A new AI capability that delivers analysis-ready Media Intelligence. More than just a product launch, this is a shift in how communications teams monitor, understand and act on media coverage.
Founded in 1997 by Peter Huiberts and Robert Thiemann, Frame Publishers specializes in high-end publications for a global audience of creative professionals. Its three highly international magazines cover art, architecture, design and interiors, reaching readers in 77 countries. Moreover, the company also publishes specialized books pertaining to the same creative fields. This makes Frame Publishers a one-stop shop when it comes to connecting with art buyers, architects and designers worldwide.
The company’s flagship publication, Frame is the go-to global reference for designers and interior architects. Since its inception, the magazine has identified the world’s most innovative interiors, culminating in the launch of the prestigious Great Indoors Award in 2007.
What Frame is to its faithful readership of interior architects, its sibling magazine Mark is to architects. By offering a fresh, non-academic and accessible outlook on architecture, Mark has redefined the way we report on the built environment.
Since 2009, Elephant magazine offers an equally contemporary view at the world of art and visual culture. Avoiding hermetic language and instead visually focusing on the artwork itself, Elephant has rapidly gained an international audience of art buyers and artists alike.
All three magazines have a strong online presence at our website frameweb.com, attracting over 120,000 unique users a month with its up-to-date news and agenda sections. Moreover, the magazines also have a digital readership, as well as license editions in China, Korea and Turkey. Furthermore, Frame Publishers yearly presents its magazines and books at over 30 trade fairs worldwide.
Frame Publishers – now consisting of 28 professionals with Robert still on board – knows how to connect with a creative audience. Building on its network of freelance writers, designers and photographers, the company offers its insights and experience to organizations and manufacturers. From custom-publishing to brand direction, Frame Publishers serves as a reliable partner in targeting the world’s leading creative professionals. Source
Sometimes, in order to let communities reclaim what was always theirs, designers must remove what came after – whether that’s decades of enclosed corridors, fortress-like barriers or the debris of loss. These four restorations cast their vote for a subtractive approach. Undoing 1995 to restore 1903, a Utrecht courthouse sheds accumulated layers The 1903 school, designed by F.J. Nieuwenhuis, was already adaptively reused once in 1995.
Enjoy 2 free articles a month. For unlimited access, get a membership now. This month’s FRAME Awards brought in an especially high number of submissions, so an expanded panel of 20 jurors has selected two winners for June. Today, we announce the first June winner and honourable mentions – stay tuned tomorrow for part two.
Enjoy 2 free articles a month. For unlimited access, get a membership now. This season, the fashion show’s relationship with public space became impossible to ignore – as spectacular scenography collided with community displacement, environmental pressure and a European heatwave. For more than ten years, I have studied runway scenography because I believe fashion shows reveal possible futures of public space.
Minwoo Ian Yang’s micro interior for Gelateria Hanro lets the building’s decades of wear coexist with new marble, timber and steel. FRAME’s take Hanro, which translates to ‘cold dew’, marks the frosty autumn transition in traditional East Asian calendars. It is a fitting name for the gelateria in west Seoul, whose artisanal flavours align with seasonal produce. Designer Minwoo Ian Yang reflects this relationship with cyclicality in this compact, contemplative space.
A wave of designers is translating millennia of instinct around contrast therapy into spatial decisions for today. The Romans knew it. The Russians knew it. The Nordics have known it all along. Now, the rest of the world is catching up. Contrast therapy – alternating between intense heat and cold exposure to activate the body’s stress and relaxation responses – is having a cultural moment that shows no sign of cooling.
Enjoy 2 free articles a month. For unlimited access, get a membership now. Item 1 of 9 1 / 10 The trade-fair stand is a tricky typology. It’s a temporary structure in tight competition for attention from a frenetically busy crowd. Sukchulmok amplifies the contrasts in its furniture collection for the build of its stand to catch the eye of passers-by. Frame’s Take If you want to make a thing’s qualities stand out, place it next to something completely different.
Enjoy 2 free articles a month. For unlimited access, get a membership now. Item 1 of 9 1 / 10 MVRDV’s La Vallée Verte brings 70 homes together around a planted courtyard in Bordeaux’s Bastide Niel district. Its angular volumes and layered balconies turn green housing into something spatial, not just visual. FRAME’s take The promise of green housing is everywhere now, often reduced to a familiar image of plants climbing across a residential façade.
The workplace has been redesigned many times over, but Other Degree’s Benine Dekker and Florijn Vriend believe the right question has never been asked: how are people actually hardwired?
For SS27 Menswear, Prada filled Milan’s Deposito with a dense orthogonal grid of light. FRAME’s take In recent seasons, the fashion show set has increasingly become a medium and subject in its own right. With the opening of the exhibition Catwalk: The Art of the Fashion Show at the Vitra Design Museum, the interpretation and circulation of fashion show spaces have become one of the fashion industry’s dominant narratives.
Exhibitions take over this edition of Openings, with each project treating space as part of the work itself. Across the selection, light and spatial staging become ways to shift how visitors read the place around them. As Seen Below – The Dome, a Skyspace James Turrell At Aros Aarhus Art Museum, Schmidt Hammer Lassen completes The Next Level with As Seen Below – The Dome, a Skyspace by James Turrell.