After Montreal won its bid to host the Games, graphic designer Georges Huel was made Director General of COJO’s graphics and design department. He assembled a team led by Pierre-Yves Pelletier, a group that included pillars of the graphic design community like Yvon Laroche and Raymond Bellemare, as well as many other associates.
The team had to produce hundreds of communications documents—tickets for the competitions, programs for cultural and sporting events, posters, signage, administrative reports and informational leaflets and brochures—as well as a variety of other items like furniture for the Olympic Village.
These designers all adopted the International Style, an aesthetic that expressed both modernity and efficiency. This simple, structured, refined style also featured the occasional use of photography.
Georges Huel’s first creations was the official logo of the Montreal Games. Using the red of the Canadian flag, it skilfully combines the Olympic rings with a stylized podium, forming an “M” for Montreal and an oval stadium track in the centre of the logo.