Jump to content

Paul Gredinger

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Gredinger)

Paul Gredinger (27 July 1927 – 6 October 2013) was a Swiss architect. Gredinger was one of the leading figures in the German advertising scene.[1][2] He also worked between 1953 and 1957 together with Karlheinz Stockhausen and Herbert Eimert at the Studio for Electronic Music.[3] He also practised Cubism painting.[4]

At the end of the 1950s he met the advertisers Karl Gerstner and Markus Kutter [de] and became their partner in 1962. From then on the agency traded as Gerstner, Gredinger, Kutter, or GGK. After Gerstner and Kutter retired in 1975, Gredinger took over their shares and expanded the agency into a European network with up to 20 branches. In the 1970s and 1980s, Gredinger's company was regarded as a first address for top creative professionals. Gredinger himself was the protagonist of one of the first colour ad campaigns I drink Jägermeister because... by Jägermeister.[5]

Gredinger supported his artist friends such as Dieter Roth, André Thomkins and Donald Judd. In 1990 he sold his shares to the Swiss Trimedia. Gredinger was elected honorary member for Germany by the Art Directors Club of New York in 1992.[6]

Gredinger was brought to ETH Zurich in 1999 by the then guest lecturer Valerio Olgiati as a fictitious client, for whom one of the residential buildings was designed by Raphael Zuber.

Gredinger died in Thalwil at the age of 86.

Literature

[edit]
  • Heinz Wirz (ed.): 14 student projects with Valerio Olgiati. 1998-2000. Quart Verlag, Lucerne 2000, ISBN 3-907631-04-8. Design: Raphael Zuber

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Paul Gredinger on Last music
  2. ^ Former GGK managing director Paul Gredinger deceased Der Standard
  3. ^ M. J. Grant: Das Serielle in: Serial Music, Serial Aesthetics: Compositional Theory in Post-War Europe, p. 165–
  4. ^ Spiegel Online: pleasure in doing so
  5. ^ Werbung. Das jüngste Gericht Der Spiegel Online, 1994
  6. ^ Archivierte Kopie at the Wayback Machine (archived April 9, 2015)
[edit]