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UnBeige logo by Steven Seighman, as part of our regular design our logo feature
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Boutique Marketing and Communications Firm is looking for a Junior Web/Print Designer (Contract). See the next featured job.
Wednesday, Sep 24
Seven Questions for Print's New Editor-in-Chief Emily Gordon
1. What led you to Print? I was so dazzled by Todd's writing and his story of being so irresistibly drawn to a vintage book that he ended up scouring a British graveyard for the author's headstone, and eventually republishing bits of her books into an anthology, that I wrote a post on Emdashes—a blog about The New Yorker I've done for nearly four years—raving about it. Todd and I began corresponding, and he sent me some issues of Print. I was struck by the gorgeous layout and the excellent writing and criticism—and by the fact that I, a hopeless magazine addict, had never read it before. Eventually, I contributed a review of the Complete New Yorker DVDs. The following year, my editor Jeremy Lehrer left the magazine to freelance, and I was hired to replace him as senior editor. Shortly thereafter, Todd went off to other things, and I became managing editor. Read on for Emily's plans for the magazine and why Print (and print) is alive and well, both on paper and online. 2-3. And now you're editor-in-chief. Can you tell you us a little bit about your plans for Print? Are there areas that you want to increase coverage of; any stories, people, or themes that you are itching to tackle? Speaking personally, I've always been interested in everything we cover, but didn't realize it all fell under the umbrella of a single and extremely wide-ranging discipline. My mission is to both serve the design community as well as we possibly can, materially and spiritually, and to reach the millions—yes, millions—of readers and viewers who will be amazed to find there's a publication that exactly scratches their itch for riveting visual content and intelligent, readable analysis of the world around them. 4. Any plans for Print's online presence? The editors and designers on staff, as well as all our freelancers and contributing editors, are making all the difference as I make this transition; I have never known a magazine staff so hardworking and easy to get along with. I have a good feeling about working with David Sloan, who was recently brought in as our new publisher, as well. 5. How do you describe Print to people who are unfamiliar with the magazine? It's not surprising that we would publish many of the leading visual-culture critics of our day, from our beloved Steve Heller (who now writes a "Daily Heller" newsletter for us) to Virginia Postrel to Debbie Millman to Rick Valicenti to Paul Shaw to George Lois to John Canemaker to Carlo McCormick to Rick Poynor to Alice Twemlow, to up-and-coming writers like Aaron Britt, Alissa Walker, Bill Kartalopoulos, and Douglas Wolk. But not everyone knows how much our community has expanded in the past few years to include writers like Clive Thompson, Michael Musto, Penny Wolfson, Sukhdev Sandhu, Richard Lingeman, A. O. Scott, Ted Allen, Leslie Savan, Tom Vanderbilt, and Heather Cocks and Jessica Morgan from Go Fug Yourself. And, of course, it wouldn't be half as exciting an experience to open the magazine without Kristina DiMatteo's masterful art direction. On the visual side, a few contributors that come to mind are Christoph Niemann, Steve Brodner, Peter Arkle, Camilo Jose Vergara, Maira Kalman, Andrea Dezso, Paula Scher, Kate & Camilla, Abbott Miller, Gregory Crewdson, Honest, Project Projects, Danny Gregory, Gluekit, Mark Mahaney, Sam Potts, Nicholas Blechman, Paul Davis, and Giampietro+Smith. There are far too many great people to name! Another magazine's art director recently told me he sees Print as a magazine for people who work on a larger scale than their city or their studio, who engage with the world at large, who want to be inspired. He's referring to designers and the other visual communicators whose work we feature in the magazine, from filmmakers to web designers to calligraphers to typographers to street artists, but I think it applies to all of our readers. They know visual culture shapes the world and vice versa, and they love to read engaged critiques of it and interviews with the people who do it best. 6. What's the most valuable lesson you learned from former editor-in-chief Joyce Rutter Kaye? Even when Joyce set out to make waves, it was always in the service of advancing the cause of design and design journalism. Not only is she supremely well organized, she's always current, and never became complacent, either, even after ten years at the magazine and numerous National Magazine and Society of Publication Designers awards. This also goes for longtime editor Martin Fox, who was at Print for 40 (!) years and continues to inspire and educate me, and the wonderful Julie Lasky of I.D. 7. Finally, next spring you and Michael Bierut will be teaching a course in SVA's D-Crit program. Can you tell us a little about the course? So it all comes down, once again, to blogs, magazines, paper, screens, and the intersection of all of the above. I feel very lucky—and ready to work hard for the magazine and for the good of print culture, on paper and online. (Photo: Caleb Crain) Email This Post |
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