Jugend (magazine)

Jugend
A Fritz Dannenberg 1897 poster promoting the magazine
EditorFranz Schoenberner
FrequencyWeekly
FounderGeorg Hirth
First issue1896
Final issue1940
CountryGermany
Based inMunich
LanguageGerman

Jugend (German for 'Youth') (1896–1940) was an influential German arts magazine. Founded in Munich by Georg Hirth who edited it until his death in 1916, the weekly was originally intended to showcase German Arts and Crafts, but became famous for showcasing the German version of Art Nouveau instead. It was also famed for its "shockingly brilliant covers and radical editorial tone" and for its avant-garde influence on German arts and culture for decades, ultimately launching the eponymous Jugendstil ('Youth Style') movement in Munich, Weimar, and Germany's Darmstadt Artists' Colony.[1]

The magazine, along with several others that launched more or less concurrently, including Pan, Simplicissimus, Dekorative Kunst ('Decorative Art') and Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration ('German Art and Decoration')[2] collectively roused interest among wealthy industrialists and the aristocracy, which further spread interest in Jugendstil from 2D art (graphic design) to 3D art (architecture), as well as more applied art.[2] Germany's gesamtkunstwerk ('synthesized artwork') tradition eventually merged and evolved those interests into the Bauhaus movement.[2]

  1. ^ "Download Hundreds of Issues of Jugend, Germany's Pioneering Art Nouveau Magazine (1896–1940)". Open Culture. Retrieved 2021-07-01.
  2. ^ a b c "Jugendstil: Art Nouveau in Germany, Austria: History, Characteristics". Art Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2021-07-02.