The history is more complex and nuanced, the context was global upheaval and the acceleration of change that followed. Where the French expressed these profound shifts in social and cultural context through fine art and the Americans through commercial dynamism, Italy took a different path. When I think of Italian Modernism I immediately think of typographic expression. This was a prolific and seminal moment in Italian design unlike anything happening in this field anywhere else in the world. In fact the rest of us are still trying to catch up and find the poetry, fluency and character of this bold approach to typography.
With an ancient Roman typographic history so embedded in the Italian visual landscape it was perhaps easier for young Italian designers in the 1930s and onwards to feel so comfortable in the established rules they were able to break them with confidence. Italian graphic designers of this period blended these visual references with a bold modernism inspired by the machine age.
In 1933 a group of typographers and printers founded a magazine called Campo Grafico, a publication designed to inspire other designers to push the boundaries of the current possibilities of graphic art. They called themselves the “Campisti” and their influence was profound. These designers were working at a time of unparalleled creativity in Italy, the 1930s to the 1970s were the great decades of Italian style from Gio Ponti to Ferrari, from film sets to coffee shops, from loafers to lighting, Italian designers were creating the most desirable expressions of craft for a modern audience.
Below: Campo Grafico, Rivista di Estetica e di Tecnica Grafica, Year I, Nr. 6, June 1933; Campo Grafico, Rivista di Estetica e di Tecnica Grafica, Year VII, Nr. 3-4-5, March-April-May 1939; Campo Grafico, Rivista di Estetica e di Tecnica Grafica,Year VII, Nr. 1, January 1939.