Aperture 241 Winter 2020
£19.95
19 Available
ISBN
MAPERTU241
Aperture 241 Winter 2020 is available to buy in increments of 1
This winter, in the wake of a pandemic, global protest movements, and a dramatic presidential election in the United States, Aperture releases “Utopia,” an issue that shows that other ways of living are possible—when the collective will exists.
In “Utopia,” artists, photographers, and writers envision a world without prisons, document visionary architecture, honor queer space and creativity, and dream of liberty through spiritual self-expression. They show us that utopia is not a far-fetched scheme, but rather a way of reshaping our future.
Weight | 0.855000 |
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Binding | Magazine |
Pages | 148 |
Date Published | 2020-12-03 00:00:00 |
Frequency | Quarterly |
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ISBN13/Barcode | 9781597114868 |
ISBN10 | 1597114863 |
Publisher | Aperture Foundation |
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Love for a Common Way of Life
Tyler Mitchell’s vision of Black utopia
Salamishah Tillet Dream Worlds: Five Reflections
–Utopia by Subtraction
Chris Jennings
–Occupy the Moment
Olivia Laing
–Abolition
Nicole R. Fleetwood
–Towering Ambitions
Steven S. Lee
–The Rot of Stars
Elvia Wilk Spaceship Earth
What a new documentary reveals about Biosphere 2
Matt Wolf in Conversation with Julian Rose Dreaming & Dwelling
The architecture that imagined a new society
Mimi Zeiger Feminist Futures
The artists who find freedom in collage
Sara Knelman Remains of the Day
Holding space in the Middle East, ten years after the Arab Spring
Kaelen Wilson-Goldie The Future Will See You Now
The private worlds of Black desire
Antwaun Sargent The Black Fantastic
Speculative visions of the African diaspora
Ekow Eshun Calling in the Spirit
For Latinx photographers, a search for belonging
Kiara Cristina Ventura PICTURES
David Benjamin Sherry
American Spirit
Yxta Maya Murray Allen Frame
1981, NYC
Brendan Embser Aikaterini Gegisian
The Suspended Real
Lauren Elkin Gareth McConnell
Dream Meadows
Alistair O’Neill Balarama Heller
Sacred Place
Pico Iyer
FRONT
Agenda
Gregory Halpern, Jo Ractliffe, Companion Pieces, Street. Life. Photography.
Day Jobs
Lou Stoppard on Koto Bolofo and Europe’s fashion world of the 1980s
Backstory
Rebecca Bengal on the making of Mary Ellen Mark’s The Book of Everything
Curriculum
Paul Graham on Garry Winogrand, green tea, and New York City
BACK
Endnote
Five questions for the Family Acid
Love for a Common Way of Life
Tyler Mitchell’s vision of Black utopia
Salamishah Tillet Dream Worlds: Five Reflections
–Utopia by Subtraction
Chris Jennings
–Occupy the Moment
Olivia Laing
–Abolition
Nicole R. Fleetwood
–Towering Ambitions
Steven S. Lee
–The Rot of Stars
Elvia Wilk Spaceship Earth
What a new documentary reveals about Biosphere 2
Matt Wolf in Conversation with Julian Rose Dreaming & Dwelling
The architecture that imagined a new society
Mimi Zeiger Feminist Futures
The artists who find freedom in collage
Sara Knelman Remains of the Day
Holding space in the Middle East, ten years after the Arab Spring
Kaelen Wilson-Goldie The Future Will See You Now
The private worlds of Black desire
Antwaun Sargent The Black Fantastic
Speculative visions of the African diaspora
Ekow Eshun Calling in the Spirit
For Latinx photographers, a search for belonging
Kiara Cristina Ventura PICTURES
David Benjamin Sherry
American Spirit
Yxta Maya Murray Allen Frame
1981, NYC
Brendan Embser Aikaterini Gegisian
The Suspended Real
Lauren Elkin Gareth McConnell
Dream Meadows
Alistair O’Neill Balarama Heller
Sacred Place
Pico Iyer