André Ricard Sala Explained

André Ricard
Birth Date:18 June 1929
Birth Place:Barcelona, Spain
Nationality:Spanish, French
Style:Industrial Design
Notable Works:1992 Summer Olympics Torch

André Ricard (born 18 June 1929) is a Catalan industrial designer. He was born in Barcelona. He designed the torch for the 1992 Summer Olympics.[1] In 1993 he won the Creu de Sant Jordi award.

Biography

Ricard Sala was invited as an observer at the 1959 ICSID Congress and helped found ADIFAD in 1960, the Spanish designers society over which he later presided (1971-1973). He was a member of the ICSID Study Group in 1961, ICSID Vice-President 1963-1971, and the leader of ICSID Design for Disaster Relief in 1976. He founded and presided over ADP, the designer's professional association, in 1978. He was Vice-President of the Barcelona Design Center from 1990 through 1996 and a member of the Faculty of the Art Center - Europe from 1988 through 1996. He was head of Product Design in EINA school from 1993 through 1999. He was the designer of the Olympic torch of the 1992 Barcelona Olympics and of the Olympic Cauldrum at Lausanne's Olympic Museum in 1993. He served as President of the NGO Design for the World from 1999 through 2007. He is a trustee of EINA Foundation and of Loewe Foundation, an Honorary Member of the Saint George Academy (2000), and a member of the Royal Academy of Sciences and Arts (2011).

Ricard Sala won the Spanish National Design Prize in 1987, the Catalan Saint George Cross and the IOC Olympic Order in 1993, Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres from France in 1998 and Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur of France in 2011. An exhibition of his work was set up at the Miró Museum in 1999.

Books

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2008/08/01/sports/20080802_TORCH_GRAPHIC.html?hp# Torch Graphics at The New York Times