[Winter 2021]
What do the most distant, wild, silent landscapes tell us? How do landscapes of our childhood, those that awoke us to the world, shape us? What reflections of our own future do we find in the chaos of urban sites? Landscapes are like mirrors, utterly shaped by human presence. The city is a direct extension of the social body and, similarly, all of nature is a construction of culture that becomes meaningful only through the human gaze.
ÉDITORIAL
Projecting Ourselves into the World Around Us — Jacques Doyon
PORTFOLIOS
Alain Lefort, Résonance des silences — Yannick Marcoux
Chloé Beaulac, Ces lieux qui nous habitent — Dominique Sirois-Rouleau
David K. Ross, Children of Kaos — Jeanne Randolph
FOCUS
Ewa Monika Zebrowski. The Photobook as a Space of Collaboration — Zoë Tousignant
Les Années musicales. The Space-Music Dimension Becomes Multiplicity — Edward Pérez-González
Gathering Clouds. Photographs From The Nineteenth Century And Today. A History of Photography Through Clouds — Bruno Chalifour
ACTUALITÉ
EXPOSITIONS / EXHIBITIONS
Rachel Echenberg, Conversations avec ma famille — Charles Guilbert
Virginie Laganière, Derrière l’horizon — Nathalie Bachand
Marc-Antoine K. Phaneuf, Dédales d’almanachs — Alexis Desgagnés
Photographie et Société : L’autre Amérique — Jérôme Delgado
Bertrand Carrière, Dans les années – Photographies 1996–2019 — Sylvain Campeau
Biennale de Berlin pour l’art contemporain — Érika Nimis
Laurence Hervieux-Gosselin, Fenêtre oubliée — Gabrielle Sarthou
Vikky Alexander, Nordic Rock — James D. Campbell
LECTURES | READINGS
New and Worthy — Jérôme Delgado
PAROLES | VOICES
Chuck Samuels. Scabs, Runny Noses & Wardrobe Malfunctions — Chuck Samuels
Links
- Achetez Ciel variable 116 – LANDSCAPES AS MIRRORS
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