Burkey Belser
James Burkey Belser was an American graphic designer. He is best known for his design of the nutrition facts label, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration mandated food labeling system that appears on all packaged foods in the United States, which has been called by some "the most frequently reproduced graphic in the world." He is also widely known for the pioneering work in legal advertising that earned him a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Legal Marketing Association as well as induction into that organization's Hall of Fame.
Biography
Early life
Burkey Belser was born July 8, 1947, in Columbia, South Carolina. The Belser family has been long-established in the South, with Christian Belser arriving in Charleston from Baden-Baden, Duchy of Württemberg in 1787. A family plantation, Sunnyside on Edisto, South Carolina, has been exclusively in family hands from the Mikell side of the family for over 300 years. Summer-long stays in the natural setting of the plantation awakened his artistic predilection. He took painting and drawing courses at the University of South Carolina when he was eight. He redrew entire issues of The New Yorker cartoons before settling on favorite cartoonists such as William Steig and Charles Barsotti.His parents divorced in 1952. Belser lived another two years in Columbia with his mother and sister before moving with them and his stepfather to Birmingham, Alabama, for a year, then on to Memphis, Tennessee. Belser was given the President's Award by the student body, an award given to the individual judged to have contributed most to the high school. He was an Eagle Scout and earned the God and Country award.
Career
Belser was not initially trained in graphic design. He was an English major and an art minor at Davidson College in North Carolina. He then spent a year studying French literature at the University of Montpellier in France. During the decade following college, Belser trained himself to be a designer. He joined the provocative magazine published by Ralph Ginzburg, Avant Garde, in New York City, ultimately becoming its circulation director. After a year at the magazine, Belser left to travel from Istanbul to Kathmandu. Upon returning, he settled in Washington, D.C., and became the business manager for The Righteous Apple, a graphic design studio created for the non-profit black cultural arts organization, New Thing Art & Architecture Center.In 1978, he launched his own design firm, Burkey Belser Inc. That same year, he married lawyer Donna Greenfield. They later merged his company with her consulting firm into Greenfield/Belser Ltd. Belser began working with law firms shortly after the Bates v. State Bar of Arizona decision in 1977 allowed lawyers to advertise.
Belser's first brochure for a law firm was designed in 1983 for the Virginia firm of McGuire Woods & Battle. It was a 12-page hardcover book, modeled on 18th-century book design. The brochure took a Gold Award at the Art Directors Club of Washington, D.C., proving that design for law firms could be done in an instructive, informative and innovative manner. Belser quickly expanded the tactical and graphical legal vocabulary, creating the very first ads for a law firm, Howrey & Simon, in 1992. He was also among the first to create a law firm logo, a "designed" law firm website, law firm newsletters and every other marketing tool that corporations use routinely today but that were simply unknown in the legal industry at that time. The transformation of marketing in the legal industry was not unlike that of the banking industry in the 1970s and the accounting industry shortly thereafter—all of which had been for centuries either not permitted to "advertise" or bound by custom and decorum from doing so.
In 1992, he was contacted by David Aaron Kessler's staff at the FDA to help with the Nutrition Facts label, because of his prior success designing the EnergyGuide that appears on all major appliances in the U.S. Because Congress had mandated the reformulation of the label but not its redesign, Belser undertook the project as a pro bono effort, for which he received a Presidential Design Award from President Bill Clinton. In an interview in PRINT magazine, the Italian designer Massimo Vignelli said "I applaud the person who designed the Nutrition Facts label that's on every food package now being sold in the U.S.", describing it as a "masterpiece of information architecture, and quite a victory for social responsibility."
The success of that initiative led the FDA to once again call on Belser to design the Drug Facts label that now appears on all over-the-counter drugs. Belser would later call the Nutrition Facts label an iconic "government brand", describing it as an example of how "design can work in the public interest."