Eli Gross


Eli Gross was an Israeli graphic designer and typographer, and one of the leading figures among the generation of designers who introduced the Swiss style and the concept of total design to Israel. Gross worked in both the Netherlands and Israel and was involved in major projects shaping the visual identity of public institutions in Israel.

Biography

Gross was born in Haifa in 1939. After completing his military service and working at Israel Shipyards, he moved to the Netherlands, where he studied graphic design and typography at the Royal Academy of Art in The Hague from 1961 to 1966. In 1968, he joined the studio Total Design in Amsterdam, where he worked for team Wim Crouwel and team Benno Wissing. He assisted on large-scale projects such as the signage system for Schiphol Airport, the logo for the City of Rotterdam, and the design of the Dutch Pavilion at Expo '70 in Osaka, Japan.
In 1972, he returned to Israel and established an independent studio in Tel Aviv called "E. Gross Designers Ltd." Among the projects he carried out were:
In 1973, Gross joined the faculty at Bezalel as a senior lecturer in the Department of Graphic Design, where he taught typography. In 1975, he was appointed senior lecturer at the Faculty of Architecture and Town Planning at the Technion.

Style and influence

Gross is associated with the International Typographic Style, also known as the "Swiss Style." This design approach is characterized by the use of a strict grid system, sans-serif typefaces such as Helvetica and Univers, and left-aligned text—or right-aligned in the case of the Hebrew alphabet. More specifically, Gross is identified with the Dutch dialect of Swiss design.
Curator Ran Shechori described Gross as "the kind of director who does not emphasize himself, whose great achievement is expressed in everything flowing as if by itself," calling him "the loyal successor of the modern movement, which championed humanism, functionality, rationality, and the aspiration for universality, to bridge cultural, national, ethnic, and linguistic gaps."
Prof. Yarom Vardimon wrote that Gross would "resolutely integrate the spirit of the international style into his work—without defining it as such—and out of a belief in the righteousness of the path: 'In this small world, it is important that we know how to speak the language of others. Israel is closed off in its local orientation; we must expose ourselves to dialogue at an international level.'"
Gross consistently employed the Hebrew sans-serif typefaces Oron and Narkis Tam, often paired with lowercase Latin letters such as Univers and Helvetica.

Awards and recognition

In 1980, Gross received a special commendation for his design of the visual identity for Bank Leumi le-Israel, as part of the 1979 "Otot" Awards for outstanding works in the field of advertising in Israel.
In 1977, Gross was awarded the Sandberg Grant for Research by the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, together with architect Saadia Mendel, for the development of a multifunctional urban column integrating various public functions such as a traffic light, mailbox, street lighting, and more.
In 1975, Gross won the Art Book Competition held by the Israel Museum in Jerusalem.

Exhibitions