| More than 400
original fruitbox labels, each one a miniature
work of art, trace the growth of California’s
fruit industry from the 1880s through the 1950s.
Paper labels were first used in Southern California
in the 1880s to identify the brand name and packing
location of fresh citrus fruit. Growers and packers
were responsible for providing their own labels
and the images they chose related to their own
special interests, or were designed to call attention
to their products in the face of hundreds of
other competing brands.
To implement their ideas, the growers and packers
formed collaborative relationships with commercial
lithographic printers in San Francisco and Los
Angeles, which led to the production of thousands
of innovative designs. In the hands of a good
artist and talented graphic designer, the citrus
box label became an elegant small poster, containing
a message that was easily understood and remembered.
The labels embody the development of advertising,
showing changing trends in typography and graphic
design and reflecting the marketing ideas of
their times. Through their small and perfectly
executed pictures, they depict California as
a fertile paradise and it’s people as beautiful,
made healthy through the consumption of fresh
produce.
The images range from exquisite depictions of
fruit and blossom, groves and missions, through
wild west themes of cowboys, Indians, bears and
deer. The influence of Hollywood is apparent
in the labels form the thirties and forties with
cartoon characters, beach and sports references
and desert and mountain vistas. Beautiful women
were a constant, whether demure Victorian ladies
or saucy 1940s sirens.
The labels were used until the mid 1950s when
pre-printed cardboard packaging replaced the
old wooden crates. However the art still
exercises its appeal and today a thriving market
exists for the remaining labels. This is perhaps
one of the few areas where a collector can own
a piece of California history for a very
modest outlay.
The exhibition was curated by historian, author
and collector Gordon McClelland and California
Heritage Museum curator, Michael Trotter.
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