Wanted: Art Director Fit for Print

We love a meta job listing, and this one’s a doozy: the top design position at a design magazine, and not just any design magazine. Print is searching for an art director to mastermind the design and production of the magazine’s six bi-monthly issues in addition to collateral materials such as promotional digital and print pieces. Responsibilities also include working closely and collaboratively with the editorial department to create content and determine the visual form it will take. The ideal candidate will come ready to apply his or her strong conceptual skills, sound design and type chops, and good communication skills, both written and verbal. Think you’re fit for Print? Click to apply for this art director job or view all the current mediabistro.com design jobs.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

After 17 Years, Art Lies Decided to Take a Break, Plans to Shut Down Journal and Site

Though originally founded to cover the Houston arts scene, the journal Art Lies wound up branching out over the past 17 years, covering and critiquing art goings-on around the world. Now it’s all coming to an end, with the announcement this week that they’ve decided to shut down both their print edition and publishing content on their site as of May. While referred to as “a period of hiatus and reflection,” the tone of the announcement seems to imply that after the reflection might come some additional silence. However, their spring plans will still move forward, as will the publication of perhaps their last issue. Here’s a bit from the announcement:

The Board of Directors’ decision has not come lightly. Print criticism, an increasingly precarious enterprise with the advent of digital media, has come to a crux in recent times. We have been fortunate to maintain a consistent and uncompromised output, responding to the changing dynamics of our field and readership with a diversified media presence. Today, facing the nationwide decrease in arts funding, our efforts have proven financially unsustainable.

We are proud of the distinguished organization Art Lies has become over the last seventeen years. To think of how we began as a local, grassroots photocopied publication and grew to produce an internationally circulated, multiplatform journal with a unique voice speaks to the hard work and dedication of many individuals over nearly two decades, including our contributors, Editorial Advisory Board, staff, advertisers, vendors and stakeholders.

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Bloesem Interview in the 101 Woonideeen

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A new look for Dutch magazine 101 Woonideeen and I'm lucky enough to be part of this issue in a new jacket and style. Just before Christmas I was invited by the lovely Anne-Marie for an interview… couldn't have been a more hectic perdio to be honest and having a photo-shoot in my house with Christmas decorations already up didn't make my life easier either, but due to the help of my good friend An van Daele we managed to get some nice pics of my home. I especially loved having the actual interview with Floor Roelvink… the questions she asked really made me think about how my blog has grown in something worth mentioning in a super great magazine like the 101 Woonideeen

You can get a better impression right here on their blog and for all you Dutch readers please do buy the copy… you won't regret it… so many more nice interviews and  very beautiful homes! 

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You perhaps wonder why i show you this image too … well i was so happy yesterday when they finally came over and placed a concrete floor on our outside terras … just a funny before&after … it's still not finished, some polishing will be done and then I can place everything back… will share some more images soon. 

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….the hardest part is always to choose favorite… there are so many blogs out there that I really love, like and read but there is only space for a few to mention, so I thought it would be best if i mention the ones that have been super supportive of Bloesem, old friends… so to speak 🙂

..Big Thank you to An van Daele!

..101 Woonideeen

New York Times Magazine, Fast Company Debut New Design Columns


Off with a bang: One third of the flashy little numbers featured in “Purse Pistols” by Chee Pearlman in The New York Times Magazine‘s new “Nine of a Kind” column.

Good news, design fans: two of our favorite publications have launched fresh design columns. Over at The New York Times Magazine, reimagined under the editorial helm of Hugo Lindgren, there is “Nine of a Kind.” The new visual design column will explore cultural trends through nine specimens. Chee Pearlman inaugurated Nine of a Kind in the magazine’s March 20 issue with “Purse Pistols,” a look at the more feminine and handbag-friendly guns appearing on the market as more states allow citizens to carry concealed weapons (the $3,000 Dark Hello Kitty Sig Sauer is one of a kind, as Sanrio was none too happy to see its star feline make a cameo on the handle of a 9mm). Pearlman tells us that the new column will have a variety of contributors. Meanwhile, over at Fast Company, senior editor Linda Tischler is also off with a bang. Her new column, “Big Bang Design,” debuts in the April issue with a look at what creativity might erupt if design were taught in middle school—and the potential payoffs for kids and businesses. The ongoing series will focus on the potential of design to create big impacts.

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IDEO’s Tim Brown to Receive Havemeyer Award

Hey Mayor Bloomberg, doesn’t “Tim Brown Day” have a nice ring to it? The IDEO president and CEO (pictured) is in New York today to accept the first annual Havemeyer Award, an honor established by the local chapter of the American Society of Interior Designers’ Education Legacy Fund (ELF) in honor of Metropolis founder and publisher Horace Havemeyer III. At the direction of Havemeyer, the award will recognize “a major contributor to the global conversation about design and its growing importance.” First up is Mr. Design Thinking himself—Brown—who receives the award from its namesake tonight at “State of Design,” an event sponsored by ELF and Metropolis. Brown will chat with MASS Design Group cofounder Michael Murphy and Metropolis editor-in-chief Susan Szenasy about what shapes twenty-first century design and how designers respond to our evolving culture.

In other IDEO-related event news, Bill Moggridge, co-founder of the global design firm and now director of the Smithsonian’s Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum, will sit down with YouTube co-founder Chad Hurley to discuss the role of the revolutionary video sharing platform within the changing world of mainstream media (see also: Moggridge’s new book, Designing Media). And fear not, non-New Yorkers, the museum has announced that this installment of “Bill Design’s Talks” will be webcast. Tune in here at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, March 24, to watch the event live. But be careful: watching an online video about the role of online video may make your brain explode.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Mahala Magazine

South Africa’s subversive new publication takes on the country’s contemporary creative culture
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Founded to “really assault the dominant narratives in our own unique way,” the South African magazine Mahala goes against the typically glossy grain with an “un-designed” style that allows its similarly raw content to shine. The publication launched in August 2010 and, now on its second issue, supplements a daily website—both the brainchild of Andy Davis.

Stories like “Surfing is Wanking,” “Racist Dogs” and “The Colonialism of Small Things”—to name just a few—shed light on topics that affect South Africans, but with its Vice magazine-style journalism, anyone interested in leading-edge culture will appreciate this unconventional upstart.

We recently probed Davis to find out more about Mahala’s beginnings, its future, and the overall state-of-mind in South Africa.

What do you most hope to accomplish with Mahala?

I want to create a platform for a racially-integrated South African youth culture that can interrogate our experience, our culture and really just provide an impetus for people to make good, relevant stuff. South Africa is still a radically segmented place. And we’ve got a whole backlog of shit that’s been swept under the carpet and kept out of view. I want Mahala to pick at those edges, to go where the art, music, literature, etc. intersects with politics, society and weird-ass South African dynamics like race relations and socio-economic disparities.

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The online site tries to crunch through what’s happening in South Africa on a daily basis. We aim to publish three to four stories a day. The debates we get going in the comments show that our audience really gives a shit about what we say, and they have a stake in the culture so they all pile in and make their voice heard, which is a good thing. But it can be quite rough on the comment boards. We have a non-intervention policy. We don’t delete anything. If people want to hang themselves kak vibes, so be it.

We hold the print magazine to a higher standard. We want people to read everything twice. It’s supposed to be a real collector’s item. But it also gives us the latitude to publish photo features, fashion, fiction and investigative journalism that isn’t always suited to online attention spans.

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What is the most challenging part of creating each Mahala edition?

Getting the right mix of words and images, without being too gratuitous or going too hardcore, but still being able to interrogate the culture and experience. I think with our first issue we were sitting on so much unreleased content that we didn’t temper it properly. So it was a bit relentless. With the second issue we got the mix a bit better varying between depth and levity. There were some almost academic style articles, hard-hitting investigative journalism, some great narrative non-fiction, fiction and some nice humor.

Another thing we really struggle to do is find good, black writers, photographers and illustrators. That’s not to say they don’t exist, it’s just that South Africa is so systemically fucked up thanks to apartheid that massive segments of the population were actively uneducated by the apartheid schooling system. So, generally speaking, anyone who is black, creative, talented and competent gets employed very quickly. And there just isn’t a plethora of young black talent beating down our doors, desperate to get published. And the last thing we want to be is a group of whiteys sitting around writing about black culture. We want to push this relationship into a “post-racial” space. Things are changing though, and it’s picking up pace. And we certainly don’t want to be those sad guys who do head counts based on skin color. But we’re still a long way off from the ideal of an equitable, meritocratic society.

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Does each edition have an underlying theme?

Not yet, but we may be heading that way. I think at the moment, we don’t need to introduce over-arching themes because the culture is happening all around us and having a theme would necessarily occlude some of the most relevant and exciting stuff. Besides, I quite like the way the magazine jump cuts from narrative to narrative. I want them to stand alone and not have too much editorial unity. We always said Mahala would support a plurality of views, so it’s cool for each piece to stand alone and not be perceived as coming from central editorial authority.

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What can we look forward to seeing in Mahala 3?

I think it’ll be bigger and better than Mahala 2. I thought there were some little failings in the last issue, that I’m glad to have the opportunity to rectify in the next issue. But those are mainly little publishing minutiae and insecurities. Generally the feedback has been overwhelmingly positive. At this stage a lot of the content is still in the air. We’re also working on a site redesign and, for our international readers, we’ll be making all the print mags available online as PDFs, from the next issue.

To subscribe to the print publication or receive their daily updates, visit the Mahala website.


Pilar Guzman Named Editor-in-Chief of Martha Stewart Living

There’s a new smart cookie at the editorial helm of Martha Stewart Living: Pilar Guzman. The founding editor of the mom-azine Cookie, which Condé Nast folded right around its fourth birthday, will succeed Vanessa Holden, who departed Martha-land in February to become senior vice president and creative director of West Elm. “Pilar is an accomplished editor who understands what the Martha Stewart Living reader needs and wants—inspiration and information to make everyday living more beautiful and meaningful,” said Stewart in a statement announcing the appointment. Guzman, who has held editorial posts at Real Simple, One, and City, will report to the Gael Towey, the chief creative and editorial director of Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia. In addition to overseeing editorial for Living, Guzman will be responsible for the creation of the magazine’s monthly digitized editions. Monday will be her first day on the job.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

New York Times Prepares to Roll Out Redesigned NYT Magazine

While most of the attention focused on the New York Times this week has been the exit of longtime columnist Frank Rich, who you’ve likely heard by now is heading to become the editor-at-large of New York, this Sunday you’re sure to also be talking about all the changes to the NYT Magazine. The recent columnist swaps has been making the rounds lately, including UnBeige favorite, Rob Walker, retiring “Consumed” from the magazine, as has speculation on what the new editor in charge, Hugo Lindgren, will bring to the table. For our design-y purposes, the Times itself has put up a small preview of this Sunday’s debut issue on the launch of their new inside-the-paper blog, The 6th Floor. Gone, it appears, are the stripped-bare covers design director Arem Duplessis was receiving raves for just a little under a year and a half ago. From afar and via a small jpeg, we’re sort of liking the new, more newspaper-y looking version (Yahoo has a slightly larger image), though we’re not sold on the headline type. However, we’re holding out full personal verdict until we have a copy it in our hot little hands this weekend. We’re extra curious to see what’s been redone inside as well.

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Gen Arts Acquired and Revived by Publishing Company Sandow Media

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Just a few months shy of a year ago, the “film, fashion, art and music” events company Gen Art, suddenly announced that, after 16 years of operation, its money had run out and they were shutting down immediately. So quickly did it fold that it reportedly left a large number of exhibitors without refunds for the fees they’d paid up front for future shows. But as we’ve learned from companies like Polaroid, it’s hard to let a familiar brand die. A statement has been released from Sandow Media, who owns a number of magazines, including Worth, Luxe Interiors + Design and Interior Design, saying that the publishing company has acquired Gen Art and have plans to relaunch it this May, reviving the organization’s now-16 year old film festival in New York. So far as the announcement goes, it appears that the founders of Gen Art, brothers Ian and Stefan Gerard will not be returning to run the company, instead acting as advisers on the re-launch. Longtime executives within the recently-folded company, Elizabeth Shaffer and Jeffrey Abramson, will serve as co-presidents. Here’s from Sandow’s CEO, Adam I. Sandow, commenting on the acquisition:

“Gen Art is a unique organization that understands the value of experiential marketing and uses this expertise to support emerging talent by introducing them to a savvy consumer audience. Marc Lotenberg, Founder & President of 944 magazine, introduced me to Gen Art and his passion and support for the organization was instrumental in orchestrating this acquisition. I immediately recognized that Gen Art’s innovative approach was a perfect fit for our organization. Sandow Media is thrilled to work with Elizabeth and Jeffrey as they lead Gen Art into the next chapter.”

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New Yorker Selects Dozen Winners of Eustace Tilley Design Contest


The magazine’s signature dandy as reimagined by, from left, Julie Hecht, Michael Clayton, Gary Amaro, and Dave Hoerlein

With his moncole at the ready and a butterfly his constant companion, Eustace Tilley has been The New Yorker‘s dapper mascot since founding art director Rea Irvin sketched him into being in 1925. The magazine recently invited readers to put their own twist on the discerning dandy in its fourth Eustace Tilley design contest. And this year’s competition came with a bookish bonus: the grand-prize winner’s design printed on a Strand Bookstore tote bag (an icon for an icon!) and a $1,000 Strand shopping spree. After sifting through roughly 600 entries, New Yorker art editor Françoise Mouly has selected a dozen winners, now featured in a slideshow on the magazine’s web site. The victorious Eustaces range from Seattle-based Dave Hoerlein‘s cartographic version (“A Dandy Map of New York”) to a Facebook-ready Tilley created by Nick McDowell of Mamaroneck, New York. Savannah-dwelling William Joca‘s “Cubist Tilley” was inspired by the work of Picasso (with a sprinkling of Ben-Day dots for good measure), while Pixo Hammer of Toronto channeled Joan Miro. As for the big winner, keep guessing (Grecian Eustace? Symbolic Eustace? Eustace through the years?). The champion and the tote bag will be revealed this spring.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.