Edit #57.

Posted in magazines, writing on December 9th, 2011
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Edit #57

Komplizierter Spaß seit 1993, hellwach, seltsam, einzigartig: Edit ist eine der einflussreichsten Literaturzeitschriften im deutschsprachigen Raum. Dreimal im Jahr lässt sich hier Neues entdecken und Altes neu entdecken. Namen oder Kategorien sind dabei weniger wichtig als der individuelle Umgang mit den bewährten Möglichkeiten oder den Grenzen von Literatur – sollte es die geben.

Olga Grjasnowa – Der Russe ist einer, der Birken liebt
Konstantin Ames – sTiL.e(ins) Art und Weltwaisen
Miron Białoszewski – Gedichte
Nyk de Vries – Prosaminiaturen LESEN
Felicia Zeller – Helme aus Holz LESEN
Georg Leß – Gedichte
Matthias Senkel – Fidye
Vier Gedichte
Elfriede Czurda, Michael Lentz, Ferdinand Schmatz und
Christian Steinbacher mit Anagrammen zu einem Gedicht
von Carlfriedrich Claus
Bildteil
Fabian Bechtle – The Maximum Force of the Future
Exkurs: Amerikanische Essays
John D’Agata – Was dort geschieht
Nikil Saval – Wall of Sound
Rivka Galchen – Fallbeispiele einer Medizinstudentin aus der psychiatrischen Notaufnahme in East Harlem, Winter 2002
Yara Flores – Spiritus Duplex
Joan Didion – Blaue Stunden
Wayne Koestenbaum – Heideggers Geliebte
David Shields – Mögliche Postkarten von Rachel aus Übersee
David Foster Wallace – Weg von dem Gefühl, von allem bereits ziemlich weit weg zu sein

Geschäftsführung: Mathias Zeiske
Redaktion: Jörn Dege, Kerstin Preiwuß und Mathias Zeiske

D 5€

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Mousse #31.

Posted in magazines on December 9th, 2011
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Mousse #31.

Starring by Antonio Scoccimarro
JONATHAS DE ANDRADE: The Advantage of Being Numb by Stuart Comer
CHANTAL AKERMAN: No Idolatry and Loosing Everything that Made You a Slave by Elisabeth Lebovici
AKRAM ZAATARI: The Political Is Personal by Alessandro Rabottini
TALKING ABOUT: To Show or Not To Show by Jens Hoffmann and Maria Lind
SADIE BENNING: Transitory States by Tina Kukielski
REPRINT: So Be It by Nicolás Guagnini
SEAN LANDERS: No Intention To Fail by Beatrix Ruf
TALKING ABOUT: Progress Is Everyone’s Business by Chelsea Haines
NICE TO MEET YOU – TRISHA BAGA: Hands-on by Esperanza Rosales
NICE TO MEET YOU – ERICK BELTRÁN: Some Fundamental Postulates by Max Andrews
NICE TO MEET YOU – EDUARDO BASUALDO: Logic of the Body by Cecilia Alemani
Agenda
Books by Stefano Cernuschi
TEN FUNDAMENTAL QUESTIONS OF CURATING: Chapter 7:What About Collecting? by Jens Hoffmann, Sofía Hernández, Chong Cuy, visuals by Mario Garcia Torres
NEW YORK – LUCY RAVEN: Anamorphic Materialism by Fionn Meade
LOS ANGELES – LIZ GLYNN: The Rise and Fall of Liz Glynn by Andrew Berardini
LONDON – IAN LAW: One Place After Another by Pavel Pys´
BERLIN – DANI GAL: History Channel by Ana Teixeira Pinto
PARIS – NEÏL BELOUFA: All Is Magic by Jarrett Gregory
Diary by Antonio Scoccimarro
LOST & FOUND: Scrutinize, Interrogate, Scrape. Gianikian and Ricci Lucchi Explore Without Surrendering to History by Andrea Lissoni
TALKING ABOUT: The Cinema as a Wayward Form… by Christopher Eamon
IAN WILSON: There was a discussion…by Hans Ulrich Obrist
WHAT’S ALTERNATIVE? ALTERNATIVE TO WHAT?: Anthony Huberman and Yasmil Raymond by Vincenzo de Bellis
HANK WILLIS THOMAS: I Am. Amen by Luigi Fassi
TALKING ABOUT: The Publishing & Exhibiting Questionnaire by Francesco Garutti and Francesco Valtolina
EDWARD KIENHOLZ: A marvellously vulgar artist! by Anja Nathan-Dorn

Editor In Chief: Edoardo Bonaspetti
Art Director: Francesco Valtolina

D: 8€

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Apartamento #8

Posted in interior, magazines, writing on December 7th, 2011
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Apartamento #8

Featuring: Marcelo Krasilcic, Nathalie Du Pasquier, Beda Achermann, Faye Toogood,Rafael de Cardenas, Brian Janusiak and Elizabeth Beer, Pilar Benitez Vibart, Cosimo Bizzarri Michael Stipe, David John, Victoria Camblin, Julie Cirelli, Thea Slotover, Ben Rivers,Patrick Parrish, Athena Currey, Alexander Heminway, Makoto Orui, Valentine Fillol-Cordier Plus: everyday life kids supplement with Olaf Breuning, Phillipe Parreno, Javier Mariscal and Mike Meiré

D € 12

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Bauhaus #2: Israel

Posted in magazines on December 6th, 2011
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Bauhaus #2: Israel

Issue 2 is all about Israel, reconstructing the migration and transformation of an idea, supported by fomer Bauhaus students who became the most important architects of the emerging state.

Tel Aviv is more closely associated with the Bauhaus name than any other city outside Germany. But this myth does not stand up to historical inspection. As Sharon Rotbard points out in this magazine, the modern architecture of the ‘White City’ has little to do with the Bauhaus. The myth of the ‘Bauhaus City’ would appear to owe more to the Israelis’ desire to see also, between everything else, the positive in Germany.
But why, then, a magazine on the Bauhaus and Israel? Freed from the myth, the Bauhaus in Israel may be revealed in an entirely new light. In the homes of German-speaking immigrants, or Jeckes, one can find, for example, material vestiges of migration that refer to European modernism and sometimes even to the Bauhaus itself. Admittedly, far more influence was exerted by the work of over two dozen erstwhile Bauhaus students in Palestine, then later in Israel, including photographers and filmmakers, sculptors and weavers, graphic designers and toy makers and, above all else, the renowned architects and town planners. Having migrated from the Bauhaus Dessau to Palestine or vice versa in the 1930s, they influenced the formation of the new State of Israel in the critical phases before and after its foundation in 1948. This embraced the reformation of the state’s leading art school, the Bezalel Academy in Jerusalem, by the Weimar Bauhaus student Mordecai Ardon to the master plan for the settlement of the entire state which came about under the direction of Arieh Sharon. But the Bauhaus students Shmuel Mestechkin, Arieh Sharon and Munio Weinraub made the most significant contribution with their work on the design of the kibbutzim from the 1930s to the 1970s. The main exhibition at the Bauhaus Dessau, the opening of which coincides with the publication of this magazine, is dedicated to these built utopian societies. In these fundamentally democratically organised socialist settlements, Jewish migrants from Central and Eastern Europe, together with the Bauhaus students, realised key ideas and ideals of European Modernism. Their common goal was the creation of the ‘Neue Menschen’ (the new people) and the functional organisation of their living environment. In the process, they adhered to a functional understanding of architecture which had, most notably, been informed by the second Bauhaus director Hannes Meyer. These visions were most clearly manifested in the kibbutzim – where they demonstrated their cogency as well as their weaknesses. The nationwide protests in the Israeli cities this past summer showed how topical Meyer’s motto “Volksbedarf statt Luxusbedarf” (the needs of the people instead of the need for luxury) still is, even if entirely different solutions are being sought today. However, the Jewish resettlement of Palestine in the spirit of modernism also raises questionable aspects: here, the projects of the avant-garde did not impinge on unclaimed dunes, but on the local Arab population. Solutions to the resulting tensions, which were evident at the time have yet to be found.

D 8€

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May #7

Posted in magazines, photography, writing on December 5th, 2011
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May #7

Olivier Zahm, “I think it’s time to break off…” / Hervé Legros, Preface (Documents sur l’art, no 2, 1993) / interview with Olivier Zahm / Stephan Geene, Wishing to be in Paris, led to be in Berlin or different ways to escape the nineties / Axel Huber, visual insert / Catherine Chevalier, interview with Roberto Ohrt / Maija Timonen, Looking the part – The Empty Plan by Anja Kirschner and David Panos / Clara Schulman, Gerard Byrne, “In San Francisco they say, “Flash on it”” / Karl Holmqvist, Ken Okiishi, (Goodbye to) Manhattan / François Aubard, Richard Prince, American Prayer / Rob MacKenzie, Emily Sundblad / Elisabeth Lebovici Henrik Olesen, La maculée conception Henrik Olesen, The Immaculate Conception Karl Holmqvist Rirkrit Tiravanija, The days of this society is numbered / Vincent Romagny, Koenraad Dedobbeleer, The duplication of Dedobbeleer / Scott Portnoy Christopher d’Archangelo, Contrary to Intuition, Let’s Begin with an Image / limited edition: UNITED BROTHERS (Ei Arakawa & Tomoo Arakawa).

Conceived as a collective space in which to develop thoughts and confront positions on artistic production, May magazine examines, quaterly, contemporary art practice and theory in direct engagement with the issues, contexts and strategies that construct these two fields. An approach that could be summed up as critique at work – or as critique actively performed in text and art forms alike.
Featuring essays, interviews, art works and reviews by artists, writers and diverse practitioners of the arts, the magazine also intends to address the economy of the production of knowledge – the starting point of this reflection being the space of indistinction between information and advertisment typical of our time. This implies a dialogue with forms of critique produced in other fields.

D € 12

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Agma Magazine # 5

Posted in Exhibitions, magazines, Motto Berlin store, writing on December 2nd, 2011
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Agma Magazine # 5

FEATURES
STUDIO Pino Pascali in his studio in Boccea, Rome, as never seen before
ARCHIVE Mark Rothko’s landmark exhibition at Whitechapel Art Gallery in 1961
COLLECTION Gian Ferrari Collection in Villa Necchi Campiglio
ADVERTISE Dwan Gallery at its best
DEPICTION Maurizio Cattelan’s pigeons seen through Maurizio Cattelan’s eyes

EXHIBITIONS
SOL LEWITT A Wall Drawing Retrospective, MASS MoCA, Massachussetts
DAMIÁN ORTEGA, Kurimanzutto Gallery, Mexico City
JEFF WALL The Crooked Path, The Centre for Fine Arts, Brussels
BILL BOLLINGER The Retrospective, ZKM, Karlsruhe
OLIVER LARIC Kopienkritik, Skulpturhalle Basel
IGNACIO URIARTE Works, Sala Rekalde, Bilbao
SYSTEMS, ACTIONS AND PROCESSES 1965–75, Fundación Proa, Buenos Aires
ROY LICHTENSTEIN Entablatures, Paula Cooper Gallery, New York

€ 15

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Nicht Jetzt! #3: Geschmack. Das Studentische Magazin Des Department Design Der HAW Hamburg

Posted in Fashion, graphic design, illustration, magazines on November 22nd, 2011
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Nicht Jetzt! Das Studentische Magazin Des Department Design Der HAW Hamburg

»Nicht Jetzt!« ist das studentische Magazin des Department Design der HAW Hamburg.
Nach den Ausgaben »Kinder« und »Geld« beschäftigt sich die dritte monothematische
Ausgabe mit dem Thema GESCHMACK.

Inhaltlich spannt sich der Bogen auf 176 Seiten von Geschmack als ästhetischem
Urteilsbegriff bei Kant über Verunstaltungsverbote in Bauordnungen bis hin zu Blümchen-
tapete – und von Trends im Design über Kleidung aus Barbiepuppen bis zum krankhaften
Verlust des Geschmackssinnes.

»Nicht Jetzt!« versteht sich als interdisziplinäres Projekt von Studierenden der Bereiche
Illustration, Fotografie und Grafikdesign und wurde betreut von Professor Stefan Stefanescu.
In der dritten Ausgabe sind, neben den Texten verschiedenster Autoren, Arbeiten von neun
Fotografen sowie zwölf Illustratoren veröffentlicht. Trotz aller Ernsthaftigkeit des Projekts
wird das Magazin von den Studenten als Raum für Spiel und Experiment verstanden – auch,
was Druck und Bindung des Heftes angeht. Die Kombination von Dünndruck-, offenem und
Hochglanzpapier, Irisdruck und offener Schweizer Broschur steht für diese Experimentier-
freudigkeit.

Redaktion & Gestaltung: Charlotte Bräuer, Lynn Dohrmann, Karina Donis, Franziska Ebert, Tillmann Engel, Marie Hochhaus, Louise Jessen, Cyrill Kuhlmann, Carsten Lerch, Benjamin Stracker

D 13€

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OE Magazine #2: Oh, What A Colourful World

Posted in Fashion, magazines on November 22nd, 2011
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OE Magazine #2: Oh, What A Colourful World

Œ is an independent fashion magazine from Berlin. Twice a year, it acts as a platform for the German, and particularly the Berlin fashion scene.

Œ largely refrains from ‘describing’ current trends and ideas in fashion, but instead concentrates on showing fashion by purely focusing on images. In every issue, 10 photo editorials reveal what keeps designers, photographers, stylists and hair & make-up artists moving these days.

When it comes to production Œ strives to maximise the potential of printed matter. Different paper qualities and special production features make Œ an item that people like to hold, keep and collect.

D 15€

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032c Magazine #22

Posted in Fashion, magazines, writing on November 21st, 2011
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032c Magazine #22

032c is a contemporary culture magazine that fiercely believes in the intelligence of its readers, and rises to the challenge of surprising them. Published twice a year, it is both timely and timeless—a celebration of and for the most cutting-edge in art, culture, and fashion.

Finding the new in the old and the old in the new, it is considered the “Berlin magazine that propagates an aesthetic of brutal elegance” by the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, or simply as the “revue ultra-pointue” by Vogue Paris.

D € 10

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Kilimanjaro # 13 . A love letter to Roni Horn

Posted in magazines on November 18th, 2011
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A love letter to Roni Horn, 13# kilimanjaro

Issue 13 of Kilimanjaro is an unofficial catalogue of sorts, whose theme is A Love Letter To Roni Horn; it is the first edition of the magazine which has been created with a single artist, and is a kind of visual & textual retrospective.
Using the traditional format of a magazine publication, comprised of interviews, essays and art criticism, we have curated an overview both of the DNA of Horn’s work, and – through the words of our selection of her friends, collaborators and admirers – of Roni Horn herself. The issue features: JUERGEN TELLER, ADRIAN SEARLE, JOHN WATERS.

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