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・ Ernst Bauer (Kapitän zur See)
・ Ernst Baumann
・ Ernst Baumeister
・ Ernst Baylon
・ Ernst Behler
・ Ernst Behm
・ Ernst Behmer
・ Ernst Benda
・ Ernst Bergmann
・ Ernst Bergmann (philosopher)
・ Ernst Bernard Heyne
・ Ernst Berndt
・ Ernst Bernheim
・ Ernst Bessey
・ Ernst Betche
Ernst Bettler
・ Ernst Beutelspacher
・ Ernst Beyeler
・ Ernst Biberstein
・ Ernst Bickel
・ Ernst Biehler
・ Ernst Billgren
・ Ernst Blasius
・ Ernst Blauensteiner
・ Ernst Bloch
・ Ernst Blum
・ Ernst Boepple
・ Ernst Bogislaw von Croÿ
・ Ernst Bolbrinker
・ Ernst Boll


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Ernst Bettler : ウィキペディア英語版
Ernst Bettler

Ernst Bettler is a fictional Swiss graphic designer. He was invented by Christopher Wilson in a 2000 hoax article published in the second issue of ''Dot Dot Dot'', a magazine of visual culture.
According to the article, Bettler was asked in the 1950s to design advertisement posters for ''Pfäfferli+Huber'' (P+H), a Swiss pharmaceutical manufacturer. The article states that Bettler knew of the company's involvement in Nazi concentration camp experiments and decided to accept the commission with the intention of damaging P+H. The four posters he created, Wilson's article recounts, were exemplary works of International Typographic Style design, advertising P+H drugs such as "Contrazipan". However, according to the article, the posters featured abstract compositions that could be read as capital letters – spelling out "N - A - Z - I" when displayed in sequence. Wilson's article states that the public outcry that followed the public display of the posters ruined P+H in a matter of weeks.
Even though it was highly detailed and featured many photographs and illustrations, the article was a complete fabrication. Ernst Bettler, Pfäfferli+Huber and its drugs do not exist, and neither do the Swiss towns "Sumisdorf" and "Burgwald" that feature in the article – their names are presumably based on the real Swiss towns of Sumiswald and Burgdorf. Nonetheless, the story was well received in graphic design circles. Among others, the September/October 2001 "Graphic Anarchy" issue of ''Adbusters'' magazine hailed Bettler's work as "one of the greatest design interventions on record", and the 2002 graphic design textbook ''Problem Solved'' by Michael Johnson covers Bettler as one of the "founding fathers of the 'culture-jamming' form of protest".
Wilson's article was first revealed to be false in a 2002 entry in the blog Lines and Splines by Andy Crewdson. The Bettler hoax and its reception was subsequently covered by Rick Poynor in an article in the February 2003 issue of ''Eye'' magazine, as well as by other blogs.
==References==

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抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Ernst Bettler」の詳細全文を読む



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