Architectural Digest
March 2006 cover of Architectural Digest
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Editor | Margaret Russell |
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Categories | Interior design |
Frequency | Monthly |
Total circulation (2013) |
814,959[1] |
Year founded | 1920 |
Company | Condé Nast |
Country | United States |
Based in | New York City |
Language | English |
Website | www |
ISSN | 0003-8520 |
Architectural Digest is an American monthly magazine founded in 1920.[2] Its principal subject is interior design, not architecture more generally, as the name of the magazine suggests. The magazine is published by Condé Nast, which also publishes eight international editions of Architectural Digest.
Architectural Digest is aimed at an affluent and style-conscious readership, and is subtitled "The International Design Authority". The magazine also oversees the AD100, a list of top 100 architects and interior designers around the world.
History
Originally a quarterly trade directory called The Architectural Digest: A Pictorial Digest of California's Best Architecture, the magazine was launched in 1920 by John Coke Brasfield (1880—1965), a Tennessee-born importer and advertising executive who founded the John C. Brasfield Publishing Corporation, which was based in Los Angeles, California. Interiors and exteriors of residences were featured in the magazine, along with floor plans.
By 1963, the magazine's subtitle had been altered to A Pictorial Digest of Outstanding Architecture, Interior Design, and Landscaping, and it began publishing on a bimonthly schedule. Two years later, The Architectural Digest and its publishing company were purchased by Cleon T. Knapp, the magazine's advertising director and the son of Brasfield's daughter Sarah "Sally" Brasfield Knapp (1910—1996), who served, at various times, as the magazine's editor in chief, managing editor, and associate publisher.[3] The magazine's subtitle was altered to The Quality Guide to Home Decorating Ideas shortly thereafter, and was changed again, in 1974, to The Connoisseur's Magazine of Fine Interior Design. The John C. Brasfield Publishing Company was renamed Knapp Communications Corporation in 1977.[3]
Condé Nast Publications purchased Architectural Digest, as well as its sister publication Bon Appétit, from Knapp in April 1993.[3]
Editors in chief
- John C. Brasfield
- Sally Brasfield Knapp
- (James) Bradley Little (1938—1971), a former interior designer, who served as editorial director and editor in chief from 1964 until his death.[4][5]
- Cleon T. Knapp, 1971—1975 (served as publisher during the same period)
- Paige Rense, 1975—2010;[6] she previously served as the magazine's associate editor, 1968—1971, and its executive editor, 1971—1975.
- Margaret Russell, 2010—present
Since the 2010 change in leadership, the magazine has seen a shift towards featuring lighter, more open interiors, brighter photography, and a modern graphic style.
References
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- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Art Center
- ↑ "Editor Killed by Robbers", The New York Times, 10 April 1971
- ↑ Palm Springs Life
- ↑ Paige Rense Noland to Retire From Architectural Digest, The New York Times