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Résumé:
SUKO Magazine is an artist-run, Montreal-based publication featuring the work of artists and cultural workers based locally and internationally. "Frontiers" reveals discussions critiquing imposed political barriers, tangible and symbolic borders, categorized identities, and binary worldviews. This issue features an array of photography, writing, styling, object design,(...)
SUKO Magazine, volume 03: Frontiers
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$35.00
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Résumé:
SUKO Magazine is an artist-run, Montreal-based publication featuring the work of artists and cultural workers based locally and internationally. "Frontiers" reveals discussions critiquing imposed political barriers, tangible and symbolic borders, categorized identities, and binary worldviews. This issue features an array of photography, writing, styling, object design, and more, all expanding on ideas of the either/or, the here/there, the back/forth, and the blurry space of the in-between. The selected works reveal varying perceptions and challenges brought on by the copious ways borders and boundaries exist. Placed in context with one another, these contributions honour lineage and storytelling as methods of truth telling and resistance against ongoing forms of violence and occupation.
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$40.00
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For the fourth issue, SUKO focuses on the theme Deferred Dream, a term coined by Langston Hughes’ poem of the same name. The idea came from the shared feeling of working toward a future that will not necessarily be realized in our lifetime, and the resolution to work towards it anyway. Through interviews, biographies, and features, artists share how they connect to their(...)
SUKO magazine, vol. 04 : Deferred Dream
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$40.00
(disponible en magasin)
Résumé:
For the fourth issue, SUKO focuses on the theme Deferred Dream, a term coined by Langston Hughes’ poem of the same name. The idea came from the shared feeling of working toward a future that will not necessarily be realized in our lifetime, and the resolution to work towards it anyway. Through interviews, biographies, and features, artists share how they connect to their own dreamworlds and in-between places. Artists in this issue confront and challenge their uncertainties, while others draw from sources of hope and protest inspired by past generations.
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