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Object Timeline
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1953 |
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1993 |
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2012 |
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2025 |
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E15WE Radio
This is a radio. It is dated 1953 and we acquired it in 1993. Its medium is molded plastic, metal. It is a part of the Product Design and Decorative Arts department.
These Crosley radios are evidence of automobile styling’s influence on industrial design in postwar America. As manufacturers transitioned from war-related goods to consumer products in the years after World War II, the automotive industry came to dominate the domestic landscape, employing one in six working Americans and quadrupling its output between 1946 and 1955. The visual landscape, too, was impacted: vehicular imagery and automotive motifs, whose streamlined aesthetic became popular in the 1930s, were integrated into products ranging from furniture to household appliances. Here tuners and dials take inspiration from gleaming hubcaps, speakers stand in for automobile grilles, and the overall program recalls car headlights gently swelling out of their sleek and dynamic casing.
This object was
donated by
Max Pine.
It is credited Gift of Barbara and Max Pine.
- Drawing, Design for a Radio
- graphite on off-white paper.
- Gift of Max and Barbara Pine.
- 1994-18-2
- "Factory F2," white Desk Tool
- plastic, metal.
- Gift of Plus Corporation.
- 1996-16-5
- Clock With Kitchen Timer
- molded and glazed earthenware, glass, chrome-plated metal, painted metal,....
- Gift of George R. Kravis II.
- 2016-5-10
Our curators have highlighted 1 object that are related to this one.
- Muji Wall-mounted CD Player
- abs plastic, metal.
- Gift of MUJI.
- 2013-35-1
Its dimensions are
H x W x D: 18.4 x 32.2 x 16 cm (7 1/4 x 12 11/16 x 6 5/16 in.)
Cite this object as
E15WE Radio; USA; molded plastic, metal; H x W x D: 18.4 x 32.2 x 16 cm (7 1/4 x 12 11/16 x 6 5/16 in.); Gift of Barbara and Max Pine; 1993-133-34
This object was previously on display as a part of the exhibition The World of Radio.