Tagbanger · 09/04/10

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UNTER DEM MOTTO 2010

Harsh · 08/29/10

Created by Telefantasy Studios

Jonathan · 08/13/10




Jonathan · 08/13/10

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Here’s my theory: like a post-dated check, it is going to look good in two years. Wait and see.

Mark · 08/04/10







Jonathan · 08/01/10

Sunrise Energy

Jonathan · 08/01/10

Sandy · 08/01/10

Jonathan · 07/29/10



Owen Luder’s Brutalist Trinity Square car park in Gateshead, made famous in the film Get Carter (1971) is undergoing demolition. Owen Hatherly offers his thoughts in The Guardian.

Mark · 07/28/10

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Raymond Scoot, book dealer, accused of stealing a Shakespeare first folio..

“After his arrest, neighbours painted a colourful picture of Raymond polishing his Ferrari
in his silk dressing gown before taking the bus into town to go shopping.”

Mark · 07/10/10

Interpol video Lights, Directed by Charlie White

Jonathan · 07/02/10

Robert Palmer, from the Clues LP, 1980

Mark · 05/12/10

Eva Weinmayr, Art in Ruins and Unknown Stranger, London 1994, an unpublished project for Frieze

Eva Weinmayr, Art in Ruins and Unknown Stranger, London 1994, an unpublished project for Frieze
Softcover, 16 pp., mimeograph/laser 1/1, 210 x 297 mm
Edition of 300
ISBN 978-0-9562605-2-9
Published by Occasional Papers and FormContent

This booklet is published as part of I Wonder What The Silence is About, a body of work, speculating on the (temporary?) disappearance of Art In Ruins. This English collaborative art practice was formed in 1984 and created a radical stance towards the art world, based on critical post-modern thinking. They have been for a short period omnipresent in the London/Berlin art scene before they fell silent in 2001. I contacted Art In Ruins and asked for permission to reprint one of their publications as part of my project. This they rejected but suggested to publish this interview instead, which was initially written for Frieze Magazine in 1994. It has not been printed until today.

—Eva Weinmayr

Distributed in North America by Textfield, Inc.

Textfield · 04/30/10

It’s going to be a hot, hot Winter in South Africa this June.

Parkside · 04/07/10

Dissecting Entryway

The Entryway is an online project created by two aspiring journalists — “maybe the whitest people we know” — who move into a crowded immigrant household in Los Angeles to learn Spanish, so that they can, eventually, better report on their city. It’s getting wonderfully fawning feedback so far, and hopes to raise $3,240 to keep going.

Kara Mears takes photos and Devin Browne writes and designs the entries, which are published sort of like a diary, with words and phrases alternating between large and small typeface. The first thing we learn about the young women, in their opening entry, is that they chose their family after an apparently grueling two years of searching because — unlike other houses in MacArthur Park, I guess — “This family cares about cleanliness. They cannot live with bedbugs.”

continue reading

Jonathan · 04/02/10

Needless to say, I’ve got my Spring wardrobe all sorted out.

Mark · 03/01/10
We Have Photoshop
Jonathan · 03/01/10

Sara De Bondt and Fraser Muggeridge, The Form of the Book Book

Sara De Bondt and Fraser Muggeridge, The Form of the Book Book
Softcover, 96 pp., offset 2/1, 140 x 230 mm
Edition of 1000
ISBN 978-0-9562605-1-2
Published by Occasional Papers

A collection of essays on book design by Catherine de Smet, James Goggin Jenni Eneqvist, Roland Früh, Corina Neuenschwander, Sarah Gottlieb, Richard Hollis, Chrissie Charlton, Armand Mevis.

Distributed in North America by Textfield, Inc.

Textfield · 02/18/10

via Union Football League / From a left wing.

Parkside · 02/13/10
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