|
UnBeige logo by Jennifer Lew, as part of our regular design our logo feature
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Receive mediabistro.com's Daily UnBeige Feed via email
magazinesWednesday May 14, 2008
Magazines Paint Politicians by Number, Again
Andy Warhol did it. Damien Hirst will sell you a kit to do it yourself. Time did it, and now The New Republic has gotten into the act. We're talking, of course, about the art of painting by number. Our sister blog, FishbowlNY, noted today (via Portfolio) that The New Republic's in-progress paint-by-number Obama cover is strikingly similar to Time's paint-by-number visage of Howard Dean of four years ago, although TNR publisher Franklin Foer says that nobody at the magazine "has any recollection of seeing that cover." Someone needs to go talk to the art directors, because we suspect that both covers are homages to Richard Hess's famous drawing for Esquire's June 1967 cover (art directed by Samuel N. Antupit), which featured a color-by-number portrait of Lyndon Johnson on the occasion of his imminent birthday. The cover line read: "LBJ's birthday is August 27th. Color this portrait, send it to him, and make him happy." Although Hess' DIY LBJ cover was bumped at the last minute for one of a sledding Jackie Kennedy cradling a pint-sized Eddie Fisher, the cover was widely exhibited and lauded, even making it into Hess' 1991 New York Times obituary. Hess was something of a paint-by-number expert, having worked early in his career to create pictures for the Palmer Paint Company's paint-by-number drawing kits. And clearly, his influence is felt to this day, if not always knowingly. Tuesday May 06, 2008
How Print Celebrated Its Ellie Win![]() Last Thursday, visual culture and design magazine Print triumphed over the likes of Metropolis and Aperture to win the National Magazine Award for general excellence in the under 100,000 circulation category. On the occasion of the bimonthly magazine's tenth nomination and its fourth win, the American Society of Magazine Editors lauded Print's "expansive view of its subject, its relentless curiosity, and its determination to look at design not in a vacuum but as a crucial gateway to popular culture, the environment, even politics."
As for the spiderlike award itself, it has already had some adventures of its own. After joining Kaye in a cab ride home to Brooklyn last Thursday, Print's Ellie traveled by tote bag to Park Slope's PS 321, "where it journeyed through the halls and rested beneath a third-grade desk during 'Parents as Learning Partners' time, going completely unnoticed despite the high concentration of media-employed parents in the building," Kaye tells us. "It then took a Q train ride to the office where it happily joined our other three Ellies on top of our set of bookshelves." Now it's now back to business as usual at Print as the staff closes the August issue and judges the Regional Design annual. But the memories are still fresh. Adds Kaye, "I still have an unwashed champagne glass sitting on my desk from the pre-Ellie celebration in the office Thursday night." Monday May 05, 2008
How Words, Images, and Malaria Came Together in National Geographic
"It begins with a bite, a painless bite." So starts "Bedlam in the Blood," the July 2007 National Geographic cover story about malaria that won the 120-year-old magazine a 2008 National Magazine Award for photojournalism. The online story includes illuminating field notes from photographer John Stanmeyer and writer Michael Finkel, but how does a feature like this come about and come together? We asked National Geographic editor-in-chief Chris Johns: This story is one that I wanted to do quite badly. I've had malaria. Twice. The second time quite seriously. I'd run into Patty Stonesifer at the Gates Foundation [where she has served as chief executive officer since 1997], and a story like that requires a period of percolation. You've really got to think creatively: How are we going to tell this story and make it fascinating and interesting? So it's not a lecture, it's a real story about real people and a real problem, but a problem that does definitely have a solution.For more on how it's done at National Geographic, see our full interview with Johns on mediabistro.com. Friday May 02, 2008
Chip Kidd, James Victore, Neville Brody, and Euro RSCG Play for Time
For its fifth annual issue featuring the world's 100 Most Influential People, Time recruited 4% as many influential graphic designers and design firms to take a crack at the cover: Chip Kidd, James Victore, Neville Brody, and Euro RSCG. Pictured above are the five finalist covers (one designer has two entries). Can you guess whose cover is whose? And which was chosen as the ultimate winner? Make your guesses and then click "continued..." below for all of the answers and links to larger photos of each cover. Print Wins National Magazine Award; Wired Takes Design Category
DESIGN: Good | GQ | New York Magazine* | T, The New York Times Style Magazine | Vanity Fair | Wired PHOTOGRAPHY: Gourmet | GQ | Martha Stewart Living | National Geographic | New York Magazine | W PHOTOJOURNALISM: Aperture | Mother Jones | National Geographic | The New Yorker | The Virginia Quarterly Review PHOTO PORTFOLIO: New York Magazine | Newsweek | T, The New York Times Style Magazine (two nominations) | Vanity Fair Wednesday Apr 30, 2008
Another Magazine for Your Stash
Monday Apr 28, 2008
How George Lois Souped Up Esquire
Last Friday, New York's Museum of Modern Art opened its exhibition of Esquire covers designed by George Lois. On view through March of next year, the show features 32 of the 92 covers Lois created for Esquire from 1962 to 1972. "I have always seen myself as an artist. And this is the Museum of Modern Art. And I am an artist," said Lois in an interview with the Associated Press. And Lois has had some experience dealing with artists whose work adorns the walls of MoMA. In Charles McGrath's piece on Lois and the exhibition in yesterday's New York Times, the writer discusses the remarkable ability of Lois' typically text-free Esquire covers to convey a single idea through an image. "Some were untouched photographs, but, in an era before Photoshop, some were created by the primitive technique of cutting and pasting, using photographs, clip art, and sometimes hand-drawn elements," writes McGrath, before extracting from Lois this gem of an anecdote about Esquire's May 1969 cover (pictured above), which featured Andy Warhol drowning in a can of Campbell's tomato soup. "I remember when we were doing the Warhol cover," Mr. Lois recalled. "I explained to Andy what I had in mind, and he said, 'Oh, will you have to build a very big can?'" Friday Apr 25, 2008
New York Puts Best Foot Forward
The April 28 issue of New York magazine may have the stars of Gossip Girl on its cover, but the feature well starts off on another foot, with editor-at-large Adam Sternbergh's nimble article on feet ("You Walk Wrong"). Critical to encouraging readers to hunker down for a 5,000-word romp through podiatry research, walking classes, and no fewer than two quotations by Transcendalists are the trompe l'oeil shoes (like the pseudo-Adidas pictured above) scattered throughout the story in photographs by Tom Schierlitz. Creating a classic wingtip, a Christian Louboutin stiletto (watch out, he recently won a legal battle to trademark that red sole), and the above soccer shoe out of makeup on bare feet were Temptu body artists John Maurad and Jenai Chin. And if their feat wasn't enough to pique your interest in reading the article, try this snippet, which is the best sentence we've read in a while: Galahad Clark never intended to get into the shoe business, let alone the anti-shoe business. And he likely never would have, if it weren't for the Wu-Tang Clan. Dobrow Asks How 'Green' is Your 'Vanity'?
This writer's fiancee often rants against 'green issues' of magazines, saying how counterintuitive the whole thing is and how a real 'green issue' would be published solely as a PDF or entirely online. But that, of course, uses a certain amount of rationality, logic and a careless disregard for how the magazine business works. However, she can now count among her allies one Mr. Larry Dobrow whose piece in AdAge, "How Dobrow Celebrated Earth Day (Hint: Hefting a Small Forest)," he picks apart Vanity Fair's recent 'green issue' from cover to cover and is absurdly funny along the entire route. However, at the piece's close, he does stop to offer a couple of positive words, such as: Meanwhile, kudos to the handful of advertisers -- Lexus, Fiji Water, Kendall-Jackson winery, ABC Carpet & Home, BMW, GE, Chevrolet and Mini -- whose ads echo the green theme. Granted, they'd probably have run in VF if the May issue were pro-seal-clubbing or anti-lettuce, but it's still heartening to know that their media minions were mindful of coming across as responsible, attentive earth denizens. Thursday Apr 24, 2008
The Colors of Money
Colors, the lush quarterly published in three bilingual editions by Fabrica (the communications research center of Benetton), recently launched its money-themed winter issue in San Francisco, where the Italy-based magazine has teamed up with the Italian Cultural Institute and the Academy of Art University San Francisco to celebrate its 17-year publishing history. Last Thursday's presentation by the Colors editorial and creative directors at the Academy's 79 Gallery was so packed that we hear a trio of Dwell magazine staffers (chair lovers if ever there were) took in the lecture while sitting on the floor. The gallery was decked out with a giant podium made of flattened copies of the new issue (pictured above) and photographs from it. Meanwhile, the Italian Cultural Institute is hosting an exhibition of all 73 Colors covers through May 17. PreviouslyThe Glossys' Perception of Obama Seven Questions for Andrew Wagner Looking Back On the Building of 'Monocle' Vive la Différence: New Interview Thinking Outside the Box Eye Opener: Graphic Design Review Changes Ownership John Korpics to Redesign Entertainment Weekly Arch. Digest's Paige Rense Crosses Nation, Looking for 'Regular People' Designers Tar Art Media to Launch Magazine Vice Magazine Invents the 'Glow-in-the-Dark Cover Ad' Business Conde Nast Traveler Picks Their Top 7 Modern Architectural Wonders One Club Focuses on Design with New Magazine Supplement Magazine Cover Math: Safety in Numbers Metropolis Nabs Peter Mendelsund ASME Announces National Magazine Award Finalists Magazines Struggle to 'Go Green' Alice Rawsthorn and the Return of the Ugly Magazine Blinding Them with Science News: Eric Mongeon Signs on for Redesign The Atlantic Prepares for "Sweeping Redesign," Bierut Style New York's "Best of" Picks: A Closer Look New York Magazine Chooses Best "Best of New York" Covers The New Face of Creative Review Second-Class Postage and the Death of the Small-Run Magazines Martha Stewart Redirects Blueprint Dollars to Bridal and Bam! Blueprint Subscribers Receive Little White Postcard of Death The Rebel Chooses 'The Art World's 50 Least Important People' Finally! Emigre Becomes a Blog! Kinda. Not Really. No, Not at All. American Craft Crafts a New Website It's Up to You: Life or Death for Magazines? It Was Wrong to Defend Dave Seanor and Golfweek The Shame of Removing Dave Seanor from Golfweek Over Cover Image Tiepolo in Brooklyn: Elle Decor Goes Home with Vik Muniz Pentagram's DJ Stout Vs. A Cow Top Five Secrets to a Successful Magazine Cover DIY-Focused Magazine Craft Faring Well At This Holiday Time, Can't We Put Our Political Differences Aside? A Not So Good Review of Monocle's First Year Road to Dwell Redesign Paved with Good Intentions Cover of the Month: Harvard Magazine Stephen Drucker, Editor of House Beautiful, Says His Shelter Mag Is Sturdy The GUM Guys Dedicate Themselves to Being Lemon Men Blueprint (the Martha Stewart One) to Fold Redesigned Fortune No Longer Partying Like Its 1999 Matthew Lenning Gives Bon Appétit a New Look Keith Olbermann Stars In Our New Favorite Press Release Amy Sedaris Pics Saved from the House & Garden Trash Bin So Snappy Together: Web-Based LEGO Magazine to Debut Print Version House & Garden to Fold in December STEP and Modern Dog Hide the Evil Within Getting Down to BusinessWeek with Modernista! I.D.'s New + Notable = Now Can Be Yours People (Real or Symbolic) Atop NYC Buildings (Real or Symbolic) Nab ASME Best Cover Honors New York Picks Design Revolutionaries, Peeks into Fabien Baron's Bedroom Pick the Winner of Print's Student Cover Competition 1 in 5 Best Magazine Cover Finalists Feature Woman Atop Building or Pregnancy-Swollen Body Part Blueeyes Teams with Khoi Vinh for Latest Issue Living the VilLA NM: A Hard-Core Capitalist's Utopian Retreat When Celebrity Products Attack Make Mine a Monthly! Wallpaper Goes to 12 Issues BREAKING: Yves Behar's Master-ful Abs Could He Be the Most Beautiful Design Master in the World? The Slimane, Koons and Rams Touch American Craft Relaunches With a NY Bash I.D. Wants a Peek At Your Creative Space The GOOD, and the BAD, But What About the Ugly? Icon Magazine Encourages Top Designers to Rant A Walking Tour Times Two: New York Magazine Hits the Streets with Michael Surtees AdAge Takes on Maxim's Tough Guy Gimmicks Jorge Colombo Wears the Pants In This Post How to Dress, Dine and Date Like a NYC Design Maven Forget Good Design, How About "Design Good"? I.D.'s Annual Review One Big Glorious Heap of Design Slimane, Koons and Rams to Guest Edit Wallpaper Esquire's Logo Soon to Join Rest of Trash on Already Crowded Southern California Beaches Don't Ever Redesign the New Yorker. Wait. Okay, Maybe the New Yorker Needs a Redesign. Emily Gordon Asks How Old Mags Get Totally Webbylicious The Worst Day Ever To Find Yourself Employed at Business 2.0 "Law of Optical Volumes" Finally Defined By Wired (And Guess What? It's Kerning!) JPG Magazine Makes With the Moolah Roger Black Tackles Working Mother! Why Dwight With Clothes On Is So Much Better Than Pam Naked Department of Things We Missed Time to Hear From Walter Bernard Kidd Helps Jann and the Family 'Stone' Turn 40 American Craft To Be Renovated By Former Dwell Staffers Reading Up on Hats Before Queen Elizabeth Heads to the Kentucky Derby Looking at Monocle Through the Other Eye(s) |
|
|||||||||||||||||||