Vu (magazine)

VU
Vu (magazine) N°77 'Au revoir Black Birds!', issued April 9, 1929 with Adelaide Hall on the front cover
Vu (magazine) N°77 featuring Adelaide Hall
Editor Desfossés - Néogravure1
Categories Photojournalism
Frequency Weekly
Founder Lucien Vogel
Year founded 1928
Final issue 1940
Based in Paris, France
Language French
Not to be confused with VU Mag, a periodic publication by Agence Vu.

Vu, stylized as VU, was a weekly French pictorial magazine, created and directed by Lucien Vogel, which was published from March 21, 1928 to May 29, 1940; it ran for just over 600 issues.[1] In 1931, Vogel founded a companion magazine named Lu (read), a survey of the foreign press translated into French; this merged with Vu in March 1937.[2]

Vu was the first large weekly to systematically feature photographs in essay form, and as such was an important precursor to, and proponent of, the magazine format of photojournalism (which came to prominence a decade after its print run in magazines such as Life and Look). Although inspired in part by the German magazine Berliner Illustrirte Zeitung,[3] VU featured a constructivist aesthetic and was innovative in its layouts, especially in its double-page spreads.[4] Notable contributors included Cartier-Bresson, Man Ray, Brassaï, and André Kertész.[5] It was particularly advanced in its use of picture essays.[6]

The magazine published special issues on the Soviet Union (VU au pays des Soviets, November 18, 1931),[2] Germany (L'énigme allemande, 1932), the ascent of technology (Fin d'une civilisation, 1933), China (Interrogatoire de la Chine, 1934), and Spain (VU en Espagne, 1936).[1]

A major retrospective was hosted by the Maison Européenne de la Photographie (MEP) in late 2006/early 2007.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Looking at Vu: A photographic magazine, 19281940, Maison Européenne de la Photographie, 2006, retrieved January 18, 2013.
  2. 1 2 Richard Davies and G. S. Smith, "D. S. Mirsky: Twenty-Two Letters (192634) to Salomeya Halpern; Seven Letters (1930) to Vera Suvchinskaya (Traill)", Oxford Slavonic Papers N.S. 30 (1997) 89, p. 110, note 100.
  3. Danielle Leenaerts, "Le magazine français Vu (192840): Naissance de l'information visuelle et utopie de la substitution de l'image photographique au texte écrit", in: Elective Affinities: Testing Word and Image Relationships, ed. Catriona MacLeod, Véronique Plesch and Charlotte Schoell-Glass, Word & image interactions 6, Amsterdam/New York: Rodopi, 2009, ISBN 9781441625519, pp. 15972, p. 159 (French)
  4. Steven Heller and Karen Pomeroy, Design Literacy: Understanding Graphic Design, New York: Allworth, 1997, ISBN 9781880559765, p. 62: "Paris Match was arguably the most popular picture magazine, but the newsweekly VU ... was the most innovative".
  5. "Vu Magazine: Photos, Robots and Cutting-Edge Design", Global Moxie blog, February 19, 2007, updated June 13, 2007.
  6. Steven Heller, "Photography Changes the Look and Content of Magazines", Click! Smithsonian Photography Initiative, retrieved January 18, 2013.

Further reading

External links

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