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Visual Essay: ‘Your Receptivity Is Not Your Own’
by Marija Cetinic // Feb. 28, 2023
Your receptivity is not your own is a love letter to money. Dear money, you’re all I need, your latch is perfect, you make all needs impossible, your milk rots my teeth…[read on]
Deeply Personal and Always Political: Photography As Nan Goldin Sees It
by Annalisa Giacinti // Feb. 21, 2023
There is something very calming about Nan Goldin’s photographs, a sort of comfortable intimacy that’s easy to witness and stand in front of. The subjects photographed don’t…[read on]
‘The House of Inventions’: An Interview with Perla Montelongo
by An Paenhuysen // Feb. 14, 2023
Perla Montelongo, Berlin-based director of Node Centre for Curatorial Studies, started the ‘House of Inventions’ in 2019 on the outskirts of her hometown Ciudad Juárez in Mexico…[read on]
‘Bad Ideas’ and Good Art: On the Uncertainty of Value
by Dagmara Genda // Feb. 7, 2023
The Bad Ideas Collective (BIC) is less of a working collective than a collection of artists sharing their “bad ideas,” though one of its three founders, artist and Central Saint Martins…[read on]
Outer (Safe) Space: Ad Minoliti’s ‘GG’
by Matteo Calla // Feb. 3, 2023
In ‘GG,’ Ad Minoliti’s latest show at Peres Projects in Berlin, the white cube has been domesticated. Stepping into the gallery space on Karl-Marx-Allee…[read on]
Undoing Family in ‘Servus Papa, See You in Hell’
by Annalisa Giacinti // Jan. 31, 2023
“My childhood was a paradise until I fell in love” may seem an uncommon thing to say to most. Not so for Jeanne Tremsal, who grew up in a commune where exclusive love was forbidden…[read on]
Nurturing Unresolved Feelings: Intimacy in Dafna Maimon’s Practice
by William Kherbek // Jan. 13, 2023
Maimon’s approach to such unresolved feelings is courageous, often infused with humour and openness and an inclusive spirit that prioritises developing and exploring relationships…[read on]
Letter from the Editors: Family
by Alison Hugill, Dagmara Genda // Jan. 6, 2023
Kinship beyond bloodlines—or the recently popularized concept of “chosen family”—is, for many, a mode of survival that provides escape from the suffocations and all too often latent…[read on]