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Comments Posted 12.18.09 | PERMALINK | PRINT

Mark Lamster

Good Night Old Friend: ID Magazine Closes After 55 Years




After 55 years, ID Magazine, the grand dame of American design publishing, has shuttered. It's a terrible blow to the design world, and especially to those of us in the extended ID family — I was a contributing editor, and wrote for the the magazine for many years. It was an honor to be a part of such a storied legacy.

ID
was a labor of love and labored over by the best designers, editors and writers in the business. I learned a great deal about a great deal from reading the magazine, and also from working as a contributor. This diversity was what made ID such a compelling magazine — it was about all the disciplines of design, from graphics to architecture to industrial design — but this broad view was also a weakness, at least in the advertising department. When news broke that ID was being put to sleep, I was — bitter irony — at work on a feature on new products designed to prevent death via sleep. My last published piece for the magazine was a review of the collected essays of Paul Goldberger, a kind of wistful book that now seems an appropriate finale. My last cover [above at right, adjacent to the magazine's first, from 1954 and designed by Alvin Lustig] was titled "No More Tears." I suspect that more than a few tears have been shed this week, and rightly so.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Mark Lamster is a writer on the arts and culture. He is Associate American Editor of The Architectural Review, and is currently at work on his third book, a biography of the late architect Philip Johnson. Follow: @marklamster.
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