500-piece jigsaw puzzle of Alex Prager’s artwork The Extras (2019), from her body of work Play the Wind . Finished puzzle dimensions: 450 x 450 mmBox dimensions: 245 x 190...
This catalog has been published on the occasion of Alex Prager's Part One: The Mountain, 2021 and Part Two: Run, 2022 Exhibitions at Lehmann Maupin. It contains photographic work from...
Booklet of 18 blank notecards, featuring 9 images (each appearing twice) from Alex Prager’s Western Mechanics exhibition, 2024. Enclosed in a die cut sleeve. Limited run.Sleeve/each notecard: 155 x 100 mm
Inspired by the photography of Weegee and Enrique Metinides, and films such as Metropolis and Un Chien Andalou, Compulsion confirms Alex Prager's vivid cinematic aesthetic. Unlike her previous work, however,...
Photography Is presents more than 3,000 phrases that define one of the most democratic and ubiquitous of all art forms. Mirroring the ambiguous and untrustworthy nature of photographs themselves, each...
Towards an empty sea is a macabre tale of dark origins, metamorphosis, and a eery nightmare escape down a dying river towards an empty sea and nothingness. Water and flight...
Pole of Inaccessibility is a zine which was created to accompany a sound performance organised by Jack O’Flynn in Phoenix Park at Dublin’s Pole of Inaccessibility - the point furthest...
Edited from 25 years of work (1979–2005), The British Landscape is a collation of John Davies’ revealing landscapes. Rich in detail and narrative, and contrasting scenes of nature apparently untouched by humans...
Silvermine is a set of five photo albums each containing 20 prints. The negatives were salvaged from a recycling plant on the edge of Beijing, where they had been sent to...
Roger Hilton (1911–1975) produced the works now known as the ‘Late Gouaches’ and ‘Night Letters’ during the final two years of his life at his cottage in Cornwall’s West Penwith....
‘Right from the start, almost every appearance he made was catastrophic … catastrophe is his means of operation, and his central instrument of governance.’– Adi Ophir For their version of...
This book tells the story of how plants arrived on this planet and gave rise to other forms of life. Using images archived at AMC (Archive of Modern Conflict), the book...
Is it a book, is it a sculpture? No, it’s a Me Nu. This work by Ruben Lundgren and Timothy Prus has been produced to coincide with their exhibition “Anything that...
The title of this two-volume set gives little clue to the content beyond the fact that 82 photos are included in each volume. Like some bureaucratic code, it marks but...
Handle with gloves. Ink is not fixed and may smudge or transfer. TV Casualty is a graphic study of the horror of nostalgia in the decline of the American Dream. On...
The first Earth-born creature to enter space was Laika, a stray dog from Moscow that blasted off aboard Sputnik 2 on 3 November 1957, heralding the beginning of the space...
‘The Night Climbers of Cambridge was published in 1937 by Chatto & Windus, a reputable house that had brought out the first English translations of Proust in 1922. The author was...
The OODA Loop is known in business and in warfare. It was originally devised by John Boyd, a USAF officer who was active in the Korean war and who later...
Do green people exist? A quick search brings up the legend of the green children of Woolpit. This tale recounts the discovery of a brother and sister who appeared largely...
The Luton Auguries began with the purchase of the newspaper archives of the city of Luton. From this vast source material, Timothy Prus selects and assembles a series of images, creating a surrealist...
Don McCullin has been making photographs for more than 50 years, first capturing the small dramas of everyday life in 1950s London, then travelling to the world’s most dangerous conflict...
Dry Hole is an intuitive selection of images extracted from a collection of Real Photo Postcards (RPPCs). David Thomson emphasises details contained within the larger frame of the postcards by cropping...
The hundreds of photographs gathered in Will Write Soon, lead us into the meanderings of day-to-day life in the towns and countryside of North America at the turn of the 20th...
Each copy contains one of three different stamped and numbered original Liu YiQing prints. The photographs in Happy Tonite have been selected by Ed Jones and James Welch from the collection of Chinese photography...
‘This is what hatred did’ is the lapidary phrase that ends Amos Tutuola’s novel My Life in the Bush of Ghosts. When it was published in 1954, the novel provoked such...
No one doubts Queen Victoria would have loved Colombia. She was known to suffer from orchid delirium and appointed an official Royal orchid expert whose name was Frederick Sanders. The...
Ten real lives, ten photographs, ten journeys in time: the first killing of the Cold War, the dying hopes of a doomed aviator, the ghosts of Native America at Alcatraz,...
Issue 12 of Amc2 is about the space left by the disappearance of photography both as an idea and as a material object. It is also a memento mori for Frido Troost...
Dublin Needs to Dance is a photographic exploration of youth and queer nightlife in Dublin, captured through an intimate lens of interior spaces where community and culture thrive. Against the...
Drawing on more than 100 unpublished photographs, including unseen images of some of the most famous and infamous Berlin clubs of the 1920s, Party! Party!! Party!!! depicts the Weimar Republic through the...
Dublin Inquirer is an independent newspaper launched in June 2015 to provide quality coverage of city affairs.
Published by Dublin InquirerNewsprint40 pages300 x 370 mm
Collected Shadows, a touring exhibition curated by the Archive of Modern Conflict and first exhibited at Paris Photo in 2012. The works span a period from the early 1850s to...
In 2011, New York-based street photographer Bruce Gilden was commissioned by the Archive of Modern Conflict to capture the people and places of London. Kalev Erickson, who accompanied Gilden in...
A new publication by Stereo Editions featuring two extensive interviews with filmmakers Annik Leroy and Julie Morel.“This conversation was recorded in Brussels in November 2023. It was an attempt to...
The Island Weights is a collection of poems by Sky Hopinka, published by Stereo Editions as a letterpress limited edition. Relating to the four water spirits holding the earth in place,...
In the midst of the global financial crisis that began in 2008, Penelope Umbrico started noticing large quantities of used office desks for sale online. In the pictures advertising them,...
Out Of Order: Bad Display III consists of images of screens cropped from used and broken LCD TVs, computer monitors, and laptops found for sale on e-shops. Now out of order,...
Penelope Umbrico’s project Solar Eclipses is made up of a collection of collages created using images of solar eclipses found in the New York Public Library Picture Collection. She creates...
Issue 8 of Amc2 features a selection of full-length portraits, some black & white and others hand-coloured, made in Chinese studios between the 1930s and the 1980s. This serendipitous reunion of 60...
The great technological leap that took place in the 19th century in optical lens systems such as the microscope meant that by the latter half of the century the exploration...
In September 1939, thousands of German soldiers were turned loose on Poland. In 1940, they descended on Holland, Belgium and France. In 1941 they went to the Balkans, and then...
Nein, Onkel: Snapshots From Another Front 1938–1945 is a photographic survey of a different, rarely glimpsed side of life in the Nazi Third Reich. It contains reproductions of 347 previously unpublished...
Unwanted Butterfly spent half of his 40 years behind bars, so he had plenty of time to have his whole body tattooed. He was an unusual sight in Socialist Hungary,...
With the demise of Kodachrome film in 2009, the colour palette that in many ways defined an era also disappeared. The 200+ Kodachrome slides selected by Ed Jones and Timothy...
The Canadians playfully and informatively re-imagines one of the most revered photobooks of the 20th century, Robert Frank’s The Americans. The source for the imagery is the print archive of...
The inaugural issue of AMC2 journal brings together different groups of work that illuminate lost corners of our cultural life. Photography is, as ever, the keystone of the collection. The Archive of...
Published to coincide with Archive of Modern Conflict’s contribution to the exhibition Conflict, Time, Photography at Tate Modern, London, AMC2 Issue 11: A Guide for the Protection of the Public in Peacetime presents the landscapes...
More Cooning with Cooners arose out of the discovery of a series of anonymous Kodachrome slides documenting one family’s 1960s racoon-hunting adventures in Ohio, USA. The book pays homage to (and...
This is a second, updated, and completely reformatted edition of Antony Cairns’ original, handmade book LDN from 2010. In this new edition, the large format and fine 170gsm Claro paper draw the viewer...
‘Tokyo Tokyo consists of a series of diptychs in which the mythical “decisive moment” of traditional documentary photography is lampooned. In their projects, WassinkLundgren playfully turn the unwritten rules of the...
In Don’t Smile Now … Save it for Later, Thijs Groot Wassink shows us London from the viewpoint of a photo booth. Go into the booth, open the curtain, feed in...
Enigmatic Hungarian photographer Gergely Papp (1922–2000) was born into a peasant family, on a farmstead in Pusztaecseg (now Ecsegfalva) in Eastern Hungary. He would live there for the rest of...
The second issue of AMC2 features the funerary practices of the Fali tribe of Cameroon, Martin Parr’s appreciation of the concrete hotels of the Spanish Costas, the tragic story of Henri Gaudier-Brzeska’s...
Printed in burgundy, blue and dark green versions, Issue 3 of Amc2 is a commemorative visitor’s guide to London 2012. The 40-page booklet offers many useful culinary and cultural tips to help...
Issue 10 of Amc2 is published to coincide with LagosPhoto 2014 and draws on three contrasting Africa-related collections from the Archive of Modern Conflict: Nigeria’s ‘Nollywood’ film industry’s obsession with the...
The Chinese are not alone in their fascination for creatures that dance on the boundary between the human and animal worlds. Maoist ideology in China had long criminalised such interest...
The "Images are all we have" sticker is a rectangular adhesive sticker, 26cm long by 4cm wide. It is durable and resistant, ideal for both indoor and outdoor use. The...
Holy Show is a magazine of contemporary life and culture as seen through the eyes of Ireland’s artists. It adapts stories from artists and their projects to the printed page....
Belfast is a city segregated and divided: its so-called peace walls , built to separate Unionist and Nationalist communities, are taller in places even than the Berlin Wall. For his...
Alex Prager is a photographer and filmmaker whose elaborate sets and complex staging draw on a rich cultural heritage of cinematic style, informed by street photography, to produce work that...
Grab a bag, pack your passport, camera, some sunglasses, swimminggear, and sturdy shoes, because this issue of The Modernist is heading OUTSIDE. Covering everything frome cemeteries, to art in supermarket...
The first issue of The Modernist on the ‘O’ theme. Here we take on OBJECT and encounter items that while everyday are anything but mundane. Some classic designs from the...
A neighbourhood whole is often greater than the sum of its parts, and whilst the architecture and buildings are key components in creating a neighbourhood, it is the inhabitants that...
The Wilhelm Gustloff was a cruise ship named after the assassinated leader of the Swiss Nazi party. It was sunk on January 30th 1945, hours after leaving the port of...
A revelatory glimpse into the future of photography, one where the very nature of how images are created is fundamentally transformed by artificial intelligence. An invaluable roadmap in a new...
Culture, Society, Money & ShitThe seventh issue presents a brand new design and takes a deep dive into the chaos of cash and capital. Because we couldn’t help but wonder:...
With beautiful colour images and a chronology of 25 years of contemporary art exhibitions in Belfast, this new book is a very special insight and illumination of the Golden Thread...
Rethinking the Image— In Conversation18-19 JulyAt the International Centre for the Image PhotoIreland launches the International Centre for the Image on 17th July, a new venue dedicated to Photography and...
Joy2025Inkjet300mm x 210 mm unframed €40 Unframed - A4 (includes 13.5% VAT) A print inspired by Mary Oliver's poem Don't Hesitate. Made with Gouache and pencil on paper. About the Artist Bronagh...
Publication accompanying the exhibition at New Art Projects, London, by Brian Teeling and Dorje de Burgh, featuring commissioned essays by Una Mullally and Sam Moore. The exhibition, as documented in...
Few subjects can evoke the entwinement of the corporeal, personal, and political so succinctly as that of hair. Throughout history, hair has been charged with significance and is resonant with...
Ukrainian soldiers engage in intensive combat training at an unmarked location; a female choir rehearse in a Sarajevo theatre once used to stage defiant performances during the Bosnian War; youths...
The late Tongan scholar Epeli Hau‘ofa wrote of the Pacific Ocean as a ‘Sea of Islands’. Rather than imagining a scattering of small, defined island states, he sketched a vast...
Our philosophical understanding of the photograph may find its bearings in notions of time and the past, but our tools for making images are imbedded in the aggressive stride of...
In the magazine’s 23rd edition, nature unfolds in all its glory, revealing its many facets and endless wonders to the curious and the creative. Within its pages, you'll find a...
Sight & Sound is the BFI's international film magazine, offering unrivalled insight into film culture with in-depth reviews, interviews and features exploring contemporary and historical cinema in all its variety....
KATALOG Journal of Photography and Video is a Denmark-based journal focusing on photography and video.
Published by KATALOG JournalSoftcover97 pages210 x 250 mmISSN 24455067
This extraordinary work, captured between 2005 and 2019, challenges the conventional narrative of East versus West and offers a striking visual exploration of life in post-industrial America and Russia. Through...
In you can’t go home again, Antigoni Papantoni reflects on her experiences of the past decade, feeling like a sailor adrift between cultures, gradually losing her sense of belonging. This...
Crowd Work is the venturous debut by writer Sam Furlong. With candour, its poems detail experiences of a body’s living, materialities it inhabits and shares with bodies and other species....
Apartamento is an international, stylishly curated interior design magazine that has been providing a broad overview of modern interior design, design and lifestyle trends since 2008. Issue 35 Features: Camille...
‘Sacred plants are either connected to ritual practice or considered of high cultural importance. This encompasses trees, flowers, fruits and other vegetation associated with religion and folklore, but also that...
Dublin Inquirer is an independent newspaper launched in June 2015 to provide quality coverage of city affairs.
Published by Dublin InquirerNewsprint40 pages300 x 370 mm
Explorations into Visual Reproduction, Perception and Randomness Moving Through Images questions how images and (visual) reproductions of physical surroundings influence our gaze and perception. This two-part publication was developed as both...
'Channel' is an environmentalist magazine publishing poetry and prose that fosters connection with the natural world. Conceived on 15 March, the day of 2019's first global climate strike, the project aims...
Have a Nice Day Press is delighted to present A Faggot is a Unit, an artist book by Berlin-based artist, filmmaker, and writer Padraig Robinson. This publication brings together two original screenplays for...
Ones to Watch is back! Meet 15 rising photographers, all nominated by BJP’s vast and global photographic community. Now in its 14th edition, Ones to Watch is BJP’s annual selection...
For her first feature film, The Virgin Suicides, Sofia Coppola commissioned British fashion photographer Corinne Day to join her on set. Renowned for her unadorned, grungy photographs of iconic models...
Urthworks draws on a trilogy of films by Ben Rivers imagining the future of a planet at three stages after environmental collapse. Working with 16mm film and digital imaging technology,...
Using CGI, Canadian artist Benjamin Freedman presents a captivating image sequence which meticulously reconstructs his childhood memories of a family road trip to Maine in 1999. Blurring the line between...
Anonymous Objects: Inscrutable Photographs and the Unknown suggests that unidentifiable things in photographs point towards larger questions about the limits of knowledge. In a world that seems to give up...
In Irrational, artist Francesco Jodice and curator Francesco Zanot dissect the rise of irrationality in modern life and society through an extensive and thought-provoking array of visual case studies. Addressing...
Against Ageism: A Queer Manifesto starts with what it is not: a socio-economic argument against ageism, celebrating the ‘elderly’ as economically viable. Instead, Simon(e) van Saarloos presents a radical critique...
The poems in hum it on the phone are made up of fragments from interdisciplinary artist Audrey Roger's diary entries, notebooks, descriptions of dreams she has had, as well as...
Tolka is a Dublin-based biannual literary journal of non-fiction, publishing essays, reportage, travel writing, auto-fiction, individual stories and the writing that falls in between. They publish and promote work that...
A Body with More Tongues is a Mythical Creature is an intimate, interdisciplinary project that combines text, illustration, music, and a card game. It reflects on how living in a foreign...
A collection of translated historical sources and essays on International Women’s Day 1979 in Iran, initiated by Katayoon Barzegar, and edited by Niloufar Nematollahi, and Jose Rosales. Spanning the breadth...
Citizen Artist 2016-2018 is a publication that reflects on the process of the studio 468 award programme, CITIZEN ARTIST. It demonstrates the richness and diversity of each CITIZEN ARTIST awardees’...
The People’s Shed is a reflection of artist, Evelyn Broderick’s, residency at studio 468 ‘A Radical Imagination’ and her collaborative arts project. This publication reflects on Evelyn’s pedagogical arts practice...
Robin (Spideog), Redcross, Co. Wicklow. The robin fluffs out its feathers in cold weather, making it appear very plump. Despite its melancholy-sounding Winter song, it can is very friendly and...
Brent Goose (Cadhan), Dublin Bay. The Brent Goose flies in family groups 5,000 kilometers from the Canadian Arctic, stopping for a while in Iceland, to spend the Winter in Ireland....
Pigeon House, Dublin The Poolbeg Chimneys are among the tallest structures in Ireland and are visible from most of Dublin city. The name “Pigeon House” comes from the inn established...
Grey Heron (Corr réisc), Dublin Zoo, Dublin. Grey Herons breed in large trees and can form large breeding colonies, or heronries, some of which have been in use for over...
Swallow (Fáinleog), Birr, County Offaly. Swallows winter in southern Africa, and fly up to 10,000 kilometers to spend their Summer in Ireland. They feed almost exclusively on insects caught in...
Goldfinch (Lasair choille), Castlemacadam, Co. Wicklow. The Goldfinch breeds throughout Ireland in hedgerows, parks and gardens. Their fine pointed beaks allow them to extract otherwise inaccessible seeds. They love bird...
Pigeon House, Dublin The Poolbeg Chimneys are among the tallest structures in Ireland and are visible from most of Dublin city. The name “Pigeon House” comes from the inn established...
Goldfinch (Lasair choille), Castlemacadam, Co. Wicklow. The Goldfinch breeds throughout Ireland in hedgerows, parks and gardens. Their fine pointed beaks allow them to extract otherwise inaccessible seeds. They love bird...
Robin (Spideog), Redcross, Co. Wicklow. The robin fluffs out its feathers in cold weather, making it appear very plump. Despite its melancholy-sounding Winter song, it can is very friendly and...
Georgian door, Merrion Square, Dublin. Georgian Dublin flourished until the Act of Union in 1800 which saw many property owners return to London and resulted in the older buildings becoming...
Killamery High Cross, Co. Kilkenny. The High Cross dating from the 9th century is used as a model for many of the small high crosses sold across the world as...
Pigeon House, Dublin The Poolbeg Chimneys are among the tallest structures in Ireland and are visible from most of Dublin city. The name “Pigeon House” comes from the inn established...
Shag (Seaga), Seapoint, Dublin. Shags can often be seen drying their half-open wings,since their plumage is only partly waterproof. Their peaked forehead and yellow gape set them apart from their...
Swallow (Fáinleog), Birr, County Offaly. Swallows winter in southern Africa, and fly up to 10,000 kilometers to spend their Summer in Ireland. They feed almost exclusively on insects caught in flight....
Please note: we only post unframed prints. For framed purchases, free Click-and-Collect is available from The Library Project and Dublin delivery only. See further shipping information below. Support24 x 30...
Photobook Conversations foregrounds discussions on and around a range of positions, practices and politics that shape the landscape of contemporary photography and publishing today. With generosity and willingness to share...
Playground is the magazine that dares to explore, question, and re-envision the creative industries. Through thought-provoking essays, reports, and bold, honest conversations, it’s where curiosity meets play and inspiration. Packed...
Dublin Inquirer is an independent newspaper launched in June 2015 to provide quality coverage of city affairs.
Published by Dublin InquirerNewsprint40 pages300 x 370 mm
The ‘Tradespotting’ tee from SMUT Press, screenprinted in London and designed by Marco Cacioni. Choose your future. Choose SMUT. Regular fit, 100% organic cotton tees. Size guide: (Chest (to fit))...
Quarterly Disegno is devoted to exploring the many facets of design and its impact on the world today. Disegno #39 includes: Gabriel Fontana’s non-hierarchical sports; a journey to reclaim a...
Disco Pogo is a bi-annual, electronic music magazine from the original founders of seminal 90s title Jockey Slut. The Spring/Summer '25 issue of Disco Pogo offers a choice of three...
Paddy Kiernan is a musician and photographer, based in Dublin. His image Kerrymount Rise was selected for the TLP Edition A New Normal, published in 2020. In 2021, he self-published...
Line Which Forms a Volume is a critical reader and symposium of graphic design-led research that is written, edited, designed and published annually by participants of the MA Graphic Media...
𝑻𝒖𝒃𝒆𝒓𝒄𝒍𝒆𝒓𝒐𝒔𝒊𝒆𝒔 is a casebound publication showcasing Kevin Mooney’s most recent series of works commissioned by and exhibited in Luan Gallery. Tuberclerosies includes a curatorial essay by Aoife Banks, curator of...
Los tamarindos de La Concha [La Concha’s Tamarinds] is the continuation of photographer Ricardo Cases's urban exploration, which began in 2018 in the city of Valencia and was published in 2023...
HUN is Julia Mejnertsen’s long-term photographic research about our perception of nature. Through her mother’s hunting practice, the Danish photographer reflects both on the complex family bonds we build and...
In Leve, Martín Estol claims a space for fantasy. As opposed to a conventional reading of the family biography, text and images coalesce in this account, exploring and honouring the figure...
HeghDI' vem ghaH, tu'lu' Dinosaur (which translates from Klingon as “Upon awakening, the dinosaur was still there”, a micro-story by Augusto Monterroso) tells a previously unknown story about the Klingon race....
Real Review is a contemporary culture magazine based in London and is "what it means to live today". Each issue tracks our ever-changing zeitgeist through a "current mood". Using the...
How does the world form itself? How does it create itself as a world? And how do we understand the role of the visual in this regard? Most responses to...
From music writer Alex Coles, Fusion! From Alice Coltrane to Moor Mother traces the origins and legacy of blended musical genres by focusing on twelve dynamic collaborations. From Alice Coltrane working with...
What parallels are there between a human pranayama practitioner and a migratory bird in heavily datafied environments? And what can they tell us about the need to reorient our...
Abandoned Prose is a publication with texts by Nathan O’Donnell and design by Clare Bell. It is the outcome of a Samuel Beckett Creative Fellowship at Trinity College Dublin, part of a...
Inspired by political campaign posters from the Polish 2023 parliamentary elections, The Powers That Be photobook contemplates the links between electioneering and political outcomes. Whilst travelling around Poland researching coal mining...
Conceived and imagined in close collaboration with Orla Barry on the occasion of her exhibition at MACS, The Shepherd's Progress brings together a majority of the works (texts, installations, performances) produced by...
DOMESTIC is grounded in research on the food production industry, and focuses on relationships between humans and animals, eaters and eaten. The project stems from a batch of found 16mm...
'The First Draft' is an artistic homecoming, bringing internationally influenced work back to the roots of Rich Gilligan's creative journey and offers a contemplative look at the themes of belonging,...
Family is an elementary topic of cultural and artistic fascination, with the most interesting criticism taking place in the modern era. photography in particular, with its ability to mercilessly depict...
It is fascinating that surreal is a thing. isn’t real and unreal enough? the feeling of surreal results from a mental hiccup whereby the brain at first thinks it is...
History doesn’t repeat itself, but sometimes it rhymes and with this in mind we introduce the theme of ‘new pictorialism’. new implies old, and any photography student will affirm that...
There are so many ways to describe the photographic genre we focus on in this issue of blow: urbanscapes, observational photography, accidental revelations, street encounters, urban scenes… street photography is...
Photographic portraiture is one of the most compelling and popular of artistic genres. it is also a very complex and tentative area of artistic practice, covering an extensive ground from...
With the wonderful freshness in the air and the great stretch in the evenings comes a new issue of blow to savour in the bloom of spring. this time we...
This teaser issue is just a taste of what’s to come; a high quality portfolio of work to be published quarterly and a chance for all photographers to have their...
As society becomes increasingly urbanised it seems we are moving further and further away from nature – and especially from animals. an encounter with an animal is now a rarity...
Issue 1 features some of the haunting work of Roger Ballen, a photographer that urges us to confront our darker side, while at the same time opening our eyes to...
One of the most photographed of subjects, the human body is infinite in its ability to communicate visually. regularly a study of shape and form, sometimes a tool for social...
There has always been—and always will be—a unique and complex relationship between the moving and the still image. like film, photography grants the artist permission to create a new reality,...
Takes on a topic that is so general and pervasive that there is a danger of missing the mark. the topic is monochrome, that is, photography in black and white...
A picture is worth a thousand words – an old saying goes. there is certainly truth in this – photographs, whether taken by a professional photojournalist or by an amateur...
"Issue fourteen deals with the self portrait, and we confess this issue is opinionated. we were drawn to the type of self portrait that is closer to fiction than autobiography....
Sionnachuighim, meaning “I play the Fox”, is thought to be one possible origin of the word shenanigans, and in this work, shenanigans take centre stage. As a teenager, I entered...
Helena Gorey’s is a distinctly lived practice as nature ecology and the environment and specifically her native homeplace of rural Co. Kilkenny is central to what inspires her. This body...
The title ‘Empathy Lab’ comes from a dedicated area in Facebook’s EU headquarters in Dublin where employees can express empathy to various causes, through the use of technology. This body...
A journal of grassroots herbalism, printed in Wales, with beautiful pen and ink illustration. Wort is a curated collection of contributions from persons working with plants as medicine in ways...
The title “improbable, imaginary, invisible, tuning sound to bodies, bodies to sound” is a poem and a blurb. This book is queer, playful, and tongue-in-cheek. The 77 drawings of imagined...
THE PLANT magazine is thrilled to announce the release of a brand new issue, celebrating plant life, flowers, nature and the world around us with four striking covers — by...