Sunday, May 10, 2026

Madonna, Bob Dylan & the Sistine Chapel – April 2026 M&A Activity


“Print is evolving from being just another media channel to becoming the stage where a brand proves its artistry and permanence.”
- Cherry Collins, strategy partner at Havas Media UK

“Print issues no longer move into the collectible category, they start there. Print is both our best foot forward, and a document for posterity.”
- Mark Guiducci, Global Editorial Director, Vanity Fair

“This is not about loss. This is about gain, reinvesting resources and strategizing how we position print so that it feels less like the old-school idea of a newsboy delivering your daily news and more like a premium parcel, a special treat you want to keep and dig into in a rarefied way.”
- Chloe Malle, Head of Vogue’s Editorial Content

Quotes from article “The Future of Fashion Magazines,” Vogue Business, October 3, 2025, with reflections on Conde Nast’s decision to shift Vogue’s publication from monthly to eight times per year, timed to correspond with major fashion events, with bigger issues and a commitment to print on heavier paper.

Print as Premium Luxury Channel

Callaway Arts & Entertainment, the publisher behind some of the most elaborate art, celebrity, and collectible books of the past four decades, recently filed for protection under Chapter 11 of the US Bankruptcy Code. The extraordinary part of the story is not that a publisher of $22,000 art-book sets eventually faced financial pressure. The remarkable part is that books of this ambition were produced at all.

For decades, Callaway pursued its rebuttal to the commoditization of print with unusual conviction. If ordinary information was moving online, then print had to become more tactile, more permanent, more collectible, and more luxurious. The company’s bankruptcy filing now shows both sides of that strategy. Premium print can escape commoditization, but it can also create a business model burdened by high production costs, long development cycles, expensive rights, specialized vendors, and a narrow audience of buyers.

The Legacy of Success

The person behind that feat is Nicholas Callaway. Born in 1953, he grew up surrounded and preceded by generations of successful entrepreneurs. His father, Ely Callaway Jr., founded Callaway Golf, the leading global manufacturer of golf clubs and golf-related products. His brother, Reeves Callaway, was the founder of Callaway Cars, a designer and manufacturer of high-performance vehicle customization packages. Callaway Gardens resort, now a National Natural Landmark, was founded by his family. Heady stuff for a young person seeking to carve out their own niche in such a family.

After graduating from Harvard with degrees in Classics and Fine Art, and a stint as a director of an art gallery in Paris, Callaway embarked on a publishing career, eventually responsible for more than seventy Miss Spider titles and other children’s books. His efforts also included producing limited editions of fine art and celebrity biographies; the first of these is a book of photographs by Alfred Stieglitz, published in 1983. In 1987, he followed that up with a book of photographs by Romanian sculptor Constantine Brancusi.

Many other titles followed, many with the common theme of high art, celebrity subjects, luxury photography, collectibles, and museum-scale projects, all with luxurious production standards. Books about Georgia O’Keeffe, a book of Issey Miyake fashion photos by Irving Penn, a picture book of custom-built Ferrington Guitars featuring the bespoke instruments’ celebrity musician owners, among many others.

Outrageous and Collectible

Most famously, or more correctly, infamously, in 1992, Callaway produced the book Sex by Madonna. The book featured many provocative images, some of which bordered on pornographic. The book was highly controversial and, in retrospect, was a significant pop culture event at the height of Madonna’s fame. The art and alternative-lifestyle communities feted the book, while conservative-leaning organizations sought to limit its distribution. Despite the controversy, or more likely because of it, the book sold 150,000 copies on its first day in the United States and topped the New York Times Best Seller list within three weeks. Sex went on to sell more than 1.5 million copies worldwide and to this day remains the best- and fastest-selling book in the coffee-table book category.

The book was a production masterpiece. Madonna was convinced that Warner Books, the publisher, could not produce the book to her standards, so she arranged to transfer the production to Nicholas Callaway’s bespoke production company, Callaway Editions. The company, the predecessor to Callaway Arts & Entertainment, was known for producing beautiful art books. Madonna specified an aluminum cover that was stamped, anodized, die-cut, and spiral-bound. The finished book measures 11” x 14” and is 128 pages in length. Each copy is serial numbered and was originally sealed in a metallic Mylar plastic wrapper. R.R. Donnelley was engaged to print and bind the book, with subcontractors brought in to produce specialty components. The avant-garde design and elaborate packaging resulted in a product that felt more like a prestige collectible media object than a traditional book.

From the outset, the Callaway company specialized in projects that conventional publishers often considered too elaborate, risky, or unconventional. Callaway books were frequently oversized, lavishly produced, heavily illustrated, and physically complex. Many involved unusual materials, intricate bindings, custom packaging, inserts, or extensive photographic reproduction challenges.

Print as Multi-Channel Component

Throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, while much of the publishing industry focused on economies of scale and retail distribution, Callaway increasingly pursued what might be described as event publishing. Rather than releasing large numbers of conventional titles, the company concentrated on fewer, highly differentiated projects tied to art, music, entertainment, or cultural prestige.

After the success of Sex, Callaway produced books that functioned as multimedia cultural experiences rather than conventional publishing products. Callaway repeatedly emphasized that books should stimulate multiple senses simultaneously. He often described publishing in cinematic or theatrical terms, arguing that physical books possessed emotional and tactile qualities impossible to replicate digitally. In interviews, he spoke about paper, binding, scale, texture, typography, and reproduction quality in the language of a designer or filmmaker rather than that of a conventional publisher.

This philosophy eventually led the company into increasingly ambitious multimedia territory. Callaway experimented with hybrid publishing forms: books integrated with music, interactive publishing, children’s entertainment properties, digital applications, and branded intellectual property extensions.

The company’s Miss Spider franchise evolved into television and merchandising properties. Callaway also developed “BoundSound” multimedia publishing concepts that combined physical books with digital and audio experiences. Later, Nicholas Callaway became an early advocate for tablet publishing and interactive book applications after conversations with Apple founder Steve Jobs reportedly encouraged him to explore the iPad ecosystem.

Although the company became associated with lavish printed books, Callaway himself was never anti-digital. Quite the opposite. He understood earlier than many publishers that digital distribution would eventually dominate routine informational content. His response was not to reject digital media but to reposition print toward areas where physicality itself created value.

In effect, Callaway anticipated the modern premiumization strategy now visible across much of the printing industry: bespoke packaging, embellishments, collector-edition books, boutique magazines, premium direct mail, and experiential graphics.

Luxury on Overdrive

As routine printed communication became increasingly disposable or migrated online, Callaway pursued the opposite extreme: printed objects so elaborate, tactile, and permanent that they could function as cultural artifacts. This philosophy reached perhaps its most ambitious expression through Callaway’s Vatican publishing project, The Sistine Chapel trilogy. The project represented an extraordinary combination of technology, art preservation, photographic reproduction, and sumptuous manufacturing.

Produced in collaboration with the Vatican Museums and Italian publisher Scripta Maneant, the trilogy reportedly involved more than 270,000 ultra-high-resolution giga-pixel photographs taken inside the Sistine Chapel after a major restoration effort, while the chapel was closed to the public. The resulting three-volume work reproduced Michelangelo’s frescoes at unprecedented detail and 1:1 scale. Color reproduction is reportedly at 99.4% accuracy.

The books themselves, published in November 2020, are finely produced collectible luxury artifacts. Each of the three books measures 24” x 17” and has a total of 822 pages, including 220 gatefolds measuring 24” x 51”. Each volume weighs 25 pounds and is printed in six-color hexachrome lithography. The signatures were hand-gathered and bound in three-piece Bodoniana (lay-flat) sewn binding in silk with metallic ink. The spines are white calf leather from matched hides and are debossed in silver, gold, and platinum foil stamping. The original price for one of the 600 sets in the limited English-language edition was $22,000. (The current price on Callaway’s website is $35,000 for the set.)

Other monumental projects followed. In 2021, Callaway published The Beatles: Get Back, a 240-page hardcover book featuring transcriptions of over 120 hours of audio from the Beatles’ sessions for their final album, Let It Be. Callaway followed this up in 2023 with the publication of Bob Dylan: Mixing Up the Medicine. This 608-page coffee-table-style book has over 1,100 images and is printed in five colors on uncoated paper. Produced in collaboration with The Bob Dylan Center, the book attempts to capture the breadth and depth of the archives there.

Too Much Luxury

The financial pressure from these recent ultra-premium productions shows in Callaway Arts & Entertainment’s bankruptcy filing. Court documents listed liabilities to the top unsecured creditors of approximately $4.15 million. Amounts owed to major unsecured creditors reportedly included $1.7 million to Hachette Book Group (the distributor for Callaway), $1 million to Scripta Maneant (the Italian co-publisher of The Sistine Chapel), $450,000 to Bob Dylan, and an undisclosed amount to Transcontinental Printing. The creditor list tells a revealing story about the economics of prestige publishing: celebrity intellectual property, museum-scale art production, international printing partnerships, and highly specialized manufacturing.

Callaway’s struggles reveal both the promise and the danger of the premium position that it aspired to and achieved over four decades. It is well established that commodity print faces severe pressure as routine and date-sensitive information continues to migrate online. Commercial printing remains intensely competitive and continues to consolidate. Callaway demonstrates that the opposite end of the market carries its own vulnerabilities.

Luxury print can escape commoditization precisely because it is expensive, specialized, tactile, and culturally significant. Yet those same qualities create financial risk due to investment in preparation and price hurdles for buyers. Long timelines, expensive manufacturing, specialized reproduction, premium and increasingly limited materials, and limited-run luxury positioning appear to have contributed to financial instability for this publisher committed to print as objects for posterity. The paradox is that the more the printed content is a bespoke product, the more inaccessible it may become.
   
2026 April - Mergers and Acquisitions in the Printing, Packaging, Paper & Related Industries

Deal Party #1
(Surviving Entity)
Pre-Deal
Revenue
(US$Mil)


Party #1 Address


Deal Party #2
Pre-Deal
Revenue
(US$Mil)


Party #2 Address
Date
Deal
Public
Deal
Value
(US$Mil)

Deal Structure
(Intermediary)


Notes

Press
Links
Labelink No Data Anjou, QC Litho Québec No Data Pointe-Claire, QC 4/21/26 No Data Acquisition Folding cartons Link
Associates International No Data Wilmington, DE Ace Twill
(Advised by Graphic Arts Advisors)
No Data Berkeley Heights, NJ 4/16/26 No Data Acquisition
(Graphic Arts Advisors)
Commercial printing Link
International Paper $24,340 Memphis, TN North Pacific Paper Company
(Port co. One Rock Capital Partners)
No Data Longview, WA 4/16/26 $360.0 Acquisition Containerboard mill Link
Walker360 $15.0 Montgomery, AL Sull Graphics $6.8 Ball Ground, GA 4/15/26 No Data Acquisition
(New Direction)
Commercial printing Link
United Business Mail No Data Minneapolis, MN Enru Logistics
(Div. LSC Communications)
No Data Bolingbrook, IL 4/15/26 No Data Acquisition Marketing Mail Logistics Link
OSP Holdings $727.3 Osaka, Japan Global Venture No Data Kent, WA 4/14/26 No Data Acquisition Seal & label manufacturer Link
Venetoulis Institute for Local Journalism No Data Baltimore, MD The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
(Prop. Block Communications)
No Data  Pittsburgh, PA 4/14/26 No Data Acquisition Community newspaper Link
Allegra Marketing Print Mail No Data Clinton, MI American Speedy Printing No Data Shelby, MI 4/13/26 No Data Acquisition Printing & copying Link
Kornit Digital $208.2 Rosh-Ha’Ayin,
Israel
PrintFactory No Data North Brabant,
Netherlands
4/13/26 No Data Acquisition Print workflow system Link
Salem One
(Port co. Granite Creek Capital)
$53.1 Winston-Salem, NC  SmashBrand No Data Boise, ID 4/9/26 No Data Acquisition Packaging design agency Link
Welch Packaging Group No Data Elkhart, IN Jamel Containers No Data Chattanooga, TN 4/9/26 No Data Acquisition Corrugated boxes Link
OnTheGoMedia No Data Hampton, IA Hampton Chronicle
(Prop. Mid-America Publishing)
No Data Hampton, IA 4/4/26 No Data Acquisition Community newspaper Link
TRG (The Royal Group) No Data Cicero, IL Chillicothe Packaging No Data Chillicothe, OH 4/2/26 No Data Acquisition Corrugated boxes Link
Grand Junction Media
(Sub. Seaton Publishing)
No Data Grand Junction, CO Colorado Newspaper Group
(Prop. Wick Communications)
No Data Montrose, CO 4/1/26 No Data Acquisition
(Dirks, Van Essen)
Community newspapers Link
  Burke Group No Data Edmonton, AB Houghton Boston No Data Saskatoon, SK 4/1/26 No Data Acquisition Commercial printing Link
   
     
2026 April - Bankruptcy Filings in the Printing, Packaging, Paper & Related Industries



Filing Party

Date
Case
Filed
Pre-Petition
Revenue
(US$Mil)



Case #



Filing Party Address



Circuit



Region & City



Judge



Attorney for Debtor



Notes
Chapter 11 Filings:
Signmakers Custom Signage & Fabrication LLC 4/2/26 No Data 26-13217 Los Angeles, CA 9th Central CA
Los Angeles
Deborah J. Saltzman Michael R. Totaro Signs & wide-format printing
  Chapter 7 Filings:                  
  Fullerton Digital Print & Display Inc. 4/28/26 No Data 26-11310 Anaheim, CA 9th Central CA
Santa Ana
Scott C. Clarkson Ethan Chin Wide-format printing
      

2026 April - Non-Bankruptcy Closures in the Printing, Packaging, Paper & Related Industries



Closed Company / Facility

Date of Closure
Pre-Closure
Revenue
(US$Mil)



Closing Address
Related Party Related Party
Address
Date Closure Public


Notes

Press
Links
Rocket Printing
(FKA Taylor Printing)
4/20/26 No Data Fredericton, NB None N/A Apr-26 Commercial printing Link
Nutis Visual Communications Group 5/6/26 No Data Columbus, OH None N/A Apr-26 Retail display & commercial printing Link
Manroland - Manufacturing plant Jun-26 No Data Offenbach, Germany Langley Holdings Nottinghamshire,
UK
4/23/26 Sheetfed press manufacturing Link
  Kendall Press 4/9/26 No Data Chelsea, MA None N/A 4/9/26 Commercial printing Link