So today, May 13th, 2026, I discovered the delightful graphic art by Erik Nitsche. Without knowing it, I'd been a fan of his art for half a century. I see now how much he influenced Western graphic design in so many areas, in infographics, advertising, book covers, album covers, articles about anything scientific, about space or travel.
I love his use of color, the whole rainbow palette, love the geometry of design, a kind of minimalist joy, both bold, informative and quiet at the same time.
This is the little video that got me interested. https://youtube.com/shorts/XNUNw9gUQjA?si=YxarVOOLARMDjIBr
In Print (1999) Steven Heller wrote an obituary entitled ‘Erik Nitsche, The Reluctant Modernist’, calling Nitsche the equal of Lester Beall, Paul Rand and Saul Bass. Paul Klee was a family friend who had a great influence on Erik. Yet Nitsche did not study at the Bauhaus, but went – after a short period at the College Classique in Lausanne – to the Kunstgewerbeschule in Munich, where he won a prestigious poster award. He worked in Cologne and Paris; there he was employed by the Draeger Bros and Maximilien Vox. Aged 26 he moved to New York, where he was appointed art director for Saks Fifth Avenue. His list of clients included Orbachs, Bloomingdales, Decca Records, Filene’s, 20th Century Fox, NY MoMa, CCA, NY Transit Authority and Revlon. Nitsche designed covers and artwork for American fashion and decoration magazines, and books for US and Swiss publishers. He was a consultant to commercial and industrial corporations and museums. Considering himself to be asocial, he soon left AGI.
of Erik Nitsche, who has been called progressive and trend-setting by both scholars and critics. In fact, Michael Aron, a professor at the Parsons School of Design, places him “on the top-ten list of the best 20th-century designers in the world.”

moved to New York where expanded his range of work, but continued to do art for the film industry, producing many posters.

Filene’s, drew subway posters for New York Transit, and designed more than 200 record album covers for Decca, virtually all of them for classical music.
In the late 1950s, he worked for General Dynamics, which was building the Nautilus, the first nuclear submarine. Nitsche was commissioned to develop “a visual image that would introduce this submarine to the world and at the same time emphasize the company’s peaceful concerns,” The Times said. “The design for the submarine was top secret, so Mr. Nitsche devised a symbolic solution based on the message ‘Atoms for Peace.’ ” Posters from this campaign, published in six European and Asian languages, have become classics among modern posters and are in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, The Smithsonian, and the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. 
real estate agent with the Gordon Walsh Agency in town. A native of Germany, she died in 2005 at the age of 94.

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