Artribune Magazine Redesigns After Seven and a Half Years
After seven and a half years, Artribune Magazine has undergone a complete redesign, as announced by director Massimiliano Tonelli. The relaunch focuses on long-form content enhanced with photography, infographics, and illustrations to offer a reading experience impossible on mobile screens. Tonelli frames the move within the broader crisis of cultural publishing, noting that 70% of online content is read on smartphones. The new format aims to reclaim the artisanal dimension of print, emphasizing visual clarity and unique page layouts. The magazine will continue to feature quality journalism, investigative pieces, and authoritative voices, but now with a renewed graphic identity. The first issue under the new direction is considered a 'number zero.' Tonelli also highlights the magazine's niche supplements: Incanti (weekly art market), Render (biweekly urban regeneration), and PAX (biweekly cultural tourism).
Key facts
- Artribune Magazine redesigned after 7.5 years.
- New focus on long-form content with photos, infographics, illustrations.
- 70% of online content read on smartphones.
- First new issue considered 'number zero'.
- Magazine supplements: Incanti, Render, PAX.
- Director Massimiliano Tonelli announced the change.
- Redesign aims to offer unique print reading experience.
- Crisis of cultural publishing cited as context.
Entities
Artists
- Massimiliano Tonelli
Institutions
- Artribune Magazine
- Exibart
- Gambero Rosso
- Università di Siena
Locations
- Pesaro
- Fano
- Urbino
- Marche
- Torino
- Italy