Was einem Heimat War. Peter Granser. Bücher und Hefte.

Posted in history, photography on June 3rd, 2012

Was einem Heimat War. Peter Granser. Bücher und Hefte.

Peter Granser set off in search of traces of the town of Gruorn on the Swabian Alb, which was forcibly evacuated in 1939. He documents the eventful history of a landscape that was used for over 100 years as a training ground for the armed forces. In 2005, the terrain, still strongly contaminated with projectiles and unexploded ordnance, was declared a biosphere reserve.

Pages: 88
Size: 17 x 24 cm
Weight: 450 g
Binding: Hardcover
ISBN: 9783981453027

D 28€

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THE MAKING OF THE CHINESE NEW WORKING CLASS THIRTY YEARS OF MIGRATION Chinas neue Arbeiterklasse Dreißig Jahre Wanderarbeit. Ludlow 38. Spector Books.

Posted in photography, politics, writing on June 1st, 2012
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THE MAKING OF THE CHINESE NEW WORKING CLASS THIRTY YEARS OF MIGRATION Chinas neue Arbeiterklasse Dreißig Jahre Wanderarbeit. Ludlow 38. Spector Books.

Vor 30 Jahren wurde in China eine Reformpolitik eingeleitet, die sich der westlichen Globalisierung öffnete. Als Ergebnis entstand eine neue Arbeiterklasse: die Wanderarbeiter, die mittlerweile mehr als 200 Millionen zählt und den wirtschaftlichen Aufstieg Chinas im weltweiten Wettbewerb überhaupt erst ermöglichte.

D 14 €
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Inward World. Nadine Byrne. Moon Space Books.

Posted in Zines on June 1st, 2012
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INWARD WORLD. Nadine Byrne. Moon Space Books.

A book by Swedish artist Nadine Byrne.

To capture a world within – rendering it trough the multifaceted features of a stone, a painted torso, the pale green of newly bloomed leaves, sun-stained water. Transferring the colors to fabric and burning clay made to resemble objects of an eternal current.

D 13 €
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frieze d/e #5

Posted in magazines, writing on May 30th, 2012
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frieze d/e #5 – Sommer / Summer 2012

Frieze d/e is a fully bilingual German/English magazine with its own editorial team and independent content. d/e stands for ‘Deutsch’ and ‘English.’ With editing and production based in Berlin, the new magazine offers in-depth coverage of contemporary art and culture throughout Germany, Austria and Switzerland while closely following the international artist communities in this region.

Collaborators issue 5:
Jennifer Allen, Dominikus Müller, Jan Verwoert, Simon Rees, Barbara Preisig, Geeta Dayal, Kito Nedo, Carla Accardi, Metahaven, Andreas Schlaegel, Pablo Larios, Luca Cerizza, Michael Riedel, Raphael Gygax, Christy Lange

D 8.50€

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San Rocco 04/ abstract

Posted in writing on May 30th, 2012
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San Rocco 04/ abstract
FUCK CONCEPTS! CONTEXT!

Contemporary architecture is generally presented with the phrase “My concept is . . . ”, in which the blank is filled in by some sort of notion: “My concept is freedom”, “My concept is the iPad”, “My concept is the Big Bang”, “My concept is democracy”, “My concept is panda bears”, “My concept
is M&M’s”. This statement is then followed by a PowerPoint presentation that begins with M&M’s and ends with round, pink bungalows on paradisiacal Malaysian beaches. According to concepts, to design is to find what buildings are: an ontology for dummies that turns banality into spectacle. Thus, the library is the books, the stadium is the muscles, the promenade is the beach, the aquarium is the fish, the swimming pool is the water and grandmother’s garage is grandmother.
Concepts protect us from running the risk of engaging with form. Why should we bother with form when we have an idea? Why waste time seeking beauty when we can claim that we are solving problems? Why think when we can happily sit around a table and do some brainstorming? Why take the pains to learn something when we can shout “Eureka!” in your face?
Anyhow, it is possible to escape from this selbstverschuldete Minderheit. Complexity exists, in re, in context. Cities and territories are here, and it is possible to understand them!

D 15€
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cura. #11

Posted in magazines, writing on May 30th, 2012
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CURA. No.11
SPRING — SUMMER 2012

Portraits in the Exhibition Space
Arnold Bode and the Perfect Combination of History,
Environment and Contemporary
by lorenzo benedetti

SPACES – Study Cases
Chapt. 2 – Emily Pethick / THE SHOWROOM London
by vincent honoré

MAKING AN EXHIBITION
On the Work and Role Play of Graphic Designers
by adam carr

AROUND
Asier Mendizábal and the Enigma of Ideology
by josé luis corazón ardura

Only Politically-Oriented
Pop Art Painting?
by raimar stange

FOCUS
THE ENDLESS HOUSE
Mark Manders
by maria barnas

LAB
Written Associative Performances
a project by DINA DANISH
curated by post brothers

ANDROID®
Quadratisch. Praktisch. Gut.
by riccardo previdi

LAB
Jamie Shovlin: Artist’s Pages
text by martin holman

SPOTLIGHT
Fantasy or fear? In Conversation with Caroline Achaintre
by gavin wade

Possibilities and Fantasies of the
Forgotten and Fetish Object.
In Conversation with Anna Franceschini
by ilaria gianni

THE EXHIBITION ROOM
a project by
INVERNOMUTO

FASHION CURATING
In Conversation with VALERIE STEELE
by dobrila denegri

BOOKS
Avital Geva’s Conceptual
Experiment with Books and Space
by ory dessau

AGENDA
edited by sara feola

D 7€
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Fillip 16 & Olaf Nicolai @ Motto Berlin. 30.05.2012

Posted in Events, magazines, Motto Berlin event on May 25th, 2012

Fillip 16: Berlin Launch
May 30, 2012, from 7 pm

Fillip and Motto Berlin are pleased to present a special launch event for the sixteenth issue of Fillip magazine with contributing artist Olaf Nicolai, writer Patricia Reed, and Fillip Associate Editor Antonia Hirsch.

Colour is a major factor in a magazine’s “shelf appeal” and Fillip magazine, though a publication more aligned with academic journals, has more than a few times been advised to “go colour” in order to facilitate a larger sales volume. Olaf Nicolai’s project for our new issue, 2500 × Fillip 16, subverts this market pressure by causing the magazine to be printed in colour—yet this application of colour is undelineated and flows across the spectrum of the rainbow as well as across the page regardless of the printed content. The printing technique used to achieve this effect is called split fountain printing; with a history that stretches back to the inception of the art of printmaking, it gained renewed currency in the 1960s and ’70s as a method to introduce colour in printed material without having to go through the expensive four-plate colour process. With its evocative, quasi-psychedelic effect, the technique was particularly popular in a countercultural context.

Olaf Nicolai’s project for the Intangible Economies series extends the artist’s existing research interests, previously explored in such works as Warum frauen gerne stoffe kaufen, die sich gut anfuehlen (Why women like to buy fabric that feels good to the touch) (2011), and Considering a Multiplicity of Appearances in Light of a Particular Aspect of Relevance. Or: Can Art Be Concrete? (ongoing in varying formats since 2006). These works consider the role of colour as an agent to activate affect as a consumer incentive. Nicolai’s project for Fillip 16 also represents another instance of the artist’s ongoing infatuation with print media in general through which he consistently mobilizes production techniques in order to articulate conceptual concerns. The printing technique used in 2500 × Fillip 16 causes each single copy of Fillip magazine’s sixteenth issue to become a unique original as no printed copy is exactly like the other. Accordingly, the affective power of colour in relation to consumer behaviour is complicated by questions of value and circulation vis- à-vis the unique art object.

Copies of the new issue will be available at the launch, as will Olaf Nicolai’s new Irisdruck edition, Fillip Poster One and Two, produced in tandem with Fillip 16.

Participants

Olaf Nicolai is an artist who lives and works in Berlin. His work has been exhibited at documenta X, the Sydney Biennale, and the 51st Venice Biennale, as well as at the Moderna Museet, Stockholm; the Museum of Modern Art, New York; and the Kestnergesellschaft, Hanover, among others.

Antonia Hirsch is Associate Editor at Fillip.

http://fillip.ca/

Ritual Without Myth. Royal College of Art.

Posted in Exhibition catalogue on May 25th, 2012
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Ritual Without Myth. Royal College of Art.

Designed by Rustan Söderling and edited by Lily Hall and Laura Smith, the catalogue for Ritual without Myth features a series of short essays that contextualise the practice of the artists in the exhibition, and provide insight into their diverse approaches to ritual, as well as their embodiment and subversion of dominant myths.

Interspersed throughout the catalogue, a visual essay expands upon these written narratives through a series of images and quotations, including images from the Warburg Institute’s Photographic Collection, London, that reinforce and open out existing connections between the exhibited works.

The catalogue is accompanied by a full-colour insert with photographic documentation of the exhibition.

Printed by Art Quarters Press, the Ritual without Myth catalogue is printed on Cyclus Offset 100% recycled paper manufactured from 100% de-inked waste at Dalum mill.

Pages: 96
ISBN: 978-1-907342-31-8

D 9€

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Motto Charlottenborg official opening. 24.05.2012

Posted in Events, Motto Charlottenborg event on May 23rd, 2012

Motto Charlottenborg official opening, May 24th 2012

The official opening of Motto Charlottenborg bookshop acompanies the opening reception for Christina Mackie and Thomas Kilpper’s shows at Kunsthal Charlottenborg

Motto @ Charlottenborg
Nyhavn 2
1051 Copenhagen K
Denmark
charlottenborg@mottodistribution.com

http://www.kunsthalcharlottenborg.dk/

THIS IS NOT MY WIFE. Erik van der Weijde. Rollo Press / 4478 Zine.

Posted in photography on May 21st, 2012
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THIS IS NOT MY WIFE. Erik van der Weijde. Rollo Press / 4478 Zine.

First edition published by Rollo Press and 4478 Zine.

D 22 €
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