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Norman Bel Geddes

  • Cocktail Set (1937)

    Cocktail Set (1937)

    The Chrome-plated metal cocktail set is from an edition of eight that Geddes designed in 1937. The style is typical of Norman Bel Geddes' machine-age designs in its geometric precision and simplicity of form.

    The set is owned by the Brooklyn Museum in New York City.

    The original unscaled version of this image can be found here.

  • Futurama - Street Intersection (1939)

    Futurama Street Intersection (1939)

    Futurama was a Norman Bel Geddes-designed exhibit/ride in the General Motors pavilion of the 1939 New York World's Fair. More than 30,000 people a day braved long lines until they reached the chairs that transported them through the exhibit. It was by far the most successful exhibit of the entire fair. On one independent survey of 1,000 fairgoers, Futurama was awarded 39.4 points. The next most popular exhibit, Ford's, received 8.5 points.

    Futurama resonated well with both the fair's overall theme "The World of Tomorrow" and the American people's desires. Technology was seen as a way out of the misery of the Great Depression. A vision that promised an ordered world of plenty was very welcome and people did not ask questions about the ecological or societal impact of cars and superhighways everywhere.

    The original unscaled version of this image can be found here.