 |
Joseph Marshall
Parriott , FIDSA (1920-2000)
President of the Industrial Designers Society of America
(IDSA), 1966
U.S. industrial designer
and design educator born in Moundsville, WV and raised in Colorado. He
attended Colorado University and Pratt Institute, and served as lieutenant
with U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in WW II. Parriott worked for Norman
Bel Geddes and also for Raymond Loewy/William Snaith as manager of product
design, where he designed the Time-Master Dictaphone (1963), which won
a national design award by the Industrial Designer's Institute (IDI),
and the very successful WaterPic.
After leaving Loewy,
he became a consultant for Becker & Becker. In 1965, as an officer
and Fellow of IDI (a predecessor of IDSA) he participated with Robert
Hose of the Society of Industrial Designers (ASID) and Arthur Pulos of
the Industrial Designer's Education Association (IDEA) in the merger that
formed IDSA in 1965. He was president of IDSA in 1966.
Replacing Rowena
Reed Kostellow, Parriott became chairman of Pratt's industrial design
department in 1966, a post he held until 1990. In 1967 he led a student
faculty team which designed a highly-acclaimed full-scale mock-up of a
roomy and comfortable taxicab, known as "Parriott's Chariot",
which, unfortunately never went into production. He retired in 1992 to
Cooperstown, NY.
back to Past Presidents
|
 |