ePoster Gallery 3/2022
Nourishing and warming: hot drinks in advertising
Hot drinks increase our sense of wellbeing and are also described as an inner blanket. Coffee, tea and cocoa have long been exotic luxury goods. Large areas of the western world were only able to afford these goods in the 18th and 19th centuries.
These posters use recurring motifs, such as the mother-and-child image or the roundness of a cup, to suggest cosiness, comfort and warmth. The moving steam of the freshly made hot drink not only appeals to our sense of vision, but also to our sense of smell and taste. When advertising overseas luxury goods, however, a dominant, colonialist view is often also apparent: racist stereotypes are unwittingly perpetuated.
3 questions on the cultural dissemination of hot drinks. Explained by Nico Lazúla, documentalist of the poster collection of the Museum für Gestaltung Zürich.
How did coffee become popular as a luxury product?
Industrialisation led to a significant change in living conditions. The reduction in physically strenuous labour, the increase in seated or standing work and growing demands on mental concentration and adaptability resulted in considerable changes in nutrition. Drinking luxury products such as coffee as a reward helped people to endure long working hours and break up the day. Import restrictions, which made coffee much more expensive, as well as poor nutrition led to the introduction of coffee substitutes towards the end of the 19th century, which have a higher nutritional value than coffee beans.
Are there European regions with a dominant tea culture?
A coffee culture is dominant in Europe, while tea is rarely drunk. Europe’s tea regions include the British Isles, Poland, Russia, Turkey and some areas of Germany. In most tea regions, coffee is of only marginal importance. In southern countries, people can often be seen constantly sipping warm tea, which makes them sweat slightly, thereby helping them to keep cool. This appears to be physiologically beneficial, but there is also another factor behind this tradition: a lack of clean drinking water.
How did drinking chocolate become popular across Europe?
Drinking chocolate is the third hot drink that spread across Europe in modern times, resulting in the development of its own drinking culture. Originally from Central America, the drink first made an appearance at the Spanish royal court during the 16th century; chocolate became a fashionable drink at the French court in Versailles during the 17th century. In addition to being enjoyed by the aristocracy, drinking chocolate was also a popular source of energy during Lent in the 17th century, especially in monasteries, because it wasn’t on the list of food and drink banned by the church. Drinking chocolate only began to be mass produced when soluble cocoa powder was invented in the 19th century.
Meinl Tee
Design: Joseph Binder
Posting date: 1924
Ovomaltine
Design: Viktor Rutz
Posting date: 1937
Usego – Jubiläums Kaffee
Design: Walter Sigg
Posting date: 1953
Götz Gramlich
Design: Florian Steiner – Kaffeerösterei Heidelberg
Posting date: 2014
Stoll Café
Design: Florian Steiner – Kaffeerösterei Heidelberg
Posting date: 2013
Coop Kaffee – Preiswert und gut
Design: Donald Brun
Posting date: 1943
Kaffee
Design: Hugo Wetli
Posting date: 1960
Dépôt de chocolat Masson – Chocolat mexicain
Design: Eugène Samuel Grasset
Posting date: 1896
Coop Kräutertee – Bekömmlich und billig
Design: Charles Kuhn
Posting date: 2007
Kaffee Hag
Design: Ludwig Hohlwein
Posting date: 1913
Kaffeekanne und Design – Eine Entdeckungsreise
Design: Claudia Schmauder
Posting date: 1996
Café Wolgrot
Design: Martin Amstutz, Patrick Kessler, Manuela Bruno
Posting date: 1992
Riquet Tee – Kräfitg – Aromatisch
Design: Ludwig Hohlwein
Posting date: 1926
Franck Aroma – Cichorie
Design: Numa Rick
Posting date: 1946
Meinl Kaffee
Design: Joseph Binder
Posting date: 1924
Chocolat Ph. Suchard Neuchâtel
Design: Anonymous
Posting date: 1898
Chocolat Carpentier
Design: Henry Gerbault
Posting date: 1900
Compagnie Française des Chocolats et des Thés
Design: Théophile – Alexandre Steinlen
Posting date: 1894
Co–op Tee
Design: Viktor Rutz
Posting date: 1942
Ovomaltine – Erfrischt und stärkt
Design: Celestino Piatti
Posting date: 1963
Tobler Cacao – Die billigste Volksnahrung
Design: Anonymous
Posting date: 1937
Kind – Frau – Mann – Ovomaltine
Design: Pierre Gauchat
Posting date: 1954
Banago
Design: Kaltenbach & Zbinden / Fritz Kaltenbach
Posting date: 1960
Meinl Kaffee
Design: Hans Krautschneider
Posting date: 1918
Suchard Express Drink
Contini Sjöstedt-Impact
Design: Thomas Cugini
Posting date: 1971
Ovomaltine – Um mehr zu leisten!
Design: Werbeagnetur Dr. Ivan Ruperti
Posting date: 1969
Kein Glas Milch ist gross genug mit Nesquik
Design: Anonym
Posting date: 1961
Volg Apfel-Tee
Design: Viktor Rutz
Posting date: 1943
Tee
Design: Hugo Wetli
Posting date: 1960
Franck Spezial
Design: Ludwig Hohlwein
Posting date: 1929
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