Become a Member
Books

Vu: The story of a Magazine That made an era

Stunning Vu of history

November 19, 2009 13:55
534   0736

ByMelanie Abrams , Melanie Abrams

1 min read

By Michel Frizot and Cedric de Veigy
Thames and Hudson, £40

Before television was de rigueur in the living room, it was the picture magazines that showed what was happening around the world. Vu, the subject of this new book, was one of the most popular, fascinating an estimated 450,000 readers with its incisive photographic stories and eye-catching front covers of people and events from Paris to Shanghai.

Published between 1928 and 1940 in Paris, Vu used more photographs than any other magazine, with 3,324 published in its first year. Unusually, these pictures were the main ingredient. They influenced the articles rather than the other way round.

Many of these images were unseen elsewhere, such as the first pictures of life in the Soviet Union by Lucien Vogel or the groundbreaking snapshots taken on the streets by Andre Kertesz, Henri Cartier-Bresson and others.