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Heres a sneak peak at my Degree Show work ‘I Was Here’
‘eclectic’
University of Sunderland Fine Art Degree Show 2009
19th June – 27th June
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And so I return from an absent but busy Spring.
As well as getting ready for my Degree Show (i will be posting more on that shortly) I have become somewhat of an addict of magCulture, here is Jeremy Leslie’s latest post….
‘What Makes a Magazine?’
The subject has currency this week following the refusal by South Africa’s ABC (Audit Bureau of Circulation) to recognise MK Bruce/Lee as a magazine. MK Bruce/Lee is an extraordinary project, a customer magazine produced by South African company The President on behalf of the music TV station MK and sold through music chain Musica. Each issue consists of a bag of printed goodies: fold-out posters, booklets and cards. Every part is beautifully designed and executed, with different paper stocks and print effects. It couldn’t be further from the ‘standard’ magazine format. I’ve argued here before that magazines have to emphasise their printed nature, their ‘magaziney-ness’ to establish a foothold in the future, and here is a perfect case study. Yet, in the words of the ABC, ‘The board rejected your application for membership of the ABC on the basis that it was not considered to be a magazine’ (full story here).
Clearly, MK Bruce/Lee is far from being a ‘normal’ magazine. It will not sit neatly alongside all the regular titles on the shelves at your local store. It is not an A4 full-colour printed series of bound pages. It doesn’t look like what people expect a magazine to be – no logo at the top of the page, etc. But that doesn’t mean it isn’t a magazine.
So what is a magazine? I prefer a more open definition, best summed up by Fernando Gutiérrez in my book ‘Issues’, ‘The word magazine means storage space for dynamite. A magazine is full of surprises and it can explode at any minute’. The ‘surprise’ theme has figured here a few times recently as a defining trait of great magazines such as The New Yorker and The Face. But great though such titles are, they not only stick to a traditional physical format but cannot be described as typical. They are (or were in the case of The Face) exceptional for their refusal to be predictable. It is difficult to describe the New Yorker in a single sentence, it’s scope is so broad. Every issue contains surprises – as David Hepworth has said, ‘one of its chief delights is that it’s impossible to predict what’s going to be in it’. This was what made The Face great in its heyday too. It managed to combine the most unlikely parts. Political reportage sat next to fashion in a way that hadn’t been seen before. And yes, they got things wrong: the fashion shoot based on terrorist chic springs to mind. But it was only later, when The Face became scared of making such mistakes, that it began its slow decline toward closure.
With the majority of magazines being nervous of straying too far from their comfort zones – and I suspect many of their readers would support this conservatism, people desire familiarity – we need to celebrate those titles that are attempting to do something different. Whether mainstream or independent, consumer, B2B or customer, old or new, industry bodies like ABC should be supporting innovative publications. And if we’re supporting innovation in content and presentation, why not format too?
There are two important factors to consider in qualifying as a magazine. Firstly, a magazine is a vehicle for content. Text, pictures and design work together to present a mediated view on a subject/subjects. As established above, the whole point of the New Yorker is that you the reader are placing your trust in the editorial team to deliver material you perhaps didn’t expect would interest you. This mediation is an important difference from other content providers, particularly digital media where content is sourced by search or by random links. Nothing wrong with these processes, they’re just different (although they sometimes mimic the surprises found in the the best magazines).
Secondly, a magazine is part of a series, an ongoing project that gets published under a single banner. The period between issues might be weekly, monthly, quarterly, annual or irregular, but another issue is always on its way.
By these two criteria, ever-changing magazine projects like Visionaire, La Mas Bella and Statements are all magazines, as are those listed in Andrew’s recent piece.
And so, of course, is MK Bruce/Lee.
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3309/3594412889_0ce2522bb4.jpg
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I have started to continue my ‘You Are Here‘ project that I began in Berlin with a series of stret posters pointing out routes for the public to follow of a selected ‘alternative’ walk around the city. The project was also launched at WHATEVER Berlin print and street art gallery and studios.

This billboard is located in Washington, England, and is a new commission by Arts Centre Washington.
More info about the project in a future post perhaps.
My good friend and flat-mate has fairly recently invested in the same Nikon DSLR that ive been using for the past 4 or 5 years, the now rather dated D50 is still a great little camera, and can be picked up now at an even bigger bargain than ever before, and un-like myself he has actually gone out and done something I haven’t done for a long time – take pictures for the sake of taking pictures, capturing the beauty in everyday without being overwhelmed with more ‘meaningful’ agendas, something perhaps a degree in Fine Art does to you. . This summer he took his camera over to Budapest for a good test, and he has actually ended up with a great little series of images capturing the more or less hidden beauties of the city in his shots. A naturally narrative series of images – this is what you get when you follow your heart and eye with equal measure, not placing restrictions on what you shoot or present with the end result solely in mind….
Please check them out by following the image below to his flickr page. I need to start doing this again and soon. (ps. please ignore my flickr page at all costs as it really is dire)
CIRCA (myself and curating sidekick Adam Phillips) are very proud to present some great little film and video pieces from Mark Neville, Berit Hummel and Graham Dolphin in Sundelrand, UK over the next three weeks.
click image for more info…

image courtesy of the artist, Berit Hummel Untitled (white tiger)
scary huh….

OK – to be fair she wasn’t on her medication…. she normally looks like this…

pretty, cool, yes
=P
she also find this lil beauty….

“this artist is amazing. his name is peter callesen and this is his website:
http://www.petercallesen.com/ “
…. expecting to fly.
wingsuit base jumping from Ali on Vimeo.
The start of another year is here, hope everyone has a beautiful one.
and here’s some beautiful photos of a man, his bicycles, girlfriend and dog. Lovely Flickr photosets by Fast Boy


