70. Today in 1920s Turkey: 22 March 1928 (His Master’s Voice Gramophones)

Yasemin Gencer
2 min readMar 22, 2017

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Advertisement by İhap Hulusi (Görey), Akbaba, 22 March 1928, no. 551, page 4.

Türkçe
Sahibinin Sesi Gramfonları
Sahibinini Sesi: Gramfonların en güzelidir!

English
His Master’s Voice
His Master’s Voice: is the best of all gramophones!

Comments:
This advertisement for a portable, crank-operated record player is one of the more visually appealing ads that was running in the newspapers of this period. As one of the artist’s earlier works, this image exemplifies İhap Hulusi Görey’s (1898–1986) celebrated graphic style and demonstrates the pioneering role he played in developing a strong and consistent syntax to the visual language of advertisements very early in his career. His signature is located in the lower right corner of the ad and it consists of his name atop a triangle with his location “Istanbul” below. For another example of İhap Hulusi’s work that is not an advertisement, see post #44.

The present ad consists of several images superimposed upon one another. On the base layer is a pair of hookah-smoking men seated on stools and engaged in deep conversation. The name of the product, “His Master’s Voice Gramophones” is printed above the conversant men. To the right of this text, in a small roundel, is the brand’s emblem which consists of a confused dog staring into a gramophone cone. His Master’s Voice was a British-owned record and gramophone company and this logo constitutes a simplified version of the original. His Master’s Voice’s products, a record (bearing the HMV name and logo) and a phonograph, are layered over the two men. The reader’s attention is drawn to these denser, darker commercial products above all of the other clutter in the advertisement. The phonograph is compact, convenient, and enticing in its simplicity. Perhaps these are the very qualities that the two chatty men in the background are discussing… Or maybe they are conversing about the wonders of modern technology through the example of this product. This advertisement therefore functions by introducing the audience to the product while also suggesting that it is remarkable and “buzz-worthy” through the imagery of the men, thus persuading readers to either buy the product or talk about it to create, what we would today call, “hype.”

Entire page, Akbaba, 22 March 1928, no. 551, page 4. Hakkı Tarık Us Collection, Beyazıt Library, Istanbul.

Originally published at https://steemit.com on March 22, 2017.

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Yasemin Gencer
Yasemin Gencer

Written by Yasemin Gencer

I am a scholar of Islamic art and civilization specializing in the history of Ottoman and modern Turkish art and print culture.