History of Science & Technology, Including the Life and Letters of Richard P. Feynman, and Space Exploration

History of Science & Technology, Including the Life and Letters of Richard P. Feynman, and Space Exploration

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 48. Large Original Neon Apple Sign.

Apple Computer, Inc.

Large Original Neon Apple Sign

Lot Closed

December 13, 08:48 PM GMT

Estimate

10,000 - 15,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

APPLE COMPUTER INC.

Large Original Neon Rainbow Apple Logo Sign, ca. 1990s


Neon Rainbow Apple logo, suspended within a square acrylic shadow box, with transformer at top. OVERALL: approx. 36 1/2 inches wide by 36 1/2 inches tall (39 inches tall including transformer). LOGO: approx. 31 1/4 by 25 inches. Small crack to plexiglass where attached to transformer, with small area of loss. Plexiglass frame separating from plexiglass backing across bottom of piece.

Apple Computer Inc. boasts one of the world's most recognizable logos -- an apple with a bite taken out of the side. The present rainbow neon sign would have hung outside an authorized Apple retailer, and represents the company's second generation logo, the Rainbow Logo, which was in use from 1976 to 1998. Coinciding with the introduction of Apple’s first personal computer Apple II, the Rainbow Logo was meant to symbolize the launch of the world’s first computer that supported colors. 


The first Apple logo depicted Isaac Newton sitting under a tree with an apple dangling over his head, and the motto "Newton...A Mind Forever Voyaging Through Strange Seas of Thought...Alone" printed around the border. This design was only in use for a short period of time in 1976 before Steve Jobs commissioned Rob Janoff to design the greatly simplified apple design featured here. (See Steve Jobs letter lot for materials with this original logo). The inspiration for the bite taken out of the apple has been the subject of some debate over the years. Janoff has stated that it was meant to demonstrate scale and to delineate the fruit from another vaguely round fruit like a cherry. Others have speculated that it was an allusion to the groundbreaking mathematician and computer scientist Alan Turing, who died after biting into an apple laced with cyanide.