When Alexander Girard was posthumously awarded the AIGA medal earlier this year, Herman Miller produced a video tribute that attempted to compress the designer’s voluminous accomplishments into a five-minute film now available to stream online. What’s remarkable about the video is not only how it captures Girard’s colorful legacy, but also how it brings his designs to life.
As head of Herman Miller’s textile division for two decades, starting in 1951, Girard designed more than 300 textiles—many of which are still manufactured today. To show the depth and breadth of his work, the video team at Dress Code was given access to the Herman Miller archives, allowing them to create real-life table settings and seating areas—complete with many, many period-appropriate ashtrays—that show how real people might have interacted with his creations.
As Amy Auscherman, Herman Miller’s corporate archivist, says in the video, “What Girard brought to modernism was a warmness and a humanity. He wasn’t afraid of using textures and bright warm colors. He brought levity to an otherwise cold perception of modernism at the time.”