
Icons & Milestones: Mary Carey, Elaine Cohen, and Rob Cohen
The Icons & Milestones Series by Mark Hebert The following is part of the Icons & Milestones Series, which started in the Exhibit City News

The Icons & Milestones Series by Mark Hebert The following is part of the Icons & Milestones Series, which started in the Exhibit City News

George Kish November 23, 1957 — March 11, 2025 George Kish, a respected figure in the exhibit and event industry, passed away on March 11,

The Icons & Milestones Series by Mark Hebert The following is part of the Icons & Milestones Series, which started in the Exhibit City News

(Crates are stacked outside the Westgate Las Vegas convention center.) Brian Sullivan shopped around some of the roughly 5 million square feet of event space

The evolution of tradeshow exhibits from the earliest days to the present has been shaped by achievements in materials, technological innovations, economic pressures, globalization,

The Icons & Milestones Series by Mark Hebert The following is part of the Icons & Milestones Series, which started in the Exhibit City News

(The Griffin Museum of Science and Industry, which recently secured a $10 million grant for restoration efforts, will enhance accessibility and public spaces by 2027.

(The historic El Cortez Hotel & Casino, the longest continuously operating casino in Las Vegas, recently unveiled a $20 million expansion featuring additional gaming space,

(March 2005: Larry Kulchawik, president, International Federation of Exhibition and Events Services, and Derse Exhibits development executive from Chicago region (left); John McGregor, CORT Trade

(Two MegaCon Orlando attendees showcase their intricate cosplay on the convention’s red carpet, celebrating the creativity and fandom that make the event one of the

Had this book been published just a few months earlier, it would have easily earned a place on Exhibit City News’ 30th Anniversary Training &

The tradeshow industry may be a trillion-dollar powerhouse, but for most of the public, it remains, as the title suggests, “invisible.” In The Invisible Industry: