Designers
and design historians told me over the years that they had heard about
the existence of a Nazi graphics standards manual. No one could say
they actually saw it, but they knew of someone who had. So it grew into
something of a Big Foot or Loch Ness Monster tale, until one day I
actually saw it too – and it had been right under my nose the whole
time.
I had envisioned a manual of the kind that
Lester Beall did for International Paper or
Paul Rand did for IBM, showing acceptable logo weights and sizes, corporate
typefaces and colors. I was so familiar with these standards manuals,
that it never even occurred to me they were postwar formats — and
decidedly modern. Maybe the Nazis did theirs in a different way.
The Nazis brand may indeed be uniformly distinctive, but for all the
significance they placed on graphic design, there was more variety and
greater leeway than one might think. Nonetheless, once I determined who
was responsible for maintaining the NSDAP brand, it was a bit easier to
identify the identity manual.
First, there were different bureaucracies: The Party’s identity was
overseen by one leader, while the state’s identity was handled by
another — and within these were many sub-chambers too.
Dr. Joseph Goebbels’
Ministry of Enlightenment and Propaganda (PROMI) did not oversee the
signs and symbols of the Party. Although his Ministry had a graphic
design atelier, it was primarily for creating the propaganda materials.
Albert Speer,
Hitler’s architect and the designer of Nazi spectacles, did not
administer to the identity either. His office designed monumental ways
of displaying the existing brand.
The policing of all things Swastika was the responsibility of
Dr. Robert Ley,
the head of the German Labor Front (Deutsche Arbeitsfront, DAF) and the
Strength Through Joy (Kraft durch Freude, KdF). Known as much as
anything for his heavy drinking, this former editor of the anti-Semitic
newspaper,
Westdeutsche Beobachter, was not a designer or art director, but garnered considerable power
owing to his intense loyalty to Hitler. One of his most ambitious
design initiatives was taking over the development of the Volkswagen
(people’s car) from Porsche.
Perhaps a lesser, though
significant, responsibility was developing a NSDAP handbook that
detailed the organizing principles and mechanics of building the Nazi
movement. It is this 550 page, red cloth-bound book titled
Organizationsbuch der NSDAP,
with the symbol of “Greater Germany” embossed in silver on the front,
which turns out to be the elusive standards manual. The DAF was also
responsible for typesetting guides and other graphic arts handbooks,
but this is the graphic masterpiece of the Master Race.
It is
not exactly clear how much Dr. Ley (who hanged himself after the war)
was personally involved, although his introduction is in the volume.
Perhaps he did not know the difference between typefaces, or even what
graphic design was. But it was his office that determined the standards
of stationery, enamel signs, flags and pennants, awards and badges,
party uniforms and all things involving the swastika and ancillary
symbols. So someone in Dr. Ley’s office knew what he was doing, though
received no credit.
Published in 1936,
The Organizationsbuch der NSDAP (with subsequent annual editions), detailed all aspects of party
bureaucracy, typeset tightly in German Blackletter. What interested me,
however, were the over 70 full-page, full-color plates (on heavy paper)
that provide examples of virtually every Nazi flag, insignia, patterns
for official Nazi Party office signs, special armbands for the
Reichsparteitag (Reichs Party Day), and Honor Badges. The book
“over-explains the obvious” and leaves no Nazi Party organization
question, regardless of how minute, unanswered.
When I noted
above that the book was under my nose, I meant this literally and
figuratively. Many of the color plates, which visually establish the
identity standards, have been reproduced in histories of World War II
and the Nazis, without proper attribution. So, I’ve seen some of them
before. Also, the Nazis issued a 255 page book,
ABC des Nationalsozialismus (1933) by Dr. Curt Rosten, which in a more condensed fashion provided
some early Nazi visual standards. It turns out I had this book in my
collection all along without knowing its significance.
There
was a standards manual after all. It just was not what I envisioned or
expected. It turned out another record of graphic standards existed
where I least expected it: the
Reichs Gesetzblatt (Law
Journal). When a graphic element was changed by law or decree it was
chronicled in this document. So the Loch Ness mystery was solved,
somewhat.
Iron Fists: Branding the 20th Century Totalitarian State by Steven Heller will be released in paperback by Phaidon Press in March 20