Abstract

This paper will centre upon the visual language of the two popular Turkish youth magazines, which were designed, printed and circulated for the pre-television society of the 1930’s Turkey. New Man (Yeni Adam) and Seven Days (Yedi Gun) were the two prominent Turkish magazines of their era, as each had different political views from the other, but interestingly both had art deco visuality in common, in terms of interpreting the Modernism. Although art deco or the modern style movement was identified with new mass production industries and new consuming cultures of the 1920’s post-war European and American societies, the movement also influenced the press world of the non-industrialized and agricultural countries, located in the periphery of Europe, such as the Balkan states and Turkey. This paper aims to clarify how art deco gained different ideological features in the 1930’s Turkish mass print culture, linked with the Modernization programme of the Turkish state. New Man was a socialist realist and Seven Day s was republican nationalist youth magazines, which had rich visuality and strong editorial content in common. However, each represented a different face of art deco with a different idealized ideology to liberate, to educate, to unify the masses or mainly to modernize the young society.

Highlights

  • This paper centers upon the visual language of the two popular Turkish youth magazines, which were designed, printed and circulated for pre-television society of the 1930’s Turkey

  • The name art deco or the modern style was officially defined in 1925 Paris International Exposition, which declared the collaboration of arts and crafts with engine industries through exhibited modernist projects of the participant states.[1]

  • Art deco visually idealized the rapid growth of the mechanical mass production industries with geometric forms and cubic style images, and was used as an effective tool for visual information designs of different Modernist ideologies, that shaped the daily lives of the western societies

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Summary

Introduction

This paper centers upon the visual language of the two popular Turkish youth magazines, which were designed, printed and circulated for pre-television society of the 1930’s Turkey.

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