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Date: May 26, 2012


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.







Production-wise, 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.








Sources:
OE
Date: May 23, 2012


TIGER Magazine is a biannual publication that presents a creative contemporary culture from an honest and aesthetic perspective. It brings together icons from the world of art, fashion and design, so that it is a true reproduction of reality, with beauty as a theme throughout its pages.

New issue featuring: Albert Watson, Papo Waismann, Tung Walsh, Maison Martin Margiela, Limi Feu, Nasir Mazhar, AA Bronson and many more…












Sources:
TIGER
Date: May 23, 2012


BUTT is a quarterly magazine for gay men, founded in 2001 and edited by Gert Jonkers and Jop van Bennekom.
The magazine, originating in the Netherlands, features interviews, articles, and advertisements and illuminates upon trends and lifestyles within the male homosexual community.




BUTT 29 is a kind of gay guy’s A-to-Z of hot and fascinating homos, each revealed in stark black and white photography, then sandwiched in between eight penetrating interviews from our most nosey contributors. It’s also the first issue ever to be perfect bound with two distinct covers, both by longtime collaborator Wolfgang Tillmans and both featuring German super beauty Karl.

Among other faggotries, BUTT 29 tells you about the faggiest profession in the universe, one thirteen-and-a-half inch schlong (okay, nine-and-a-half inches when it’s soft), provides advice for beating your meat on a budget, and drops in on John Waters chatting with a man in drag! Our style-conscious readers will want to take a very close look at a series of Sex Looks featuring hot guy Christopher (everyone wants to get into his pants and you’ll see why).







Sources:
BUTT
( age +18 )

Date: May 22, 2012


Is this our ‘Brave New World’? Have we yet to enter into it? Or are we on the brink of discovering a world entirely separate from ours: alien, parallel, internal? Inspired by the eponymous dystopian novel written by Aldous Huxley in 1931, Nobrow 7 asks 15 internationally renowned cartoonists, each contributing 4 page visual narratives, and 30 star illustrators to interpret the theme ‘Brave New World’.






45 Creative visionaries take on the theme to produce cutting edge comics and illustration in this fantastic large format anthology that has taken the illustration and comcis world by storm. With contributions from a group of artists that reads like the guest-list of an illustration/comics super-festival: Joost Swarte (Is That All There Is?, Fantagraphics), Tom Gauld (Goliath, D&Q), Jillian Tamaki (Indoor Voice, Drawn & Quarterly), Luke Pearson (Hilda and the Midnight Giant, Nobrow), Anders Nilsen (Big Questions, D&Q), Joseph Lambert (Winner of Ignatz award categories for ‘Outstanding Anthology or Collection’ and ‘Outstanding Artist’ awards for I Will Bite You), Ethan Rilly, Eda Akaltun, Andrew Rae, Rob Bailey, Henry McCauseland, Domitille Collardey, Michael DeForge, and many, many more, Nobrow 7 will exceed your expectations beyond measure.










Sources:
NOBROW
Date: May 22, 2012


Car park is dealing with the visual arts - mainly photo essays - delving into fashion, fine art, and favorite things.Thought provoking, full of contrast and surprises and all presented in a rather raw but refreshing manner.





Featured in the current issue:
Liselotte Boegh, James Capper, Elena Damiani,Faouzi Fares, Ian Addison Hall, Arnauld Lajeunie, Rosie Roberts, Jan Håkon Robson, Stephanie Schneider, Constantine Tsapaliras, Wesley Willis (courtesy Rollo Press)










Sources:
car park



Date: May 22, 2012



Patterns of Creative Aggression is a magazine that presents the development of creative works and the people behind them. It is a response to what people do and how they do it. It aims to present a view of the individuals beyond the works they create. Despite the difficulties surrounding the nature of exposing what is not necessarily intended to be seen, by focusing on individual's stories we can perhaps gain a clearer context to the many situations and influences that lie inherent in the development of such varied creative works.







In this issue, Kirsten Law speaks with Jason Crombie, editor of Wooooo magazine, about his interview style and publishing projects; Tim Hillier presents two projects undertaken by brothers Andy and Mavie Murphy; British artist Graham Hudson explains the construction process behind his sculptures; Paris/New York-based photographer Justin Guilbert shares his experiences on undertaking a project in Japan; Melbourne-based artists Jen Berean and Pat Foster discuss their work with Kain Picken and Fiona Lau, the collaborative duo behind ffiXXed; and New York-based photographer Moises Saman talks about being on assignment in Haiti, Iraq, Afghanistan and El Salvador.












Sources:
PCA
Date: May 21, 2012


Tough Crowd is an occasional publication which provides a platform for creative talents in East London and beyond. Tough Crowd issue two features interviews with Untold, Jessica Penfold, Ebe Oke, Fuck Buttons, Owen Hatherley and Laura Oldfield Ford, as well as exclusive fashion and photography commissions.











Sources:
Tough Crowd
Date: May 19, 2012


A brand new independent surfing magazine published out of Melbourne, Paper Sea Quarterly in their own words "started as a simple recognition of the need for change."
"Intelligent, creative men and women with an appreciation for hand-crafted quality will find honest stories and critical pictures on surf, travel and art from likeminded contributors the world over."
















Sources:
PSQ
Date: May 17, 2012


June 2012 issue, featuring a cover story of legendary skate graphic artist Don Pendleton (with a special print offer through Juxtapoz.com in the coming days). June 2012 features former Pee-Wee's Playhouse art director Wayne White, Brooklyn's Kevin Cyr, Boston's Raul Gonzalez, Fort Thunder founder Brian Chippendale, Stockholm's spaced out Killian Eng, and the Bonnie and Clyde of graffiti, Utah and Ether.














Sources:
Juxtapoz
Date: May 17, 2012


Sova Magazine is an independent, 250 copies limited and completely self-published art magazine, with the aim of featuring unknown & new coming photographers, writers, illustrators & other creatives with a printed platform for publishing their work.

Sova N°3 “Golden” includes works from:
Dusdin Condren, Julea Dichte, Monika G. Dorniak, Teye Gerbracht, Eva Maria Großmann, Petra Herbert, Theda Hustede, Sina Kauri, Iska Kaek, Subesh Kc, Erica Lindberg, Victor Morales, Shradha Mukhiya, Martin Petersen, Mr. Phomer, Jovana Reisinger, Alicia Rost, Marija Šaboršinaitė, Cora Schubert, Katarina Šoškić, Susanna Spångberg, Sarah Stone, Johan Strindberg, Jenny Ukneecorn, Jana Voigt, Jenny Wildfang & Ben Wittner.




64 pages in A5. comes with postcard, poster, stickers & gold










Sources:
SOVA


Date: May 16, 2012


Poster tribune is a bi-anual newspaper devoted to posters. It contains 12 pages of illustrated articles and 3 posters (65 cm x 96 cm).

MUSIQUE – IMAGE
The love story between music and graphic design changes tack in 1939, when Alex Steinweiss, artistic director at Colombia Records, decides to replace the vinyl records’ brown paper envelopes with illustrated covers. By evoking the music through an image, this idea is a real marketing tool and will make record sales take off. Even today, despite the technological advances, vinyl continues to be produced, to a lesser extent, and has become a cult item which crosses the generations. Concert promotion through posters then undergoes the same process.




If music reflects the various facets of the era in which it falls, the graphic design which accompanies it further anchors it in that time. It accompanies cultural, social and political revolutions and remains a powerful tool to document the ages. From the most alternative to mainstream productions, including classical, all music genres are represented by a different style; be it the naive and unrefined graphic design produced in the urgency of the punk movement or, conversely, the strict and standardised Swiss style of classical music concert posters.

Rhythm, colours, abstraction, transmission of multiple perceptions; apprehension of the music and image cohabiting, intermixing and finally merging.

Contributors : Bettina Richter, Jean Charles Giroud, Noémi Savary, Ramaya Tegegne, Emmanuel Rey










Sources:
POSTER
Date: May 16, 2012


Cine Qua Non is an arts magazine of the University of Lisbon Centre for English Studies (ULICES) built up by movements in written form that freely crisscross reflections, reviews or essays; movements that relate music to visual arts, dance to theatre, cinema to literature.





"I found that lack of expressiveness on the surface very liberating, and this allowed me to make pictures that wouldn’t probably be possible for me to make when painted, even though they are painterly in some way. It is really important that they are photographs. The brain instantly connects to them on a realistic level, trying to connect them to reality and removes this sense that each mark has been made by the artist’s hand."

Wolfgang Tillmans CQN#5














Sources:
CINE QUA NON
Date: May 15, 2012



Passion is a Paris-based fanzine, created for all works longing in cupboards, hard drives and brain tubes. Passion publishes the unpublished: censored or forgotten projects, parallel or experimental works, all from famous artists and upcoming young wolves. It´s edited by Foucauld Duchange, Gildas Durel and Grégoire Dyer with graphic design by Caroline Aufort and Antonin David.







Passion #2 comes with features of Arnaud Lajeunie, Aurélien Bacquet, Dylan Calves, Caroline Fayette, Yan Céh, Clothilde Fédou, Jetenculetherese.net & Le Grand Foutoir, Lvdovico Magno, Mike Piscitelli, François Guyomard & Quentin Williaume and Anne-Line Desrousseaux & Julie Slowey.






Sources:
Passion
Date: May 15, 2012


Sexual Graphics
Beating a path through the sexual-design minefield


Sex sells – be it newspapers and magazines, movies and stage productions, novels and memoirs, art or even music. At the same time, it can be a turn-off for viewers with a conservative outlook on the matter. So when it comes to sex in design, the pros and cons of using it have to be carefully weighed.





And then an even more difficult question has to be posed: is sex being used simply to grab the viewer's attention or does it have an integral part to play in the design concept? Does it enhance the message being conveyed or detract from it?

Featuring:

Autumn Whitehurst | David Alexander Slaager | Denzil & Siddhi | Erik Foss | Jamie McCartney | John Ryan Solis | Jorge Champrrp | Malika Favre | Michael Viviani | Mike Jeter | Who Killed Mickey

Open publication - Free publishing - More graphics









Sources:
IdN
Date: May 09, 2012


A zine that supports young photographers.











Sources:
aTree zine
Date: May 09, 2012


WAD is a quarterly magazine about fashions and urban cultures established in 1999.















Sources:
WAD
Date: May 09, 2012


Das neue KRAUT Magazin zum Thema State of the Art Photography. In dieser Ausgabe: Bildinterviews mit Fotografen der Ausstellung, Tipps und Tricks fürs Studium, Interviews mit Galerist Max Mayer und Sammlerin Julia Stoschek, und vieles mehr.






Sources:
KRAUT



Date: May 09, 2012


FROM is a magazine about youth and culture. About, for and from youth.
 Born and based in Copenhagen, raised by Scandinavian beliefs, interested in the whole world.

They seek to chronicle the cornerstones of youth. The good and the bad, the hip and the 'unpretty', the deep and the superficial. They will plot views on childhood and contemporary life in pictures and in words; both documented and aesthetisized. FROM is for all who find the thoughts and fashions of young people interesting - find that this is where it all begins.

The printed magazine is biannual, syncing up with CPH Fashion Week in February and August.







Sources:
FROM
Date: May 09, 2012


Sebastian magazine is a London based bold, new bi-annual style, culture and lifestyle publication that treads its own editorial path with wit, consideration and a focus on the personal. Evolving the notion of what constitutes a standard print publication, each issue will be named after a different man and given a different identity.





The debut issue features a cover shot by renowned photographer Asger Carlson, interviews with art gallery owner Maureen Paley and artisan purist Geoffrey B Small. Experimental, artisan baker Lily Vanilli is featured in conversation with caterer Margot Henderson and activist designers Casely-Hayford rally for a cultural revolution plus main fashion shoots shot by Bloomers/Schumm & Audrey Corregan.











Sources:
SEBASTIAN

Date: May 09, 2012


WRAP is a large format (over A3) illustration magazine with a unique concept - once read, it can easily be taken apart and reused as wrapping paper. Handy! It has 10 sheets of exclusively designed wrapping paper with coordinating notecards to the prints featured in the issue.

The great continent of North America is the theme for this edition. Featuring superb prints by illustrators from Toronto to Texas and NYC to LA, as well as artists from other countries. There's more articles than ever, so you get even more for your buck.






Features include an interview with Grace Bonney, founder of Design*Sponge blog; an article on the revival of letterpress printing; and a look at the portfolio of New York photographer Simon Biswas.





WRAP is published in the UK and printed on FSC certified paper using vegetable-based inks. There are no staples or stitches, so each sheet can easily be taken out and reused as wrapping paper. Every copy is hand-numbered. Limited edition of 3,000 copies







Sources:
Wrap
Date: May 08, 2012


Put A Egg On It #5 is a lush, green medley of cooking tips, local products and essays by Dana Cooper, Elizabeth Bethea, Svetlana Kitto and Elise Moody. The issue features an adorable array of photos and illustrations of moms cooking by our favorite contributors and some new friends. The Issue also presents a selection of Sarah Keough's collections portraits and Bek Anderson's photographs of Sameer ud Dowla Khan's splendid supper in Providence, Rhode Island. Chef Judy Rodgers from Zuni Café tells a story and the recipe theme is Pantry! Yes, you can throw something together, and yes, it will be delicious!










Sources:
Put A Egg On It
It's Nice That
Date: May 08, 2012


The Chefs and Cooks issue, the third installment of Lucky Peach, attempts to answer a few pressing questions: What does it mean to be a cook in today's age of celebrity chefdom? Where is cooking headed? How did the molten chocolate cake make its way from Michel Bras's restaurant in Laguiole, France to the Wal-Mart freezer case? What happens, exactly, when bartenders spank mint? The answers arrive from all over the place Mario Batali recalls the early days of Food Network; Meredith Erickson spends an afternoon with Fergus Henderson; Naomi Duguid visits street vendors in Chiang Mai. We talk to cooks from Fort Bragg to Paris to the South Pole. There are recipes for barbecue-chicken pizza and pasta primavera, and Christina Tosi's upside-down pineapple cake, just in time for Mother's Day.

Lucky Peach is a quarterly journal of food and writing, published by McSweeney’s. It is a creation of David Chang, chef/owner of Momofuku, writer Peter Meehan, and Zero Point Zero Production.







Sources:
mcsweeneys
Date: May 07, 2012


Photo © Maria Zaprani



COLLARBONES is a new digital magazine about photographic treasures and the stories behind them.
It is about that good or bad moments that changed your life, the wasted feelings that never took you back, the snapshot with your friends you put up on your fridge door, the private moment you never talked about, it is about the intimate moments, kiss, catatonic harpsicord, soul, ass. it is about the solitude of the abandonment, the desperate lit of cigarettes, it is about the disappearance into volcanoes and monsters, it is about yelling of happiness, waving, carrying flowers, it is about dreams, adorations, illuminations, it is about industries, trees, blind capitals and spectral nations, it is about a fucking holy laughter, highs, bodies, it is about eternity, the fourth dimension, supernatural. it is about the skinny legions, shock, mercy.



The subject for the issue #1 is about the intimate moments. Solitary figures lying, fighting, standing, staring, internal space, objects for forgiveness, escape, bodies, bullshit, treasures, mental, sexless, soul. It is about the silence of intimacy. Nostalgic moments of contemplation, undress and personal gratification. Share the photo you keep in your blog, wallet, hidden into a box under your contemporary iron framed bed.


You can submit up to six photographs (JPEG, ~1000px width, high.res). Including text is possible and it could be anything, from one word to a whole story, however your feelings are. If your text is not in english, it would be nice to send an english version too. Please, include your full name and a website or portfolio if so.

collarbonesmag@gmail.com




Publishers
Suntherain
suntherain@gmail.com

Type,size
digital (pdf)
18x22,5cm - 100 pages

Editor
Xesfigi Maria
mariaxesf@gmail.com




Date: May 06, 2012


RIOT OF PERFUME is a limited-edition biannual arts and culture magazine that features contemporary fashion, criticism, art, music, creative writing, and photography. The title is taken from the poem Matinée d’ivresse by the French symbolist poet Arthur Rimbaud. RIOT OF PERFUME is produced independently of trends, themes, and overly commercial concerns, and is based out of Chinatown in New York City.














Sources:
Riot of perfume
Magazine shots
Date: May 06, 2012



Created for people of the world who love fashion, music, art, & make believe. Lula is gentle, whimsical and ethereal in tone, mixing high fashion to fall in love with and interviews that feel like late night chats with people you wish you knew.














Sources:
lula




Date: May 06, 2012


I Love Fake is a biannual magazine, ‘celebrating the spirit of youth.’
The magazine contains work of young and upcoming photographers, artists and fashion designers.


Take a look at the previous issues here






Sources:
i love fake
Date: May 06, 2012



Elephant #10 explores how visual artists are using new strategies and approaches in making art. Drawing is being transformed from ‘a means to an end’ to ‘an end in itself,’ as artists shift lines away from their sketchbooks and move them onto an epic scale. The notion of the heroic painter mutates into that of the dauntless draftsman (not exclusively male). Meanwhile, Stan Douglas revisits key turns in the history of photography, questioning the notion a ‘good’ photograph and what it should do. Sculptor Ximena Garrido-Lecca returns to her native Latin America, exploring the politics of advertising and contemporary culture and they mix with traditional beliefs. We visit San Francisco to uncover how the city’s atmosphere creates a unique, spontaneous art scene. Chip Lord remembers the birth of conceptual art on the West Coast, Barry McGee applies nostalgia to graffiti and Mark Pauline (Survival Research Laboratory) fights the fire fighters. Mike Davis moves from paintings to tattoos and back to paintings, while Todd Hido roams through suburban streets at night. We also feature exclusive new work (and a soulful interview) by Richard Misrach. In London, Designers Graphic Though Facility talk about the language of art catalogues. Finally, if you thought you were going to get something straight-forward out of Lawrence Weiner then think again: in a highly entertaining interview the seminal artist puts everything we take for granted about art into question.














Sources:
ELEPHANT
Date: May 06, 2012


Dansk Magazine is celebrating ten years of fashion, art and culture. For this momentous event the Danish magazine is releasing their S/S 2012 issue with two covers featuring hometown models Freja Beha Erichsen and Juliane Grüner. The two female models are styled by fashion editor Anders Solvsten Thomsen for photographers Christian Brylle and Aitken Jolly. Danish artist Cathrine Raben Davidsen altered the cover images to give them that artsy feel.















Sources:
DANSK
Date: May 06, 2012


Fotografie von Roger Ballen, Rhona Bitner, Miriam Schwedt, Ivars Gravlejs, Sarah Small und Luca Desienna, Illustration von Ken Garduno, ein Grafik-Design Portfolio von Chris Bell, Besprechungen von Zines und Bücher, … Und wieder mit Aufklappseiten!












Sources:
dienacht
Date: May 03, 2012


"New York Fucking City" is a heady mix of perspectives on a heady city. Featuring words and pictures by or about Krys Fox, Scooter LaForge, Leonard Fink, Norman Brannon, Peter Duce, Greg Thorpe, and Konstantinos Tsolakis.















Sources:
Pink Mince
Date: May 03, 2012


Cover featuring Ethan James (photographed by Shannon Sinclair)

“Navigate” reads the cover of this issue of BITE Magazine, which refers to the process of accurately ascertaining one’s position and planning and following a route. This notion of movement is particularly exciting to us, as this issue explores how we move to the unknown in geographic, temporal and psychological terms. The issue’s central feature - London Calling - features interviews with Christopher O’Brien and Nicomede Talavera. Both young and British menswear designers that highlight the vibrancy and excitement gripping the capital and menswear generally.





Featuring photography by Antonio Andrade, Michael Elmquist, Elodie Daguin, India Hobson, Kristiina Wilson, Shannon Sinclair, Andrew Makadski, Dan Murphy, Tatiana Leshkina, Laura Marie Cieplick, Michal Pedelka, Hayley Louise Brown, Tanya Kechickian, Nicolas Waickman and Jens Schmid & Lydia Gorges. Further interviews with artists Robert Knoke, Letha Wilson, Daniel Baird and Ben Alper.

A special thanks to both Matthias Heiderich and Mitya Ganopolsky for providing their artwork throughout the issue.










Sources:
BITE
Date: May 02, 2012


New Issue of The White Review contains interviews with Juergen Teller who also contributes two photo series, Ahdaf Soueif and Brian Dillon. Fiction by Jesse Ball and Deborah Levy. Poetry by Michael Horovitz. Artwork by Nick van Woert, Gabriele Beveridge and Landon Metz. There’s also some visual writing in there not dissimilar to Jonathan Safran Foer’s Tree of Codes, involving prose by Vladimir Nabokov.














Sources:
The White Review
Date: May 02, 2012


Is East London Dead?
Inside, photographer Jamie Hawkesworth documents over 20 emerging talents from the worlds of music, fashion, art, photography and literature, while we talk to artists, writers and venue owners from Tim Noble and Sue Webster to The Foundry's Tracey Moberly and Savage Messiah's Laura Oldfield Ford for their insights into how the area has evolved, and the challenges it faces.

On the cover is artist Theo-Mass Lexileictous, one of the ten eccentric creative characters from 'London', a shoot by legendary Swiss art photographer Walter Pfeiffer with styling by Dazed senior fashion editor Robbie Spencer. The rest of the issue's fashion heads further afield, as Chikashi Suzuki and Karen Langley shoot Tokyo's young creatives, and Jim Goldberg and Katie Shillingford take a trip around the beautiful and damned district of Pigalle, Paris.







Sources:
Dazed Digital
Date: May 02, 2012


Highlights include…
Damien Hirst on the making of the skull
James Hall, Rachel Flynn and Helen Little on Picasso
Ali Smith on Yayoi Kusama
Hans Ulrich Obrist on Alighiero Boetti
Gavin Delahunty on Charline von Heyl
Patrick Keiller on John Latham
Michael Raedecker on Christopher Williams’s enigmatic camera lens
Katharine Stout on contemporary drawings at Tate Britain
Artist’s project by Simon Fujiwara
Jean-François Chevrier on artistic hallucination
Edward Platt on the mysterious life of Gerald Hamilton in the Tate Archive

'"Death has not required us to keep a day free.” Damien Hirst quotes Samuel Beckett, p29

“The Spanish artist’s future biographer, collector and amanuensis, Roland Penrose, claimed that when Picasso first left his home country in 1900, his ultimate destination was going to be London rather than Paris, because of his anglophile father’s love of the Pre-Raphaelites and Edward Burne-Jones – as well as his obsession with the swashbuckling adventuress Lady Hester Stanhope.” James Hall on Picasso, p33

“This unlikely magician-figure arriving in the late 1950s from a defeated Japan, carrying “60 silk kimonos and some 2,000 of my drawings and paintings,” with as much illegal money and she could hide stuffed into the linings of her clothes.” Ali Smith on Yayoi Kusama, p56

“Boetti told me he was bored by the art world.” Hans Ulrich Obrist, p87







Sources:
TATE ETC
Date: May 02, 2012


The Flux issue includes: Devendra Banhart, Ana Kras, Hanna Liden, Trent Harris, Oh Land, A.F. Vandevorst, Stephane Sednaoui, Alexander Scheer













Sources:
S magazine
Date: May 02, 2012


Just when you thought it was safe to go back to the newsstand: LWLies 41 invites you on a lung-busting, stomach-curdling journey through the sweat-soaked, grime-encrusted world of grindhouse cinema.

To celebrate the release of both Welsh writer-director Gareth Evans’ martial arts/action romp The Raid and horror auteur Ti West’s spectral chiller The Innkeepers, our Midnight Movies Double Bill issue is a full-blown exploitation extravaganza that’s dripping in dingy local videostore aesthetics and splashed throughout with an acidic fluro pantone.

Underneath the epic wrap around double cover by top illustrator Joe Wilson we’ve split the mag dead centre, doing away with the entire Back Section and Incoming chapters to make room for an in-depth exploration of the distinct themes and topics inspired by each cover film.







Sources:
LWLies
Date: April 28, 2012


The rural as a strict counterpart to the urban appears to be a condition of the past. At least, this is what Kees Christiaanse posits in an interview with us entitled "The New Rural: Global Agriculture, Desakotas, and Freak Farms". He points out that, today, non-urban spaces interact so frequently and intensely with urbanity that you can no longer describe something as strictly rural. Therefore, we can no longer separate the city from the countryside as these are not polarized entities and each other's enemies, but rather the result of each other. Evidently, to be an urbanist today means that one must also be a regionalist as Edward W. Soja puts it in his contribution "Remembrances of an Older Urbanism".
















Sources:
MONU
Date: April 27, 2012


The seventh issue of No Thoughts is dedicated to the art of the portrait in photography. An amazing ensemble of photographers has been rallied to showcase stunning and unique work for this issue. Taken as a whole, their contributions form a beautiful and cohesive series that sets a daring standard for contemporary portrait photography.





Some highlights of this issue include Dan Zev's Occupy Wall Street portraits (including the cover); Mike Schrieber's portraits of Jim Jones and Common; Brad Elterman's work of Joan Jett and Michael Jackson; Jimmy Fontaine's photo of Sonic Youth and Pavement; Samantha Casolari's work of Michael Pitt and Blondie; Michael Barolet's Ed Templeton large format print; Jim Herrington's portrait of Justin Townes Earleand; as well as work by Ray Potes, Megan McIsaac, Michael J DeMeo, Evan Tetreault, Jesse Untracht-Oakner, Alyssa Noches, April Lea-Hutchinson, Maurizio Di Iorio, and many other up and comers on the international photography scene.

Featuring work by:
Alyssa Noches, Amber Chavez, April Lea Hutchinson, Ariane Geffard, Brad Elterman, Dan Zev, Edgar Berg, Evan Tetreault, Jesse Untracht Oakner, Jim Herrington, Jimmy Fontaine, Johan Kleinjan, Joseph Zentil, Martina Simkovicova, Maurizio Di Iorio, Megan McIsaac, Michael Barolet, Michael J DeMeo, Mike Schreiber, Olivia Locher, Peter Puklus, Ray Potes, Rhiannon Adam, Samantha Casolari, Theo Gosselin and Xiang Ting Huang.









Sources:
No thoughts

Date: April 27, 2012


Natural, excessive, demure, unabashed, unveiled, exhibited, chaste, obscene, delicate, irreverent, idealized, exploited. Bodies immortalized in their whole or just in their sexual aspect; in their being ordinary or symbolically transfigured and able to express new, unexpected meanings. Disturber Magazine's first issue is devoted to the body and its representations.





Contributing artists include:
Contributing artists include: Sasha Kurmaz, David Richardson, Guillaume Maraud, Chelsee Ivan, Dana Lauren Goldstein, Michael J DeMeo, Sinapsi, Santa Katkute, Ada Hamza, Dimitri Karakostas, Joe Skilton, Francesco Nazardo, Anya Schiller, Synchrodogs, Jeff Luker, Ren Hang, Alex Alekseenko, Ilya Smirnov, Olya Ivanova, Ulrike Biets, Todd Fisher, Kristie Muller, Martina Giammaria, April-lea Hutchinson, Maurizio Di Iorio, Eylul Aslan, Alex Wein.









Sources:
Disturber
Date: April 25, 2012


András Bányai: Space

Attention! This is not a drill! Please be advised that the following pages you are about to read may give you the impression that you actually have no idea what space is and never have. Later on, this may turn out to be true. It should also be noted that exploration of the subject requires controlled conditions and safety measures even when conducted by professionals. Contemplations about the definitions of space are highly dangerous procedures and should not be attempted at home. All liability for collateral damage from any cognitive activities undertaken by laymen as a result of the ideas contained herein is hereby excluded. Thank you for your understanding.

Published in 2012
16.5 x 23.6 cm
76 pages
Softcover
Color Offset
Edition of 1000

Contributors:
András Bányai, Liza Béar, Mircea Cernov, Petra Csizek
Jonas Delaborde, Misha Hollenbach, Cathérine Hug, Ari Marcopoulos
Stefan Marx, Gáspár Riskó, Benjamin Sommerhalder, Adrienne Sós
Peter Sutherland, Ed Templeton, Dominika Trapp













Sources:
Zug Magazine
Date: April 22, 2012


We tasted honey made by London's bees. Five illustrators drew the best advice they'd ever had. We told stories about animals that were sad, happy and complicated. People shared their favourite ugly possessions. We made a three-course meal with Guinness.

Interviews: Jeffrey Lewis, Laura Veirs, Ewen Bremner, Ally Capellino, Carol Morley.

Words: Frances Ambler, Liz Ann Bennett, Theo Brainin, Johanna Derry, Rosanna Durham, Jessica Garner, Lisa Jarmin, Ellie Phillips, Helen True, Jason Ward, Elly Watson.

Illustrations: Sarah Abbott, Ben Javens, Laura Callaghan, Sarah Julia Clark, Grace Coombes, Rosie Gainsborough, Anna Emilia Laitinen, Mary Kate McDevitt, Laurie Rollitt, Joe Waldron, Anke Weckmann.

Pictures: Pip Atra, Steven Beckly, Clare Byrne, Fiona Essex, Eric Guillemain, Joachim Johnson, Marco Leao, Agnes Lloyd-Platt, Desiree McClellan, Kevin Morosky, Mark Peckmezian, Egor Rogalev, Dara Scully, Ross Trevail, Tetsushi Tsuruki.














Sources:
Oh Comely
Date: April 22, 2012


The Weekender ist ein bildstarkes Independent-Magazin zum Thema Wohnen – doch auch um Reise, Natur und Freizeit im Allgemeinen geht es.

Wir zeigen inspirierende Wohnorte – von der Wohnung über das Hausboot bis hin zum Schloss.
Ungestylt und ohne Posing. Und wir interessieren uns für die Bewohner, die wir in verschiedenen
Textformen vorstellen.














Sources:
The Weekender
Date: April 22, 2012


Interview Katie Stelmanis by Keenan
Interview FloZif by Sadie Lune
Interview Yuki Keiser by Ena S. / Goodyn Green
Turnes Off - A Compendium Of Tactics
Mad Libs by Cindy Wonderful
Photography - Eva Weiss
Integrated Polyamory by Kathryn Fischer












Sources:
Bend Over

Photo Credits: Motto Berlin
Date: April 17, 2012




Bad Day Issue 13 featuring Charlotte Gainsbourg, Patrik Ervell, Jim Drain, Laurel Nakadate, Hugh Scott Douglas, Azari & III, Calla Haynes and more is now available for pre-order here









Sources:
Bad Day
Date: April 17, 2012

The Éditions Frédéric Pierre & Camille Françoise / Éditions FP&CF are an associativ and independent publishing house based in Paris, France.

They publish the participative fanzine TELL MUM EVERYTHING IS OK and some zines and art books.

The Editions FP&CF is also a collective identity composed by Claire Schvartz, Maxime Milanesi and all the people who help and participate to the creation of their editorial productions.

Photographers that have participated to this fifth issue















Sources:
Editions FP&CF
Date: April 16, 2012


Some photographs are more important than others. Preserved memories of people you love and friends you have lost, places that shaped your understanding of the world and events that had a significant impact on your life. romka magazine is devoted to these photographs. It is about this one print that you keep in your wallet, on the desk at work or on your fridge door.




Pictures of great sentimental value that gain their quality through the personal experiences they are connected to and not through form or content. It is not about your best or most distinguished pictures, but about your personal favorites. Since all this has nothing to do with an artistic or commerical career as a photographer, everyone is invited to take part in the project.




In this issue of romka magazine, 69 professionals and amateurs from 33 countries share their photographic treasures and tell the stories behind them. For the first time, there are two special features as well: an illustrated short story by American author Paul Kwiatkowski and a collection of found photographs by London-based artist Steven Chandler.









Sources:
Romka
Date: April 16, 2012


Featuring very little in the way of actual text, Love Want is basically wall-to-wall fashion shoots of the variety that that look like they're shot with available light on disposable 35mm point-and-shoots in the middle of the Californian desert with really, really good looking topless models eating hotdogs and wearing tye-dye pants.













Sources:
Love Want
Date: April 13, 2012


Vienna publication INDIE Magazine has a rather strange yet interesting cover for the Spring issue with Irina Lazareanu wearing a veil and some white leather S&M gear.

She appears to be smoking through her veil with a puzzled expression on her face.













Sources:
INDIE
Date: April 11, 2012


Sang Bleu established itself as an amazing magazine following and depicting the place of the body in the contemporary cultures, creating an impressive set of references on tatoo and corporal expression of the self through underground, subversive and/or alternative practices.





Sang Bleu was initiated in 2004 in London as an attempt to create a publication proposing a contemporary and experimental vision of modern culture and style. Rejecting the usual categorizations and segmentations, Sang Bleu's statement is to use Art, Fashion, Sociology, Literature, but also more unexpectedly Tattooing, Body Modification, Fetish and other subcultures to create a carefully composed image of modern urban societies and individuals. Whatever their background is, Sang Bleu will reach those with a poetic mind and a sensitivity for beauty and take them to countries they never knew about.










Sources:
Sang Bleu
Date: April 09, 2012



Encens articulates some convincing, fruitful points of view at the point at which creation reaches its most unique level. Atypical, its format and design wavers between magazine and object.
Reinventing its fundamental principles for each issue [ its focus, monographs, and features ], Encens offers the best to those who, in fashion as well as in art, unlock exacting worlds.





Moving back and forth between the present and the past, Encens creates maps of the hallmarks that captivate our times, all the while taking a second look at aesthetics of the past that still have clout. It stands for an independent and long-term approach.














Sources:
Encens
 
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