbook
The feature-length film is the result of the work of the team around typographer Filip Blažek and design theorist Linda Kudrnovská, who also filmed a seven-part cycle of the same name for Czech Television. Together with Lowry, he tries to bring closer how graphic design affects people’s everyday life and decision-making. The documentary examines, for example, the aesthetics of the subway navigation system, state symbols and books. He is also dedicated to the icons of Czech graphics, such as Alfons Mucha and Ladislav Sutnar. At the same time, however, it also gives space to contemporary authors who have succeeded with their work at home and abroad.
Nicolas Lowry, still from the movie Identity. | Photo: Aktuálně.cz/Česká television
“Identity – the story of Czech graphic design is a celebration of Czechness
creativity. It is a project with a wide audiovisual scope – first we presented a television series, then a monograph was published, and now we are opening an exhibition and releasing a documentary film. We hope that this file will have a lasting value and that the lay and professional public will be able to return to it repeatedly,” the authors of the project hope to contribute to the education of the public and help experts in better orientation in the field of graphic design.
A film tour of the Czech Republic takes Lowry to important places connected with the history of Czech graphics – including Zlín, Litomyšl, Brno and Pilsen. He examines not only the work of Tomáš Bata, Josef Váchal, Alfons Mucha and Ladislav Sutnar, but also Pilsen beer. The quirky guide, who has a Picasso-like mustache and a checkered suit, also made it to South Moravia during his travels, where he researched the aesthetics of wine labels. He also went on a tramping trip along the marked routes of the Club of Czech Tourists.
Video: Watch the trailer for the film
Trailer – Identity: A Film About Czech Graphic Design (2024) | Video: The Identity Project