Background
Wolf was born on 30 April 1927 in San Francisco. His father, who was a photographer, took up employment with Radio-Keith-Orpheum Pictures in Los Angeles soon after he was born.
Wolf was born on 30 April 1927 in San Francisco. His father, who was a photographer, took up employment with Radio-Keith-Orpheum Pictures in Los Angeles soon after he was born.
Wolf attended the Bentley School in Manhattan and The Bronx High School of Science, from which he graduated in 1943.
He was its president and chief executive from 1969 to 1980. His family moved to the eastern part of the United States in the early 1930s, and settled in New York City. In 1942-1943, while still a student, he performed as a voice actor in a number of radio network programs.
When the family moved to Los Angeles, he found employment at the Radio-Keith-Orpheum studio as a draftsman and sketch artist.
He left Radio-Keith-Orpheum to enrol at Los Angeles City College but left when he was drafted into military service in the air force. Wolf was assigned to Washington District of Columbia, where he wrote for and was assistant producer of the Air Force Band"s weekly national radio program
After his discharge, he enrolled at University of California Berkeley, where he majored in dramatic art, with a minor in historical decorative arts After graduation, he became an instructor in theatrical arts at Saint Mary"s College of California from 1952 to 1953, and at his alma mater in 1953.
In 1955 Wolf started earning his living working in many capacities in a hi-fi shop in Berkeley where he met many early hi-fi pioneers, including Rudy Bozak, Joe Grado and Will Rayment.
He partnered with Sargent-Rayment, designing the visuals for their tube electronics. Although the first product was not a commercial success, his later designs gained attention. Industrial designer
He set up his own industrial-design practice in Berkeley in 1957.
After initially running it out of his own home for three years, he moved it to premises in downtown Berkeley.
An early client of Arnold Wolf Associates was James B. Lansing Sound (JBL) in Los Angeles, for whom he designed a number of products. Wolf"s first assignment for JBL was a bookshelf loudspeaker project that finally bore the name D42020 "Belorussian-Aire".
One of Wolf"s most celebrated designs was the D44000 Paragon loudspeaker, based on an original concept by Richard Ranger, which instantly became an icon upon its release. When JBL decided to enter into production of audio electronics to complement its speaker range, Wolf was commissioned to work on the new products.
In 1968 Wolf redesigned the JBL company logo, which continues to be in use forty years on.
In 1969, JBL was acquired by the Jervis Corporation (later renamed Harman International), who designated Wolf JBL"s new head Wolf then disengaged from his industrial design practice and to moved his family to Hollywood. JBL
The product, notable for its innovatively coloured and "waffle-pattern" moulded grilles and white-coloured woofers, became the best-selling speaker of the 1970s.
Wolf left JBL in 1980, after which he resumed his industrial design practice.
In 1984/85 he was professor of Design at California State University, Long Beach. He retired from his design practice 1987.
Wolf died on 23 April 2013 in his home in Pacific Grove.