164
164
c. 1950
maple, masonite 16¼ h × 28¼ w × 6¾ d in (41 × 72 × 17 cm)
maple, masonite 16¼ h × 28¼ w × 6¾ d in (41 × 72 × 17 cm)
estimate: $500–700
result: $1,875
provenance: Estate of Susan Jackson Keig, Chicago
Susan Jackson Keig was one of the most celebrated graphic designers in Chicago, but a career in art was not always her first choice. Kicked out of an all-male engineering class at the University of Kentucky when her professor declared “this is no place for a woman,” Keig pursued a degree in art and design, tapping into a passion that she held since a young age. Raised on her family farm in Kentucky, Keig began keeping a scrapbook about architecture at the age of twelve. She excelled in school and enrolled in post-graduate studies at the Corcoran Art Gallery School until 1940, when she was recruited to join the cryptanalyst division of the US Army Signal Corps in Washington, D.C. During the war, she and fellow code-breakers successfully cracked the Japanese code—a major contribution to securing victory.
I feel that as designer, we are a rather privileged group. The world is our office—literally no confines to what we might do.
Susan Jackson Keig