ANZA #1: Making Our City

Posted in magazines, newsprint on October 22nd, 2011
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ANZA #1: Making Our City

Prologue to ANZA #1:

“Architecture, although we often don’t realize it, always played a central role in our culture and life: in our homes, places of worship, offices, and shops. The 21st century has brought much social-economic transformation to Africa, and it has been coined as the century of the cities. The African continent will most probably experience immense population growth – the United Nations estimates that Africa’s population may more than triple in the century. Most of this growth will take place in cities – and in architecture.

Therefore, both specialists and public need to openly discuss the urban and architectural issues connected with these growing cities. But there is no platform in the form of a magazine for such a discussion. ANZA is edited in Dar es Salaam, Africa’s fastest growing city. It is to be a vehicle for open criticism and a constructive exchange of opinions; a platform to launch innovation solutions; a place for the discussion of typical local phenomena, and as a source of information for decision makers.

To kick-start the magazine, a four-week workshop was setup by Camenzind Magazine, Zurich to train a group of young ambitious and vibrant university students and recent graduates to form a future editorial team for a magazine that will fill the void of an East-African architectural magazine. The workshop included training in text writing and editing, photography, art and production, and finally marketing and strategy to ensure the long-term existence of the magazine.

After a fun and loud discussion bouncing ideas back and forth, we finally came up with the magazine title: ANZA, a Swahili word meaning, “start.” We found this name suitable as it marks both the beginning journey of this East-African architectural magazine and the long journey of our hopeful East-African cities and their peoples. Aside from this name being subtly powerful, we all agreed that it was also typographically beautiful.

One may ask: “can a diverse multidisciplinary student-published magazine, dealing with issues concerning people and spaces, issued bi-annually, compete with newer, more interactive, and above all faster formats like blogs and online forums?” Answer: one can never know unless they ANZA!”

24 pages
Prologue / Editorial in Swahili and English
Articles in English

D 5€

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Trois films photographiés – A Change of Speed, a Change of Style, a Change of Scene – After Birds – Screen O Scope. Philippe Decrauzat, Centre d’édition contemporaine, Geneva. Book Launch @ Motto Zürich, 5.11.2011

Posted in Motto Zürich event, Motto Zürich store on October 21st, 2011
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Trois films photographiés – A Change of Speed, a Change of Style, a Change of Scene – After Birds – Screen O Scope, Philippe DECRAUZAT.
Published by Centre d’édition contemporaine, Geneva.
Photographies: @David Gagnebin-de Bons.

LAUNCH @ Motto Zürich on the 5th of November 2011, 6.30 pm.
With a discussion around the book between the artist and Véronique Bacchetta.

This artist’s book is an edition of 400. Each copy is composed of 18 quires, bound together following a random repartition system. Each book is unique and numbered with an adjustable rubber stamp.

Encens #27 – Back to Japan / 2012

Posted in Fashion, magazines on October 19th, 2011
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Encens #27 – Back to Japan / 2012

Featuring: Deorah Turbeville, Zoran, Gerard Pipart, Mary Mcfadden, Yvonne Sporre, Mako Yamzaki….

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cura. #9

Posted in magazines on October 19th, 2011
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cura.#9
cura. is a magazine devoted to contemporary art, with texts in Italian and English. Inside issue #09, Fall

2011, you’ll find:
Cover by Benoît Maire

INSIDE THE COVER

Benoît Maire

words by vincent honoré

AROUND THE WORLD

Pontus Hultén. The Exhibition Machine

lorenzo benedetti

Female Power Pop

raimar stange

Judith Raum’s World of Things

marina sorbello

Marlon de Azambuja. Theorising Isolation

josé luis corazón ardura

There Are No Ruins Here

mirene arsanios

TALK

Doing It In The Periphery. A conversation
with Linn Pedersen and Thora Dolven Balke

marianne zamecznik

FOCUS

A Sense of Touching. Marlene Dumas

ulrich loock

ANDROID®

based in Berlin

riccardo previdi

LAB

Nico Vascellari

Bus de la Lum

words by filipa ramos

SPOTLIGHT

An Interview with Liudvikas Buklys

chris fitzpatrick

LAB

Deborah Ligorio

Paesaggio

words by christiane rekade

FASHION CURATING

Interview with Sabine Seymour

dobrila denegri

BOOKS

Participating Politically

felix vogel & morten paul

Myths, Ethics and Narrative

Strategies of Superhero Fiction

adrian tranquilli & marco arnaudo

AGENDA

edited by sara feola

D 7€

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II II V: Two And Two Makes Five. Maximilian Rossner.

Posted in photography on October 17th, 2011
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II II V: Two And Two Makes Five. Maximilian Rossner.

A5 size
Hardcover
92 pages
77 images
Printed in duplex
First edition, 2010
500 copies

D 18€

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Metropolis M, #5: Survival.

Posted in magazines, writing on October 17th, 2011
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Metropolis M, #5: Survival.

For years, post-colonialism in art was dominated by a heavy, politically correct discourse, generally at a high intellectual level. The debate primarily took place in other countries, such as France and England, where important exhibitions were organized that played a large part in guiding how people think about their colonial past.

In the Netherlands, very little has been said about our colonial past, certainly in the visual arts, where museums and other institutions have seldom broached the issue with any seriousness. Only in the last few years does there seem to be a change in this, thanks to a new generation of artists and curators who have the courage to investigate the subject with a certain amount of lightness. Obtrusive moralizing is avoided, and although one is always still in search of confrontation, there is also space for keeping things in a different perspective.
This fall, De Appel and SMBA are devoting exhibitions and events to this question. Metropolis M also pauses to take a look. A society that is so imbued with its own past, as we are, cannot ignore the dubious side of its history.

This issue also includes a follow-up to the protests expressed in the previous issue. Where it loudly voiced objections to the decimated budgets in the cultural sector, we pause here under the title ‘Survival’ to examine the background of the cutbacks and look at how we can best respond to them. Strategic analyses are interspersed with tips about how to be stronger in moving forward, out of the crisis.

Finally, we are extremely pleased that Tirdad Zolghadr, an Iranian writer and curator based in New York, has agreed to write columns for us over the coming year. His beautiful first contribution immediately sets high expectations.
– Domeniek Ruyters

OPENING
dOCUMENTA (13) thinks ahead
by Domeniek Ruyters

COLUMN
Period Room
by Tirdad Zolghadr

SURVIVAL
Politicians without a party
Markus Miessen on ‘crossbench praxis’
by Domeniek Ruyters

Money isn’t everything
Interview with Matthew Slotover from Frieze
by JJ Charlesworth

FEATURES
The art of Wilfredo Prieto
by Inti Guerrero

The Netherlands in postcolonial perspective
by Alice Smits

‘Spectres’ by Sven Augustijnen
by Stefaan Vervoort

Discovery Channel
Kianoosh Motallebi, Maarten vanden Eynde, Edith Dekyndt
by Ilse van Rijn

Published by Stichting Metropolis M
Editor in Chief: Domeniek Ruyters

D 10€

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Self Publish, Be Naughty. Bruno Ceschel. Self Publish, Be Happy.

Posted in photography on October 17th, 2011
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Self Publish, Be Naughty. Bruno Ceschel.

SPBN is a book about love/sex/desire/lust/intimacy created with the help of Self Publish, Be Happy’s extended network of contributors. In the spirit of SP,BH’s collective ethos, a call for submissions for “naughty” pictures was launched in March 2011. More than 5,000 photographs from around the world were submitted, by both established artists and young up-and-coming practitioners.

SPBN showcases 122 of these photographs by 75 different artists. The photographs, presented in a continuous flux, offer a powerful and uncompromising exploration of contemporary approaches to the themes of sex, desires and taboos within photography. From the surreal to the mundane, from the allusive to the graphic, the images challenge the tradition of erotic photobooks and their very ghettoised approach to desires.

Printed in a limited edition of 1,000, each copy of SPBN is unique; art director Antonio de Luca has designed a beautiful ever-changing book, a collection of A4 posters (in the manner of Playboy centrefolds), bound together with a removable elastic band. Each copy will have an accidental sequence of pages, an echo of the fragmented and subversive nature of desire. SPBN will also include a selection of texts (from Plato’s Phaedrus to erotic stories anonymously posted online), and, like an old porn newsletter, will come in a discreet black envelope.

Contributors: Joseph Akel, Morten Andersen, Brendan Baker, Corey Bartle-Sanderson, Ilya Batrakov, Lucas Blalock, Anna Bogutskaya, Parker Bright, Jake Brooks, Victor Cobo, Martina Corà, Christopher Day, Michael J. DeMeo, Bobby Doherty, Laëtitia Donval, Daniel Evans, Dora Fobert, Hannah Godley, Dana Goldstein, Roberto Greco, Tomas Hein, Åsa Johannesson, Ellen Jong, Ellen Jong and Kate Ruth, Jake Kenny, Paul Knight, Paul Kooiker, Paul Kwiatkowski, Alexander Kurmaz, Collin LaFleche, Mathieu Lambert, Bertrand Le Pluard, Nicole Lesser, Carrie Levy, Thomas Mailaender, Tommy Malekoff, Jennilee Marigomen, Aaron McElroy, Michael Max McLeod, Leah Meltzer, Matthew Mili, Ania Mokrzycka, Kristie Muller, Francesco Nazardo, Luke Norman and Nik Adam, Florian Oellers, Sean Orena, Witek Orski, Oliver Poddar and Andrew Ferguson, Angga Pratama, Karol Radziszewski, Pedro Ramos, Tobias Rose, Davi Russo, Corinna Sauer, Kirill Savchenkov, David Schoerner, Alexander Sedelnikov, Ben Seeley, Oliver Sieber, Pacifico Silano, Marija Strajnic, RJ Shaughnessy, Matthew Tammaro, Aram Tanis, Agnes Thor, Scott Treleaven, Sophie van der Perre, Erik van der Weijde, Marnix van Uum, Peter Voelker, Alex Wein, Harley Weir, Emily Yost, Irina Yulieva.

Published by Self Publish, Be Happy
Editor: Bruno Ceschel
Design: Antonio DeLuca
Project Manager: Andrew Moynehan
Text Editor: Lena Aliper
Ephemera selected by: Bryan Dooley
Softcover
29×22 cm
132p.

D 30€

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Vanessa Safavi. Blind Traveller. Kunsthaus Glarus. Chert, Berlin.

Posted in Exhibition catalogue, Motto Berlin store, Motto Zürich store on October 16th, 2011
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Vanessa Safavi. Blind Traveller.

Published on the occasion of the exhibitions:

Vanessa Safavi “Resorts”, Kunsthaus Glarus, August-October 2011 and “Between the Tree and a Plastic Chair”, Vanessa Safavi solo exhibition at Chert, Berlin, September-October 2010.

Published by Kunsthaus Glarus and Chert 2011

With texts by Jennifer Chert, Sabine Rusterholz Petko, Vanessa Safavi

Graphic design: Nils Reinke-Dieker

30 pages

19.5 x 29.5 cm

D 11€

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Never Odd Or Even, volume II. Mariana Castillo Deball. Bom Dia Boa Tarde Boa Noite.

Posted in Uncategorized on October 14th, 2011
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Never Odd Or Even, volume II. Mariana Castillo Deball.

An anthology of 30 dust jackets of non-existing books. A compilation of 30 titles in one single publication! Join us in this literary journey throughout different topics and subject matters ranging from: unpublished memories, tropical manifestations, intragenealogy, Why the letter E is everywhere?, the taste of truth, the aroma of existence, contemporary ruins, conversations between a cardinal and a roadrunner bird, and more!

Never odd or Even is a project by Mariana Castillo Deball with contributions by Mario Bellatin, Koen Brams, Abraham Cruzvillegas, Santiago da Silva, Tim Etchells, Carla Faesler, Dario Gamboni, Dora García, Moosje Goosen, Alejandro Jodorowsky and Pascale Montandon, Irene Kopelman, Adriana Lara, Pablo León de la Barra, Jesse Lerner, Juana Lomeli, Valeria Luiselli, Raimundas Malašauskas, Antoni Muntadas, Sophie Nys, Manuel Raeder, Eran Schaerf and Eva Meyer, Sergio Taborda and Heriberto Yépez

Published on the occasion of the exhibition
Never Odd or Even at Grimmuseum, Berlin
and Museum of Contemporary Art, Roskilde
curated by Solvej Helweg Ovesen and
co-produced by Grimmuseum, Berlin

Published by Bom Dia Boa Tarde Boa Noite
Size varies, max. 170 × 240 mm
30 Covers, 24 b/w, 6 color
English/Spanish/Portuguese/French
ISBN 978-3-00-035970-5

D 24€

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Basso Magazin #8: The Rest Is Revolution.

Posted in graphic design, Japan, magazines, photography on October 14th, 2011
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Basso Magazin #8: The Rest Is Revolution.

A compilation of text and images with contributions by Adi Khalif, Adrian Hermanides, Assume Vivid Astro Focus, Baltazar Castor, Benjamin Alexander Huseby, Berglind & Funi, Billy Miller amongst others.

Ideas, redaction, layout: Yusuf Etiman

D 8€

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