CAMPO GRAFICO: 10 COPERTINE DI CAMPO GRAFICO 1933 – 1939. Milan: Centro di Studi Grafici di Milano, 2009.

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10 COPERTINE DI CAMPO GRAFICO 1933 – 1939

Centro di Studi Grafici di Milano

[Centro di Studi Grafici di Milano]: 10 COPERTINE DI CAMPO GRAFICO 1933 – 1939. Milan: Centro di Studi Grafici di Milano, 2009. First edition [anno cultutale 2009]. Gold paper portfolio with title sticker [as issued] housing 10 offset lithographs and one title plate. Gold portfolio lightly shelf worn with a few scratches and gentle wear. The 10 plates lightly handled, but a very good set or better set.

[10] 11.68 x 16.5-inch offset litho reproductions of Campo Grafico covers reproduced at full size, with a printed title sheet and housed in Publishers gold card stock portfolio. A lovely tribute beautifully printed in Milan.

The portfolio plates include:

CAMPO GRAFICO [Rivista di Estetica e di Tecnica Grafica]
​Year I, No. 1, January 1933
Cover by Carlo Dradi, Battista Pallavera, Attilio Rossi

​​​Year I, No. 3, March 1933
Cover by Carlo Dradi and Attilio Rossi

​Year II, No. 12, December 1934
Cover by Carlo Dradi And Attilio Rossi - photo taken by Boggeri studio

​​Year III, No. 4, April 1935
Cover by Battista Pallavera - Photo signed by Renner

​Year III, No. 9, September 1935
Cover by Luigi Oriani (Scuola del Libro di Milano student)

​Year IV, No. 1, January 1936
Cover by Alberto Gennari

​Year IV, No. 5, May 1936
Cover by Luigi Veronesi

​​Year V, No. 3, March 1937
Cover by Grete Stern Coppola y Horacio Coppola - Buenos Aires

​Year VI, No. 5, May 1938
Cover by Remo Muratore

​Year VII, No. 3-4-5, March-April-May 1939
Cover by Enrico Bona

Sixty-six issues of Campo Grafico were published between 1933 and 1939 by a loosely confederated group of Italian printers, typographers, designers, and photographers. Subtitled “Magazine Of Aesthetic And Graphical Technique” the contents were designed and printed during off-hours at various presses throughout Italy and assembled and distributed in a similarly freeform fashion. The results were pure examples of Maud Lavin's phrase “design in the service of commerce,” and a magnificent demonstration of the unity of the arts and technological life.

The collective paid tribute to the homegrown aesthetic of Marinetti’s Futurism, but was forward-looking enough to explore contemporary trends such as PhotoMontage, Collage and the ideology of the New Typography, while -- in the spirit of inclusiveness -- mixing in every other “Ism” of the 1930s Avant-Garde.

Few copies of Campo Grafico survived, and the 1983 Milan exhibition codified the legacy of this superb Graphic Arts journal. Campo Grafico is an essential document of a nearly forgotten collective enterprise that mirrored the glory and the turmoil of its time. Our highest recommendation.

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