Volume and the JoAP are out

Two of my favourite mags The Journal of Aesthetics and Protest and Volume are out:

Volume is an architecture and urbanism magazine. It’s neither a highly specialized print that mere mortals like me find hard to approach nor is it one of those glossy Vogue-lookalikes with chichi spreads of fashionably ‘sustainable’ buildings. It’s not ‘something in between’ either.

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This issue presents many trends, people, ideas that might look like they do not directly belong to the world of architecture and urbanism but are perfectly pertinent and relevant to architects and urbanists. And because almost anything architects and urbanists do ends up concerning the hoi polloi (that’s you and me, my friend), there’s much food for thoughts and heated discussions in Volume 17:

The editors explain: At the close of this era of expansion and surplus Volume speculates on one of the period’s emblematic inventions: Content Management, or the collecting, organizing and sharing of digital information. Our retrospective appraisal of recent developments in the managing of information offers inside into the ability of Content Management to serve the current realities of digital abundance and material shortage, and to protect both vast and extremely limited quantities.

Jesse Seegers and Jeffrey Inaba quizz Ken Goldberg on burning dollar bills and other less trivial matters, Chris Anderson about ‘free’ culture and PageRanking on business cards. They also get Julien De Smedt to discuss his views on free-wheel experiementation, the proliferation of ‘post-OMA offices’, why not choosing and mismanaging can be valuable strategies. Benedict Clouette and Forrest Jessee’s interview with publisher Lars Müller (whose Face of Human Rights is on my must read list) evokes books as a form of content management.

Volume dives into almost mainstream US culture with an interview of Rachel Maddow (available online) and another one with Arianna Huffington (best enjoyed after having savoured this article about the so-called death of the blogosphere.)

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Entrance of the Svalbard Global Seed Vault. Credit: Mari Tefre / Global Crop Diversity Trust (more images)

Those are only a few of the many interviews of smart people by other smart people.

Just to contradict all the above i should add that many of the issues covered in Volume 17
1. are not interviews. C-LAB explores the World Heritage, the content management system for cultural and natural treasures. Easy happiness is at reach in “Architecture is Merciless”, a presentation by Jacques Herzog about Beijing’s Bird Nest and in a short series of photos that display how Vogt Landscape Architects transplant nature into a constructed context. “Seeds of Paranoia” gives the lowdown on the Svalbard Global Seed Vault. This must be one of the rare articles that goes beyond the hype aspect of the project.

2. openly belong to the world of architecture. For example, Professor of Architecture at Columbia University Mark Wigley has a short essay on architecture seen under the lens of content management.

The Journal of Aesthetics and Protest by the same publishers who released the very excellent the book, An Atlas of Radical Cartography.

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Among all paper magazines, JoA&P is probably the one most likely to truly and gently give rise to social changes. Smart, wonderfully edited and available for a mere $15, the magazine is heavily centered on the US scene and i wonder if we have anything similar in Europe. And if we don’t i wonder what we’re waiting for.

The 300 pages of the sixth issue are broken down in three ‘conceptual’ sections.

1. I Love To We is a call for a new terminology to describe the formations of grassroots cultural resistant practices. These “interventions, strategies and tactics in the territory” explore the war on terror and the global order. A quick selection of the many essays featured in this section: LA-based organization Bicicocina (or Bicycle Kitchen) describes its self-assigned mission to teach people to work on their own bikes. Lisa Anne Auerbach wrote an insightful essay on the new “Don’t Do It Yourself” battle triggered by corporations’ avid assault and capitalisation of the D.I.Y. culture. Aimee Le Duc analyzes what happens when an old police station in San Francisco is bought and transformed into a home and office by someone like artist and architect Bruce Tomb.

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Graffiti Wall

2. Antiwar Survey Respondents has almost 20 activists not only describe their antiwar activities but also answer vital questions such as “How do you measure success for this activity?’ and ‘In order to continue and be successful with this or other related activities, what would you do or need?’ The answers should convince readers that activist actions do have an impact and inspire them to join the movements or start their own.

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Center for Tactical Magic collaborating with UC Santa Cruz students on Wells Fargo Embargo

3. Another Theory Section. Under a title which could hardly get any more cloudy and bland are a handful of lessons learnt (sometimes the hard way) by artists and activists: problems encountered when trying to get art in public space, the recent history of the art collective in light of the persecution of the Critcal Art Ensemble, the danger of nostalgia to culture, etc.

Because Your University Should Affect Your Choice of Razor

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Right-slap on the back of the current issue of UC Berkeley’s California magazine is an ad for an officially licensed Gillette Fusion Power Razor.

Shredded Wheat (with Strawberries!): the Official Cereal of Wayward Women

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What Satisfies a Hungry Woman? Not the muscle-bound napper at left.

In an xD RS, Lava Doesn’t Even Sizzle

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To promote yet another limited edition vehicle, the xD RS, Scion went all Hot Lava. The subsite features a bubbling volcano with a gray xD RS in the foreground; an explosion of lava makes it that wild red-orange color we love so much.

Royal Enfield Attacks Indian ‘Mama’s Boy’ Mentality

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Having exploited the tripper and pastel-lover in its would-be motorcycle buyers, Royal Enfield finally hits ’em where it hurts: love of mother.

‘Delicate Flowers’ Don Helmets, Make Naughty in Women’s Football

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For Pittsburgh Passion, an indy women’s football league, Garrison Hughes asks us to “celebrate the delicate flower that is woman … as well as the beauty of one delicate flower drilling the other delicate flower into the ground.” Touchdown, BITCH!

ONDCP Puts Hispanic Parents on Drug Alert … by Villainizing Their Children

Coinciding with the (coincidental!) release of a CDC survey that found Hispanic teens more likely to use drugs and try suicide than black and white kids, the Office for National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) launched this really weird campaign….

Konica Plays the Tease, Promises Quick Pleasers and Big-Shots

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To generate interest in a product that’s not very interesting — office printers — Konica Minolta borrows from a topic that makes everyone’s ears perk up: the office affair.

State Farm Hedges Bets for the Asian Vote

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It’s sort of thoughtful that State Farm feels compelled to pander directly to both mainland Asians and Pacific Islanders.

Careful, Miracle-Gro, You’re Showing Your Age.

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Maybe because it’s not hip to the existence of guerrilla gardening, Miracle-Gro is using ’70s pop and a catchy new slogan to staple a sense of cool to its plant food product.

Say, How About You Bring the Fleshy One a Little Closer.

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The Calgary Zoo is running a warped print campaign that depicts how animals must see you — and your drool-worthy spawn — from inside their steel cages.

National Geographic Wins Three Ellies, Y&R Mails, Social Media Whitepapered

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– National Geographic hauled in three Ellies at the National Magazine Awards.

If Ever You Sense a Traitor in Your Midst, Here’s How to Sniff Her Out

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There’s this gift shop in St. Louis called Lusso. If its advertising is anything to go by (and when would it ever lie?), objects from Lusso compel people to steal, pick fights, and take back wedding presents.

Comedy Central Takes Giggles Serious

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To demonstrate how serious Comedy Central takes comedy, kempertrautmann/Hamburg hand-drew a few classic gags. This is the continuation of a campaign that won Comedy Central some love at Cannes.

Neural magazine issue 29 is out

0aneural29.jpgThe latest Neural magazine is available in the best book shops. This issue is dedicated to new media art in China. It contains an essay by Timothy Murray on The Paradox of Chinese Art in the Age of Technology, another by Brian Holmes on China urbanism, industrialization and culture, a review of the 11th Microwave festival in Hong Kong, a presentation of the online project The Great Firewall of China, etc.

There are book and CD/ DVD reviews, highlights on various musical, artistic or activists projects and as usual, chief redactor Alessandro Ludovico has carried out a series of interviews, this time with 8gg, Yao Bin, Zen Lu, my pals at we-need-money-not-art and i have been been submitted to some parallels quizzes, etc.

Now you’ll know what to answer when someone asks you “I keep reading about contemporary art in China but btw, what is happening in the field of new media art over there?”

Related: 8gg big.

The Walls Don’t Just Have Ears; They’ve Also Got Some Big-Ass Eyes

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This is part of a four-sided pullout for Benjamin Moore’s line of Aura paints. The first side reads, “Your life is your inspiration.” The spread, which is here, reads, “Your walls are your canvas.”

Mother’s Day Celebrated With Womanly Threshold Carry

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A bit predictable what with the last 20 years of men taking shit for all those years they gave women shit but hey, let’s not be bitter and just be grateful to all the mother’s of the world this Renault ad aims to appreciate.

Does Bestiality Put You in Stove-Buying Mode?

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Check out this trio of ads by BLATTNER BRUNNER, Atlanta for Appalachian Stove Co. Campaign name: “Hot and Crusty.”

The fact sheet reads, “Concept: Clean burning stoves for people who pretty much don’t care. Market: Southeastern US, especially highlands.”

Hook-Ups Come Easy for Pickups on TruckMatch

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After March 1, which is when this site goes live, it may well be the case that finding your match was never easier. If your match is a two-ton 4×4 in gun barrel gray.

It’s Holocaust Awareness Week, and Anne Frank is Not Fiction

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This is one of those well-tempered print ads that forces you to really look before you know what’s going on.