88 740
Fashion Jobs
BROOKS
Data & Analytics Organizational Change Management Analyst II
Permanent · SEATTLE
BROOKS
Creative Operations & Traffic Manager
Permanent · SEATTLE
NEIMAN MARCUS
Loss Prevention Investigator- Coral Gables
Permanent · CORAL GABLES
LORO PIANA
Loro Piana, Client Development Manager - Madison Ave
Permanent · NEW YORK
MOËT HENNESSY USA
Senior Brand Manager; Hennessy v.s
Permanent · NEW YORK
CELINE
Operations Supervisor - Topanga Westfield
Permanent · LOS ANGELES
TIFFANY & CO
Operations Coordinator- Richmond
Permanent · RICHMOND
ESTÉE LAUDER COMPANIES
Keyholder - The Cosmetics Company Store - 20hrs - Geneva Commons. - Geneva, IL
Permanent · CHICAGO
ESTÉE LAUDER COMPANIES
Keyholder - The Cosmetics Company Store - 20hrs - Arundel Mills 2 - Hanover, MD
Permanent · HANOVER
ESTÉE LAUDER COMPANIES
Keyholder - The Cosmetics Company Store - 20hrs - Geneva Commons. - Geneva, IL
Permanent · CHICAGO
ESTÉE LAUDER COMPANIES
Keyholder - The Cosmetics Company Store - 20hrs - Arundel Mills 2 - Hanover, MD
Permanent · HANOVER
URBN
Urban Outfitters Brand Marketing Director - Creator Relations And Social Media
Permanent · PHILADELPHIA
URBN
Urban Outfitters Director, Performance Marketing
Permanent · PHILADELPHIA
URBN
Free People: Buyer, Free-Est
Permanent · PHILADELPHIA
SACKS
Avp, PR & Celebrity
Permanent · NEW YORK
SACK OFF 5TH
Asset Protection Investigator
Permanent · SHREWSBURY
BANANA REPUBLIC
General Manager - st Louis Premium (New Store)
Permanent · CHESTERFIELD
OLD NAVY
General Manager - Town Square s/c
Permanent · SCHERERVILLE
OLD NAVY
Asset Protection Service Representative - Shops at Skyview Center
Permanent · NEW YORK
OLD NAVY
Assistant General Manager, Merchandising - ka Makana Ali'i
Permanent · KAPOLEI
OLD NAVY
Assistant General Manager NE - Festival Market at Dogwood
Permanent · FLOWOOD
CROCS
Legal Administrator (Contractor)
Permanent · BROOMFIELD
By
Reuters
Published
Nov 1, 2016
Reading time
2 minutes
Download
Download the article
Print
Text size

Move over Picasso: first-ever emojis to hang in N.Y. Museum of Modern Art

By
Reuters
Published
Nov 1, 2016

Smiley faces and images of food and cats designed almost 20 years ago by a Japanese phone company and used in digital messages worldwide have now attained the status of art.


The original set of 176 emoji, which has been acquired by the Museum of Modern Art. - Credit Shigetaka Kurita, gift of NTT DoCoMo



The Museum of Modern Art in New York has been licensed to display the emojis in its permanent collection alongside works by Pablo Picasso and Jackson Pollock, it said on Wednesday.

It was not clear how the emojis would be displayed at MoMA, but the installation is due to open in early December.

Japanese national carrier Nippon Telegraph and Telephone, or NTT DOCOMO, developed the original set of 176 emojis and released them for cellphones and pagers in 1999.

The 12 x 12 pixel images of hearts, arrows and hand gestures were the blueprint for the emojis widely used today, and they expanded the ways to communicate using the limited screen space available on devices of the time.

Paola Antonelli, a senior curator at MoMA's Department of Architecture and Design, said part of the museum's mission had always been to collect and display timeless art and design.

"Emojis as a concept go back in the centuries, to ideograms, hieroglyphics, and other graphic characters, enabling us to draw this beautiful arch that covers all of human history," Antonelli said in a statement.

The original emojis, designed by developer Shigetaka Kurita, proved very popular in Japan, and the rest of the world soon caught on. By 2006, Alphabet Inc.'s Google was offering emojis for use in its Gmail service, and Apple added them in 2011 to its iOS messaging app.

The emoji display comes six years after MoMA made headlines when it added the @ symbol - used in email addresses and on social media - to its collection, citing its "design power."

© Thomson Reuters 2024 All rights reserved.