Lella Vignelli, who enjoyed a lifelong collaborative working relationship with her husband, the late Massimo Vignelli, and whose Vignelli Center for Design Studies placed Rochester Institute of ...
Through his work, graphic designer and architect Massimo Vignelli, attempted to convey timeless art, rather than keep up with the trends of the day. For most inhabitants of Washington, D.C., ...
Mr. Vignelli, a native of Milan, passed away Tuesday at his home in Manhattan after a long struggle with illnesses. His most known, and controversial, piece of work was scrapped after just seven years ...
Massimo Vignelli, arguably the greatest designer in modern history and whose Vignelli Center for Design Studies placed Rochester Institute of Technology onto the international forefront of design ...
An archivist uncovered them last week. The modernist designer Massimo Vignelli is the father of New York City’s famous 1972 subway map. Turns out he had some ideas for Washington, D.C.’s metro as well ...
Young designers still revere them and their generosity with knowledge—and young and old alike mourn the death of Massimo, who died at the end of May at age 83 (see: “Designer Massimo Vignelli, ...
Massimo Vignelli, the influential graphic designer who designed the groundbreaking 1972 subway, is apparently very ill and needs some cheering up. According to Creative Review, he "will be spending ...
Designer Massimo Vignelli, born January 10, 1931, in Milan, Italy, died peacefully in his New York City home on May 27, 2014. One of the world’s most consistent supporters of a modernist approach to ...
The towering Modernist designer Massimo Vignelli, whose approach brought streamlined, sometimes divisive, clarity to major brands and the NYC subway system, passed away today in Manhattan at age 83.
It may be a less accurate representation of the city's shape, but it's far easier to understand at a glance. Inside the design drama of a century: The fight over New York City’s subway map One night ...
Renowned graphic designer Massimo Vignelli, whose vision extended from subterranean transit maps to airline logos, died Tuesday at age 83. He had been ill and died at his Manhattan home, said Yoshiki ...