incomplet: a podcast about design history

a podcast about design history

Women In Magazines

    This podcast episode delves into the critical role women have played in shaping the magazine industry through design, editorial leadership, and cultural influence. While season one spotlighted individual designers, this episode zooms out to explore the broader impact women have had on magazine evolution—from early European publications to today’s digital formats. It traces how magazines shifted from reinforcing traditional gender roles to becoming empowering platforms, thanks to figures like Sarah Josepha Hale, Cipe Pineles, Bea Feitler, and Ruth Ansel, who revolutionized both visual style and editorial voice. The episode also highlights the contributions of Black women in publishing, who created their own magazines to amplify underrepresented voices and foster community. Today, designers like Jessica Walsh, Gail Bichler, and Gail Anderson continue this legacy, using bold visuals and innovative technology to push boundaries and expand representation. Through storytelling, activism, and artistry, women have transformed magazines into platforms for cultural commentary and social change—proving that their creativity and leadership are essential to the industry’s past, present, and future.

    TIMELINE

    1663-1668 - First magazine-like publication (Erbauliche Monaths-Unterredungen)

    1693 - First magazine for women created (Athenian Mercury)

    1731 - Term “Magazine” first used in the The Gentleman's Magazine

    1770 - The Lady’s Magazine began

    1830 - Godey’s Lady’s Book, an American magazine for women, was started by a man named Louis A. Godey

    1832-1852 - The Ladies’ Cabinet was created and sold

    1855 - Photolithography is invented

    1870-1927 - The Woman’s Journal, which would eventually merge with The Woman Citizen,  was 

    released in Boston

    1885 - Good Housekeeping first published

    1891-1894 - Ringwood’s Afro-American Journal of Fashion Magazines were published and distributed

    1899 - The Saturday Evening Post printed the first full-page illustrated cover

    1916-1925 - Half-Century Magazine was created and distributed

    1920 - Women were granted the right to vote

    1932-1935 - Cipe Pineless works as assistant art director for Conde Nast

    1945 - Ebony Magazine was first published

    1954 - Dorothy Dandridge was the first black woman on a mainstream magazine cover

    1961 - Bea Feitler is hired at Harper’s Bazaar

    1965 - Bea Feitler and Ruth Ansel release famous cover of Jean Shrimpton for Harper's Bazaar

    1974 - Ruth Ansel becomes the first female art director and the New York Times Magazine

    REFERENCES

    2008 AIGA medalist: Gail Anderson. (n.d.). AIGA. Retrieved July 20, 2025, from https://www.aiga.org/membership-community/aiga-awards/2008-aiga-medalist-gail-anderson

    Burkhalter, N. (1996). Women’s magazines and the suffrage movement: Did they help or hinder the cause? Journal of American Culture, 19(2), 13–24. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1542-734x.1996.1902_13.x

    Clair, C. (1969). A chronology of printing. Weidenfeld & Nicolson.

    Ed.D., G. M. (2024, March 1). Women’s History Month: The Life of Dorothy Dandridge. Benicia Magazine. https://www.beniciamagazine.com/womens-history-month-the-life-of-dorothy-dandridge/

    Ellis, E., Golden, C. P., & Fripp, C. B. (2005). Cipe Pineles: Two remembrances. RIT Cary Graphic Arts Press.

    Eye Magazine. (n.d.). Eye Magazine. Retrieved July 20, 2025, from https://www.eyemagazine.com/feature/article/reputations-gail-bichler

    Ferguson, M. (1983). Forever feminine: Women’s magazines and the cult of femininity. Heinemann Educational Books.

    Forster, L. (2015). Magazine movements: Women’s culture, feminisms and media form. Bloomsbury Publishing USA.

    history of publishing. (n.d.). Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved July 20, 2025, from https://www.britannica.com/topic/publishing/additional-info

    McCracken, E. (1993). Decoding Women’s Magazines: From mademoiselle to Ms.

    Osei-Hwere, E., & Osei-Hwere, P. (n.d.). History of magazine publishing. Media Communication, Convergence and Literacy. Retrieved July 20, 2025, from https://oer.pressbooks.pub/mediacommunication/chapter/history-of-magazine-publishing/

    Rooks, N. M. (2004). Ladies’ pages: African American women’s magazines and the culture that made them. Rutgers University Press.

    Sperandio, A. T., & Bouadana, S. (2010). Ruth Ansel: art direction. Creative Review (London, England), 30(5), 28–36.

    The Luupe. (n.d.). Jessica Walsh on Building Her Own Design Studio and Breaking Clichés. Retrieved July 20, 2025, from https://studio.theluupe.com/blog/jessica-walsh-on-building-her-own-design-studio-and-breaking-cliches

    Thomson, E. M. (1994). Early Graphic Design Periodicals in America. Journal of Design History, 7(2), 113–126. https://doi.org/10.1093/jdh/7.2.113