In his later life, the
great Swiss architect, designer and artist Max Bill loved to use bright yet
subtle colours. Take, for example, his 1975 lithograph for the cover of San Lazzaro:
It seems such a pity then, that
Bill’s one typewriter design, for what started life as the Swiss Piccola portable,
should appear – in most of its incarnations – to be so bland.
The Piccola brochure says, “Approved
colour of machine [grey], not tiring to the eyes”. What a weak claim! Clearly needed,
instead, is the sting of mustard, or the soothing feel of pistachio. Grey not tiring? It puts one to sleep with its boredom!
The Swissa Piccola and the Oliver
appear predominately in a dull, lifeless grey colour – what was it about the
Swiss and the British with their grey paint on either side of World War II? At
least another Swiss company, Hermes, saw the light in the early 1950s and
started producing typewriters in a more pleasing “hospital green”.
Max Bill’s approach to the design of everyday items such as
typewriters was expressed in his quotation: "The difference between the
design problems which have to be solved every day and works of painting and
sculpture is merely one of degree, not one of principle."
I’ve elected to ignore principles,
to do some painting and thus present something to honour Max Bill, by giving my two
Swissa Piccolas a fresh complexion.
Bill's design philosophy was a flawless blend of form and
content, “a true moment of clarity”. My Swissa Piccolas were screaming out to
be dragged from the drabness of grey, to be given that clarity.
Georg Sommeregger has
an excellent rundown of the Swissa’s history at typewriters.ch
From this we gather
the company was founded by August Birchmeier in Murgenthal in Switzerland
in 1908. Birchmeier died in 1922 and his widow took over
the running of the organisation. Then in 1935 the Birchmeiers’ sons gained control.
At this time the
Birchmeiers began to produce a small typewriter at Pieterlen, near Biel, Switzerland. Georg dates the start of the family which Will Davis
labelled the “Euro Portable” from here. The Swiss Patria typewriter was, Georg
says, the original model for a whole range of European-produced machines. These
include the Japy, Oliver, Byron, Patria, Amaya and Voss Privat.
The original work apparently came from Carl Winterling of
the ArCHO typewriter company, based on the ideas of engineer Otto Haas for a “briefcase
typewriter”. Haas set out to produce “a portable
typewriter of the smallest height and most compact construction …
“The small
or portable typewriters so far on the market are too heavy for travelling
purposes … the known portable typewriters must be carried in a container
specifically designed for this purpose … parts [should] be kept so small that [the
typewriter] may conveniently be carried in a small travelling bag, portfolio or
… a school knapsack or the like ..
“The efforts
which have so far been made by manufacturers with a view of constructing
portable typewriters have more and more lost sight of the underlying principles
that ensure proper portability and in fact have rather followed the opposite
way in attempts [to accommodate] the
several parts [present in] large office typewriters.
“ … the [portable]
typewriter has thus essentially lost its value, and its weight as well as its
price has been steadily increased; so that the ‘portables’ of the present day [no
longer] serve the purpose for which they had originally been intended …"
In 1944, the Birchmeiers acquired a new, stylish outer casing design for what
was mechanically the same typewriter. The design came from Max Bill. The Bill Swissa Piccola portables were first
produced in 1950, and the factory remained operational for another 30 years.
Max Bill was born in Winterthur
on December 22, 1908, and died during a visit to
Berlin on December 9, 1994, just short of his 86th birthday. He
served an apprenticeship as a silversmith from 1924-27, then studied at the
Bauhaus in Dessau from 1927-29, after which he moved to Zurich. From 1937
onwards he was a prime mover behind the Allianz group of Swiss artists and in
1944, became a professor at the school of arts in Zurich.
In 1953, Bill, Inge Aicher-Scholl and Otl Aicher
founded the Ulm School of Design in Ulm, Germany, a design school initially
created in the tradition of the Bauhaus and which later developed a new design
education approach integrating art and science. The school is notable for its
inclusion of semiotics as a field of study. The school closed in 1968.
Bill was the single most decisive influence on
Swiss graphic design, beginning in the 1950s with his theoretical writing and
progressive work. His connection to the days of the Modern Movement gave him
special authority. As an industrial designer, his work is characterised by a
clarity of design and precise proportions. He sought to create objects so that
the new science of form could be experienced by the senses.
From 1967 to 1971 he became a member of the Swiss
National Council, then a professor at the Staatliche Hochschule für Bildende
Künste in Hamburg and chair of Environmental Design from 1967-74. In 1973 he
became an associate member of the Royal Flemish Academy of Science, Literature
and Fine Art in Brussels. In 1976 he became a member of the Berlin Academy of
Arts.
Bill is said to
have “achieved mastery in many areas: avant-garde architecture, the fine arts,
product design, typography, journalism, research and teaching and even
politics. He was a true 'uomo universale' [an Italian term for polymath, a person whose expertise spans a
significant number of different subject areas] who
represented the concept of 'concrete art' by creating works 'by means of its
intrinsic nature and rules', and a lifelong proponent of Die Gute Form (good
design).” He taught that industrial design is closely linked to social and political responsibility and must not be influenced by considerations of profit. Bill regarded himself as a product designer, entirely in the service of the public.
His output ranged from jewellery designs, a shaving brush, a mirror and hairbrush set, a wash stand, the aluminium handle for a piece of kitchen furniture, crockery for Hutschenreuther and the legendary Junghans kitchen clock. As one can see from this image, the clock looks so much better in a pleasant colour.
So, too, I think, my Swissa Piccola typewriters:
Excellent article, although I have to add that it wasn't the Birchmeier corporation that designed the Swissa Piccola, but it was invented by Otto Haas for the swiss PATRIA corporation, which licensed (?) the production of typewriters (already in the Bill design) to Birchmeier's Sons shortly after World War II. They continued to produce the same typewriters under the new brand name Swissa.
ReplyDeleteInteresting story, and I like the repainted Swissas.
ReplyDeleteI had never heard of the Amiga case/base version.
I like the colors. Nice job. Thanks for a very interesting article and all the fine details.
ReplyDeleteI didn't know the AMIGA satchel either. I have seen an authentic red Patria/Swissa in Max Bill style: http://www.flickr.com/photos/jts66/3893530250/in/set-72157624244805760
ReplyDeleteSuper article!
PS Very nice paint job! How did you do it?
ReplyDeleteOMG, I didn't remember my comments of two months ago - so I will leave a third one:
ReplyDeleteBy now, I have knowledge of an original red and green Swissa piccola.
Production of this design started in 1945 still under the brand name "Patria", then continued - mechanically unchanged - as "Swissa piccola" from 1950.
I keep discovering more variants of this European family, which really should be called a typewriter CLAN.
Would you happen to have seen a PDF of the Instructions for Use for this machine?
ReplyDeleteEven better... a hard copy for sale in the wild?
An enjoyable article as always everytime I happen to "stumble" across your excellent website. Yes strange that a colourful artist like Max Bill ended up with mainly grey colour on such an elegant typewriter design. I happen to have the original red version - tho with grey keys....
ReplyDeleteI think the story and"mystery"around my red Swissa Piccola back in 2007 was one of the main reasons i became fascinated of typewriters at the time. It was so much to "investigate"; the beautiful organic timeless design where did that came from? And the origin of the snappy swiss "clockwork"? And not to forget the fascinating story and work of a genius of a multi-artist Max Bill! ...Which I'd never heard of before! I was hooked! :) I leave a link to some photos of a happy "family reunion"! https://www.flickr.com/gp/jts66/Z262x5