Flash Art International Edition
Archiviato dal
#327 September - October 2019
Archivio Moderno
27 issues
Ultimo Numero:
Also in this issue: a drifting exchange of voicemails between alfatih and Jazmina Figueroa maps how travel, play, and machine systems structure his sensory, strategic approach to art making. Ruoru Mou speaks to Olivia Aherne about how she transforms factory waste, family remnants, and bureaucratic residue into shifting systems of value, care, and desire, revealing how bodies and labor are continually reimagined. In conversation with Marie Catalano, Megan Mi-Ai Lee unpacks replicas, “failed dupes,” and Vegas-inflicted installations that expose the fragile architectures of fantasy and deception — why we keep believing even when the illusion is doomed to break. Matthew Lawson Garrett’s essay elucidates how Ruofan Chen’s encounters with arctic exposure, particulate air, and the slow violence of labor environments shape a practice preoccupied with dust, shelter, and breath as interlocking forces of survival. Tommy Xie and Moa Jegnell explore how Xie’s melancholic, erotically charged figurations recast vulnerability as strategic soft power, building queer cosmologies where desire, violence, and tenderness coexist. Mateus Nunes traces davi de jesus do nascimento’s river-born poetics — shaped by loss, lineage, and sedimented memories — as they merge language, water, and ancestry into one continuous, trembling current. A visual essay by Zora Sicher is introduced by Rose Higham-Stainton, who traces how her photographs reimagine intimacy as a fluid, queer, and ever-circulating state of being.
In her latest episode for Unpack / Reveal / Unleash, Margaret Kross follows how Siyi Li turns cringe, cliché, and lo-fi digital feeling into a quietly radical inquiry into connection and sincerity in an image-saturated world. The new installment of Studio Scene brings Michela Ceruti into Adam Patrick Grant’s London studio, where she traces how his practice transforms photographic fragments of urban life into tender, ambiguous paintings that hold presence and disappearance in the same breath. This issue’s city focus turns to Mexico City: Luis Ortega Govela reflects on a metropolis built atop a drained lake, tracing colonial hydrological violence, infrastructural fragility, gentrification, and cultural memory to reveal a city perpetually oscillating between water, absence, and survival.
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