Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
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May/June 1989 | Volume 40, Issue 4
Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
May/June 1989 | Volume 40, Issue 4
By Larry Zim, Mel Lerner, and Herbert Rolfes; Harper & Row; 240 pages .
By Barbara Cohen, Steven Heller, and Seymour Chwast; Abrams; 80 pages .
Videotape produced and directed by Tom Johnson and Lance Bird; 83 minutes .
Just why the 1939 New York World’s Fair has got so thoroughly under everyone’s skin is not easy to say. The exposition did, of course, have a powerful advantage in timing, gleaming briefly as it did between the darknesses of depression and world war; and then there is the appealing irony of all those people believing they would soon be living in Art Deco cities where everything looked like a radio or an ice-cream scoop, when in fact the only buildings to bear out the prophecy were a few gas stations and the Guggenheim Museum. But none of this seems quite enough to explain why everybody over the age of fifty has radiant memories of the event, or why people born decades after it closed wistfully acknowledge it as the greatest of all expositions.
Something of the spirit that sets this apart from other fairs can be found in two good new books published on the occasion of its fiftieth anniversary, and in a videotape. Of these, the most inclusive is Zim, Lerner, and Rolfes’s The World of Tomorrow . Commencing with a color photograph of the subway entrance to the fair and moving on to the Trylon and Perisphere (was any structure so short-lived ever so memorable?), the book moves into a carefully documented world of gigantic typewriters, streamlined steam locomotives, innumerable murals, and the Westinghouse time capsule preserving a baseball, a light bulb, Mickey Mouse, and other clues to the national essence intact in its “immortal well.” The tour takes in virtually every aspect of the fair, and it is especially effective in recreating that king of exhibits, the General Motors Futurama, which took the 1939 visitor high above the busy, happy world of 1960: “Now we approach a modern university center. Here, in buildings of simple but functional architecture, the youth of 1960 study for their future in a world of still greater progress and achievement.…” The book concludes with a survey of the immense residue of souvenirs the great party left behind, hatboxes and carpet sweepers, candles and golf-club covers, all bearing the ubiquitous symbol that one of its very few detractors referred to as “the egg and the tack.”
There are plenty of world’s-fair souvenirs in Trylon and Perisphere too, and Seymour Chwast’s handsome design makes all that tin and felt and Bakelite look quite