Aperture 241: Utopia
Featuring profiles such as Salamishah Tillet's look at Tyler Mitchell's photography and conversations like Julian Rose's interview with filmmaker Matt Wolf, the book showcases a diverse range of perspectives and striking portfolios that span cultures and geographies.
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Aperture 241: Utopia
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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, honour 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.
In a profile, Salamishah Tillet considers Tyler Mitchell's visions of Black people resting in open green space, a democratizing landscape in which Mitchell continuously asks himself: "What are the things that I can do to lessen the inherent hierarchies in the photography-shoot structure of seeing and being seen?"
Sara Knelman shows the freeing possibilities of the feminist collage works of Lorna Simpson, Mickalene Thomas, Sara Cwynar, and Alanna Fields. Julian Rose speaks with the filmmaker Matt Wolf about his latest documentary, Spaceship Earth (2020), which follows the people who created Biosphere 2 in 1991. Antwaun Sargent traces Black queer artists' journeys into immersive desire.
Utopia also includes compelling portfolios by David Benjamin Sherry, Allen Frame, and Balarama Heller, whose respective works span time and geography, from bohemian New York to a Hare Krishna retreat in India.
"The utopian imagination tends to stir when the world feels simultaneously wrecked and malleable," the writer Chris Jennings notes, in a series of reflections by writers such as Olivia Laing and Nicole R. Fleetwood.
Notions of utopia shouldn't be restricted to the fantasy of a fully realised ideal society, or the outsize, often failed, sometimes disastrous schemes and social experiments of the past. Instead, we might consider utopia a mode of vision and thought that shields us from hopelessness.
Series: Aperture Magazine
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INFORMATION
ISBN: 9781597114868
Publisher: Aperture
Format: Paperback / softback
Date Published: 10 December 2020
Country: United States
Imprint: Aperture
Contributors:
- Edited by Michael Famighetti
Audience: General / adult
DIMENSIONS
Width: 235.0mm
Height: 305.0mm
Weight: 840g
Pages: 136
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