Leo Marfurt

Leo Marfurt (1894–1977) was a Swiss-Belgian commercial artist, best known for his posters of the 1930s, in an innovative Art Deco style that sometimes incorporated elements of Futurism, Cubism and Surrealism.

Leo Marfurt
Born1894
Died1977
Alma materBasel School of Arts and Crafts
Known forcommercial art
StyleArt Deco

Life

Marfurt was born in Aarau, Switzerland, in 1894. He moved to Belgium in 1921, marrying there in 1922.

In 1927 Marfurt set up his own business in Brussels under the name Les Créations Publicitaires ("Advertising Creations"). His customers included the Brussels World Fairs of 1935 and 1958, Minerva automobiles, Chrysler, Belga cigarettes, cross-channel ferries, and railways in both Belgium and the United Kingdom.

He died in Antwerp in 1977.

Exhibitions

An exhibition of Leo Marfurt's posters advertising gins and liqueurs was held in the Nationaal Jenevermuseum, Hasselt, from January to May 2002.[1]

gollark: Which I could think of in a few seconds.
gollark: Sorry, you have no good adjective.
gollark: So I am clearly NOT ubiquitous or coral-like.
gollark: It is, because it's true.
gollark: But one of them swore, and I actually cannot do this?

References

  1. Karl Scheerlinck, Marfurt (affiches) voor jenever en likeur (Nationaal Jenevermuseum, Hasselt, 2002).
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