Lavater spent the first nine years of her life in Moscow and Athens. In 1922, her mother (the author Mary Lavater-Sloman) and father (Emil Lavater, an engineer) settled the family back in Winterthur. After attending High School, Lavater studied graphic arts in Zurich from 1931 to 1935 at the Fachklasse für Grafik an der Kunstgewerbeschule Grafik (School of Applied Arts). It was here, in 1932, that she began studying under Ernst Keller in a class of 28 of which 7 were women. Later in life, Lavater recalled this training:
What we were learning was design, and so we began with the most important thing, drawing. Where do you put a sign in a rectangle? What is the standard solution to this exercise? Should the strongest element be the sign or the drawing? How can both be distinguished at a distance, yet integrated in a composition? [5]
Studying in Stockholm, Basel, and Paris, she opened her own studio for applied design in Zurich in 1937 with Gottfried Honegger, her future husband. It was here that Lavater embarked on her first profession as a designer of symbols, logos, and trademarks. Among her initial creations were the three keys logo of the Schweizerischen Bankverein (Swiss Bank Corporation- which is now used by its successor, Swiss global financial services company UBS AG)[3] and the logo for the Swiss National Exhibition of 1939.[4]
After marrying Honegger in 1940, she bore two daughters: Bettina (1943) and Cornelia (1944).
From 1944 to 1958 she worked extensively with the young person's magazine Jeunesse designing the covers, supplying illustrations, and being responsible for typography.[6]
Moving to New York City in 1958, she began designing scientific illustrations for Dell Publishing's Visual series. It was during this early period in New York that Honegger-Lavater became influenced by American street advertising and began to utilize pictograms as graphic representations of linguistic elements in her work. In 1962, the New York CityMuseum of Modern Art published her William Tell as a single sheet lithograph, accordion folded in the "Leporello" style,[7] with a legend listing the meanings of the various symbols (e.g., a single blue dot represents William Tell). The story proceeds chronologically as the book unfolds, and is told entirely by using the symbols without words. She produced a growing number of similar works throughout the rest of her career.
By 1995 she was creating videos of colors and symbols moving across a screen, set to music.
At the time of her death, she was retired and residing outside of Zurich. She is interred at the Fluntern Cemetery in Zürich.[8]
Lavater's William Tell and Edward Ruscha's book Twentysix Gasoline Stations were both published in 1962 (though in later editions Ruscha's copyright is given as 1963). Ruscha's book has been cited by some as the first modern artist's book,[11] though there were actually several other artists working with the book form at the same time. This claim can now be contested noting that Lavater's work, as well as that of another Swiss-German artist, Dieter Roth, preceded Ruscha.
Starting in 1963, the Paris-based publisher Adrien Maeght began publication of a series of her folding books broadly entitled Imageries. These books consist of classic fairy tales from the Brothers Grimm, Charles Perrault, and Hans Christian Andersen. These were also done as accordion-folded books with stories told using symbols rather than written language.
Educational influence
Lavater's work has been used by educators in the areas of artistic development and literacy. The National Library of France has encouraged children to explore artistic expression using the techniques created by Lavater.[12] Faculty at the University of Erfurt have produced two pedagogical guides for teaching literacy and creativity to young children using Lavater's version of the classic fairy tale, Snow White (Schneewittchen) [13] and the German fairy tale Hans in Luck (Hans im Glück).[14]
Works
Prints
2300 years of medical costume : distinctive garb of the medical and related professions from the time of Hippocrates to the Napoleonic era. North Chicago, Ill. : Abbott Laboratories, 1962 (OCLC 5734427)
Chacun sa chimère : sept eaux-fortes; Portfolio with 5 signed dry point etchings combined with color lithography. Paris : A. Maeght, 1984. (OCLC 80256726)
Books
Authored, illustrated, contributed, and edited (50+ items)
Sandy und die Kinder : ein Bilderbuch, Zurich : JUWO-Verlags A.G, [1949] (OCLC 633313764)
Tyll Ulenspiegel und Lamme Goedzak : Legende von ihren heroischen, lustigen und ruhmreichen Abenteuern im Lande Flandern und andern Orts by Charles de Coster; illustrated by Warja Lavater. Zürich : Adolf Hürlimann, 1951 (OCLC 637344224)
Die Linie by Warja Honegger-Lavater; Marga Bührig, [S.l.] : [s.n.], [1958] 24 sheets + 9 postcards (OCLC 603621666)
Il paziente difficile [s.l.] : [s.n.] [1960?] Geigy Spa s.d., Milano
Vererbung : Erbgut, Umwelt, Persönlichkeit by Hans Burla and Marco Schnitter; illustrated by Warja Honegger-Lavater. [München] ; [Zürich] : Droemer-Knaur, [1962] (OCLC 601556681)
Die Fabel vom Zufall, Paris Maeght [u.a.] 1969 164784457
Imageries, (Perrault, Charles,; 1628–1703) Paris : A. Maeght, 1965-1982 (OCLC 18529065)
Retelling of 6 fairy tales by Charles Perrault in coded images and colors. Each volume is an accordion-fold, printed on one side, individually encased in lucite, all volumes in box slipcase.
(v. 1). Le Petit Poucet -- (v. 2). Blanche Neige -- (v. 3). Le Petit Chaperon Rouge -- (v. 4). La fable du Hasard -- (v. 5). La Belle au Bois dormant -- (v. 6). Cendrillon.
Also published individually:
Le Petit Poucet, Paris : A. Maeght, 1979 (OCLC 64394985)
Blanche Neige, Paris : A. Maeght, 1974 (OCLC 6463880)
Le Petit Chaperon Rouge, Paris : A. Maeght, 1965 (OCLC 4461512)
La fable du Hasard, Paris : A. Maeght, 1968 (OCLC 11584251)
La Belle au Bois dormant, Paris : A. Maeght, 1982 (OCLC 54661715))
Cendrillon, Paris : A. Maeght, 1976 (OCLC 7536039)
Lune enchantée : une imagerie, racontée et dessinée d'après le conte de Charles Perrault "La belle au bois dormant", Paris : Adrien Maeght, 1973 (OCLC 77670046, 828641009, 845167435)
Perzeptionen: es spricht, die sicht im, Sicht, Gedicht, Zürich : Adolf Hürlimann, 1973 (OCLC 46708766)
do do : moving ... for our very little ones, New York : the Museum of Modern Art, 1976 (OCLC 633400532)
Die Rose und der Laubfrosch: eine Fabel (The Rose and the Tree frog: a Fable), Zurich : Edition Schlegl, 1978 (OCLC 48193811)
Roman, Amsterdam : Da Costa, 1985, (OCLC 77992810)
Hirten : eine Geschichte in Reimen : [begleitet von weissen und schwarzen Merkmalen Juli 1984 bis März 1985], Zürich : ok Eichholzer, 1985, (OCLC 633237294)
Un anagram : plénitude? [Non] - solitude? [Non], Zürich : Atelier Handsatz Fässler, Paris : [s.n.] 1987 (OCLC 722572605)
Fraternité - égalité - liberté. chaque jour ... un pictogram., O.O. u. Vlg. 1988 (12 numbered copies)
Le souverain et son bouffon : "pictogramm mural" ; lithographie., Paris : Les Amis du Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, 1988 (OCLC 705826319)
La mauvaise herbe : "pictogramm mural" ; lithographie., Paris : Les Amis du Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, 1988 (OCLC 705826298, 722602669, 722596642)
Perception - when signs start to communicate : pictogram, Zurich : Truninger-Druck, 1991 (Variations on 5 symbols, written by Johann Caspar Lavater in his last year, "Suffering - Leiden, Bearing - Tragen, Resting - Ruhen, Acting - Wirken, Enjoying - Geniessen", with text by Warja Lavater in English and German. Published on the occasion of the opening of the Interdisciplinary Conference "The Faces of Physiognomy", Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, to the 250th birthday of J.C. Lavater. From the collection of Warja Lavater, signed by the artist.) (OCLC 633466501)
Spectacle: un conte, Paris : A. Maeght, 1990 (OCLC 24798997)
^ abEvamy, Michael (2007). Logo. London, U.K.: Laurence King Pub. Ltd. pp. 304–305. "The UBS mark was originally created for the Swiss Bank Corporation in 1937 by a Swiss illustrator, Warja Lavater, fresh out of Zürich's School of applied art."
^ abHollis, Richard (2006). Swiss graphic design: the origins and growth of an international style, 1920-1965 (1st ed.). New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 124. ISBN0-300-10676-9. OCLC65221958."Although the first prize in the competition for a symbol . . . was won by Herman Eidenbenz, Warja Honegger-Lavater's design was selected for use. The four rings were intended to represent trade, light industry, heavy industry, and agriculture."
^Hollis, Richard (2006). Swiss graphic design: the origins and growth of an international style, 1920-1965 (1st ed.). New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 114. ISBN0-300-10676-9. OCLC65221958.
^Plath, Monika; Richter, Karen (2006). Die Bildwelten der Warja Lavater "Schneewittchen" Modelle und Materialien für den Literaturunterricht (Klasse 1 bis Klasse 5). Baltmannsweiler : Schneider-Verl. Hohengehren. ISBN978-3-89676-958-9.
^Plath, Monika; Richter, Karen (2015). Hans im Glück : in Bildern von Warja Lavater. Baltmannsweiler : Schneider-Verl. Hohengehren. ISBN978-3-83401-439-9.
Beckett, Sandra L. "Artists' books for a cross-audience - Warja Lavater" IN Studies in children's literature, 1500-2000, Dublin; Portland, OR: Four Courts, 2004, pp. 163–166 (OCLC56361783)
Kushner, Robert. "Review of Exhibitions - Warja Lavater at the Swiss Institute" IN Art in America vol. 85, no. 4 (April 1997), p. 122
Lavater, Warja. "Perception: When Signs Start to Communicate" IN The Faces of Physiognomy: interdisciplinary approaches to Johann Caspar Lavater. Edited by Ellis Shookman. Columbia, SC : Camden House, 1993. pp. 182–187. (OCLC28669014)
Mallarte-Feldman, Claire. "Folk Materials, Re-Visions, and Narrative Images: The Intertextual Games They Play" IN Children's Literature Association Quarterly Volume 28, Number 4, Winter 2003. p. 215. E-ISSN1553-1201 Print ISSN0885-0429
Moholy, Lucia. "Current and Forthcoming Exhibitions - Switzerland" IN Burlington Magazine vol. 105, no. 719 (February 1963), p. 85
Plath, Monika and Richter, Karen. Die Bildwelten der Warja Lavater "Schneewittchen" : Modelle und Materialien für den Literaturunterricht. Baltmannsweiler : Schneider-Verl. Hohengehren, 2006. OCLC71345203)