As more requests came to the Vienna museum from abroad, a partner institute called
Mundaneum (a name adopted from an abortive collaboration with
Paul Otlet) was established in 1931/2 to promote international work. It formed branches containing small exhibitions in
Berlin,
The Hague,
London and
New York City. Members of the Vienna team travelled periodically to the
Soviet Union during the early 1930s in order to help set up the 'All-union institute of pictorial statistics of Soviet construction and economy' (Всесоюзный институт изобразительной статистики советского строительства и хозяйства), commonly abbreviated to
IZOSTAT (ИЗОСТАТ), which produced statistical graphics about the
Five Year Plans, among other things. After the closure of the Gesellschafts- und Wirtschaftsmuseum in 1934 Neurath, Reidemeister and Arntz fled to the
Netherlands, where they set up the International Foundation for Visual Education in The Hague. During the 1930s significant commissions were received from the US, including a series of mass-produced charts for the
National Tuberculosis Association and Otto Neurath’s book
Modern man in the making (1939), a high point of Isotype on which he, Reidemeister and Arntz worked in close collaboration.
Rudolf Modley, who served as an assistant to Otto Neurath in Vienna, introduced ISOTYPE methods to the United States through his position as chief curator at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. Furthermore, by 1934 Modley established Pictorial Statistics Incorporated in New York, a company which promoted the production and distribution of ISOTYPE-like pictographs for education, news, and other forms of communications. Beginning in 1936, Modley's pictographs were used in a nationwide public health campaign for US Surgeon General Thomas Parran's "War on Syphilis." Otto and Marie Neurath fled from German invasion to
England, where they established the Isotype Institute in 1942. In
Britain Isotype was applied to wartime publications sponsored by the
Ministry of Information and to documentary films produced by
Paul Rotha. After Otto Neurath’s death in 1945, Marie Neurath and her collaborators continued to apply Isotype to tasks of representing many kinds of complex information, especially in popular science books for young readers. A real test of the international ambitions of Isotype, as Marie Neurath saw it, was the project to design information for civic education, election procedure and economic development in the
Western Region of Nigeria in the 1950s. ==Archive==