The Interface: IBM and the Transformation of Corporate Design, 19451976
English
By (author): John Harwood
In February 1956 the president of IBM, Thomas Watson Jr., hired the industrial designer and architect Eliot F. Noyes, charging him with reinventing IBMs corporate image, from stationery and curtains to products such as typewriters and computers and to laboratory and administration buildings. What followeda story told in full for the first time in John Harwoods The Interfaceremade IBM in a way that would also transform the relationships between design, computer science, and corporate culture.
IBMs program assembled a cast of leading figures in American design: Noyes, Charles Eames, Paul Rand, George Nelson, and Edgar Kaufmann Jr. The Interface offers a detailed account of the key role these designers played in shaping both the computer and the multinational corporation. Harwood describes a surprising inverse effect: the influence of computer and corporation on the theory and practice of design. Here we see how, in the period stretching from the invention of the computer during World War II to the appearance of the personal computer in the mid-1970s, disciplines once well outside the realm of architectural designinformation and management theory, cybernetics, ergonomics, computer sciencebecame integral aspects of design.
As the first critical history of the industrial design of the computer, of Eliot Noyess career, and of some of the most important work of the Office of Charles and Ray Eames, The Interface supplies a crucial chapter in the story of architecture and design in postwar Americaand an invaluable perspective on the computer and corporate cultures of today.