Viktor Schreckengost
Viktor Schreckengost, a pioneer of modern industrial design whose career spanned 75 years and whose influence
—through design, art and education—has left an indelible mark on modern America. A small-town potter who began his
career during the Great Depression, he championed the middle-class consumer, believing that good design didn’t have to
come at a high price.
Always in tune with changing fashions, Viktor imbued his creations with the spirit of their generation: the Jazz Bowl, originally
commissioned by Eleanor Roosevelt in 1930 is now an Art Deco icon; the Murray pedal car, a staple of baby-boomer
childhoods; and American Limoges’ Flower Shop dinnerware, considered so representative of its time that the American
Girl™ 1940’s doll Molly is sold with a tea set based on the design.
From the 1930s-1970s, Viktor maintained full-time careers in teaching and industrial design in addition to creating products
for Murray, Sears, General Electric, and Harris Printing, among others. His greatest impact on the American cultural
landscape comes arguably through his industrial designs and his
influence as a teacher on modern industrial designers.
Viktor was raised in Sebring, Ohio and attended the Cleveland
School of Art (now the Cleveland Institute of Art). Viktor turned 100
years-old this year.
