Pestrý týden

Pestrý týden was a Czech illustrated weekly magazine published from 2 November 1926 to 28 April 1945, during the First and Second Czechoslovak Republics and during the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia.[1] It helped establish top photo-reporters of the 1930s, such as Karel Hájek, Václav Jírů and Ladislav Sitenský.[2] Published and printed by Grafické závody ('Graphic Works')[3] by Václav Neubert and Sons, based in Smíchov, Prague it was issued in 963 numbers.

Pestrý týden, front page, 8 December 1926

Establishment

Karel Neubert, son of the publisher Václav Neubert, from Pestrý týden, 12 June 1927

Pestrý týden was founded by Karel Neubert,[4] who managed it until its demise in 1945. In English, the title may be translated as ‘Colourful’, 'Variegated' or ‘Prismatic’ Week.

The editorial circle in the first years consisted of: journalist Milena Jesenská,[5] graphic artist Vratislav Hugo Brunner, painter, poet and founding member of Devětsil Adolf Hoffmeister, and publisher Karel Neubert. This group of editors sought to create an intellectual magazine. At the end of the 1920s, this editorial office was replaced by a group around Jaromír Johna, under whom it was transformed from an élite revue into a pictorial family weekly for the middle classes. Thanks to this new focus, the circulation of Pestrý týden increased to hundreds of thousands of copies in a short time and it was able to establish itself against considerable competition from other First Republic periodicals Pražský ilustrovaný zpravodaj, Letem světem, Světozor, Ahoj, Star, Světový zdroj zábavy, Eva, Hvězda československých paní a dívek and List paní a dívek.

Zenith

Pestrý týden’s peak years were 1938 - 1939 during which its "flawless gravure printing, as well as comprehensive articles and columns from home and abroad"[6] made it qualitatively the equal of contemporaneous world weekly picture magazines.[7] During a tense period in Czech history it excelled in printed picture reportage by top Czech photographers to an extent unprecedented in competing papers.[8]

During the Protectorate

From 1940, Pestrý týden was the official organ of Radosti ze života (‘Joy of Life’), the sole socio-political movement in the Protectorate, Národního souručenství. The period marks a gradual decline in quality. Under the Nazi protectorate, Pestrý týden diverged from its news function, with the exception of ideologically distorted news from Germany, and instead covered less topical, more general, stories; publisher and editor-in-chief Karel Neubert, did his best not promote Nazi ideology more than he was forced by the authorities.[9][7]

Cessation

Pestrý týden ceased publication just before the outbreak of the Prague uprising in 1945. In less than a month, the former editors formed a new news weekly called Svět v obrazech (‘The World in Pictures’).[10][11]

Prominent photographers who contributed to Pestrý týden

Photographer Přemysl Koblic in 1943 juggling small-format camera, flash gun, brief case, folder, pipe and spare bulb.

Bibliography

  • Vilgus, Petr: České ilustrované časopisy mezi roky 1918–1945 na příkladu Pražského ilustrovaného zpravodaje a Pestrého týdne, Praha 2007. available online.
  • Vilgus, Petr: Pestrý týden, 2. listopadu 1926 – 28. dubna 1945 : Vznik, existence a zánik nejlepšího ilustrovaného týdeníku první a druhé Československé republiky an období Protektorátu Čechy a Morava, Praha-Opava 2001, ISBN 80-238-7874-3. available online.

References

  1. Vilgus, P. (2001). Pestrý týden, 2. listopadu 1926-28. dubna 1945: vznik, existence a zánik nejlepšího ilustrovaného týdeníku první a druhé Československé republiky a období Protektorátu Čechy a Morava. Czechia: Petr Vilgus.
  2. Greenberg, H., Birgus, V. (2007). Czech Vision: Avant-garde Photography in Czechoslovakia. Germany: Distributed Art Pub Incorporated.
  3. Středisko.. (1987). (n.p.): Profil.
  4. Slavné osobnosti v dějinách Prahy 5: příběhy nevšedních životů. (2006). Czechia: Perseus.
  5. Hockaday, M. (1997). Kafka, Love and Courage: The Life of Milena Jesenska. United States: Harry N. Abrams
  6. Pachmanová, M. (2005). Academy of Arts, Architecture and Design in Prague 1885-2005. Czechia: Vysoká škola umělecko-průmyslová.
  7. Móda v ulicích protektorátu. (2013). (n.p.): Grada Publishing a.s.
  8. Orzoff, A. (2000). Battle for the Castle: The Friday Men and the Czechoslovak Republic, 1918-1938. United States: Stanford University.
  9. Štemberk, J., Jakubec, I. (2018). Cestovní ruch pod dohledem třetí říše. Czechia: Univerzita Karlova, NakladatelstvíKarolinum.
  10. Pestrý týden in memoriam TGM v Praze dne 19. října 1937. (1937). Czechia: Vyd. Pestrý týden.
  11. Str̆edisko. (1987). Czechia: Profil.
  12. Čapek, K., Scheufler, P. (2000). Karel Čapek: fotograf. Czechia: Obecní dům.
  13. Funke, J., Dufek, A. (1996). Jaromír Funke (1896-1945): průkopník fotografické avantgardy. Czechia: Moravská galerie.
  14. Moucha, J. (2013). Photographer's diary. Czechia: Vydala Marie Michaela Šechtlová.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.