Great Britian was the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution and the epicenter of the development of modern industrial design. This book - the fourth volume in the "MoMA Design Series" featuring works in the Museum's collection - explores this legacy, tracing the growth of British design from the eighteenth century to the Millennium Dome and beyond. In its more than two-hundred-year scope, "British Design" explores the Arts and Crafts Movement, the Spitfire and Hurricane fighter planes of World War-II, the Mini car and Dyson vacuum cleaner, the Cool Britannia cultural explosion in the late 1990s, and British designers' take on the digital devices that define entertainment and communication in the early twenty-first century.
An introduction by Paola Antonelli, Senior Curator of Architecture and Design at The Museum of Modern Art, provides an overview of design culture in Great Britain; an essay and timeline by Hugh Aldersey-Williams, curator, former design critic for "The New Statesman", and author of "World Design" and "New American Design", illuminates the masterpieces of modern British design superbly reproduced in the volume's plate section.