George Lois: The Esquire Covers

  • Where: Museum of Modern Art (MoMA)
  • When: thru 03/31
  • Address: 11 W 53rd St, New York, New York, 10019
  • Cross Streets: 6th Avenue
  • Phone: 212.708.9400
  • Website: Official Website
  • Email:
  • Hours: Sat-Mon and Wed-Thu, 10:30am-5:30pm; Fri, 10:30am-8pm; Tue, closed
  • Closed: Tuesday
  • Transportation: E, V at Fifth Ave.-53rd St.; F at 57th St.
  • Directions: via Google Maps
  • Category: Museum, Solo Show

From 1962 to 1972, George Lois changed the face of magazine design with his ninety-two covers for Esquire magazine. He stripped the cover down to a graphically concise yet conceptually potent image that ventured beyond the mere illustration of a feature article. Lois exploited the communicative power of the mass-circulated front page to stimulate and provoke the public into debate, pressing Americans to confront controversial issues like racism, feminism, and the Vietnam War. Viewed as a collection, the covers serve as a visual timeline and a window onto the turbulent events of the 1960s. Initially received as jarring and prescient statements of their time, the covers have since become essential to the iconography of American culture.

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