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MONO.KULTUR #50: MIKE MILLS

Dear Friends,

yes, this one has taken us forever, but the good news is: we are finally ready to release mono.kultur #50 (50!) into the world. This being our Anniversary Edition, the issue features not one, but three (3!) intimate conversations with the wonderful US film director and designer Mike Mills, widely acclaimed for his tender and personal and allround heartwarming films and stories, capturing our daily dilemmas of human existence with lighthearted melancholy and a big heart.

Largely influenced by the US punk and skate culture, Mike Mills became first known as a graphic designer for the independent music scene, creating designs for the likes of the Beastie Boys, Sonic Youth, Beck, and Air, and nascent skateboard labels Supreme or X-girl. His work was defined less by style than a singular voice, that used graphic design as a platform for conflicting messages, subtle humor, and a profoundly human touch.

Given his penchant for personal stories, it comes as no surprise that Mills progressed via music videos and documentary projects into feature films, most notably ‘Beginners‘ (2010) and ‘20th Century Women‘ (2016), drawing from autobiographic elements of his childhood and parents’ histories to compose deeply intimate, layered, open-ended stories about the infinite vault of human emotion and confusion.

All of Mills’ talents and obsessions, however, culminate in his latest marvel of a film, ‘C’mon C’mon‘ (2021) starring Joaquin Phoenix, and largely based on Mills’ observations of what it means to raise a child in today’s world. Told in his signature blend of tenderness, melancholy, and style, it gently touches upon an entire palette of modern concerns, weaving our tiny troubles into the larger canvas of society and history.

In tune with Mills’ varied career and the personal tone of his work, this issue contains not one but three very personal conversations, all conducted by close friends and acquaintances of Mike Mills. Part I was conducted by Norwegian filmmaker Joachim Trier about directing personal stories within the larger history of film; Part II with Dutch design studio Experimental Jetset draws the line from Mills’ design work in the 1990s to his films today; while Part III with Canadian singer and pop star Feist explores the making of ‘C’mon C’mon’ up close and the creative process at large.

Graphically, these three conversations are presented in three separate booklets bound into one volume, which is simple and complicated, straightforward and complex all at the same time, and thus very much like Mills’ work, come to think of it.

Available as ever through our online store mono.konsum, or at the trusted book dealer of your choice very soon indeed.

Enjoy and all our best,
mono.kultur

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mono.kultur #50
MIKE MILLS: THE TENDER SPOT
“This is not what I was hoping for, this isn’t the magic I wanted.”

Autumn 2024 / English / 15 x 20 cm / 68 Pages / 3 Booklets bound into one Volume

Interviews by Joachim TrierExperimental JetsetFeist
Works by Mike Mills
Design by mono.studio

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MONO.KLUB #54: MIKE MILLS

Dear Friends,

after an unexpected hiatus of way too long, we return with, believe it or not, mono.kultur #50, dedicated to US film director and designer MIKE MILLS. And no, we’re not sure why this took us so long, or how we got here in the first place.

To celebrate the occasion, please join us for a talk with Mike Mills in person, and a screening of his latest film C’MON C’MON, at the beautiful Open Air Cinema Kreuzberg, on Friday, 09 August 2024.

Starring Joaquin Phoenix and Woody Norman, C’MON C’MON is a sensational and deeply touching road movie of sorts, where a radio journalist finds himself in sudden charge of his 10-year-old nephew, dealing with questions of parenthood, the fragile balance between the generations, and what it means to be alive. All told with the lighthearted melancholy and inimitable style of Mike Mills.

To make it brief: in our humble opinion, C’MON C’MON is one of the best films of the last few years, and we are utterly thrilled to show it in one of our favourite cinemas in Berlin, and have Mike Mills be our guest for a live conversation. So we could not be more excited to celebrate our 50th anniversary issue in this way.

As ever, we look forward to seeing you there.
mono.kultur

Watch the Trailer for C’mon C’mon
Book a Ticket (Scroll down to August 09)

mono.klub #54
MIKE MILLS

Screening of C’MON C’MON
Talk with Mike Mills

Sneak Preview of
mono.kultur #50 Anniversary Edition
MIKE MILLS: THE TENDER SPOT

Friday / 09 August 2024 / 20h45

Open Air Cinema Kreuzberg
Courtyard Kunstquartier Bethanien
Book a Ticket (Scroll down to August 09)

Thank you to DCM Films

MONO.KULTUR #49: SANTIAGO SIERRA

Dear Friends,

within the general feeling of unease, we are thrilled to present our new issue mono.kultur #49 with Spanish artist and activist Santiago Sierra, widely acclaimed and frequently despised for his controversial performances that aim straight for the point where it hurts the most.

Santiago Sierra is perhaps best known for his infamous ‘remunerated actions’, in which he hires the poor and desperate at minimum wage to undertake pointless and degrading tasks. They include prostitutes having a line tattooed across their backs for the price of a shot of heroin; war veterans paid to face a corner of a gallery like scolded school kids; a young boy hired to polish the shoes of visitors during an exhibition opening; and workers tasked with shifting concrete blocks from one end of a space to another, or sitting inside cardboard boxes at a gallery for hours.

Sierra’s remunerated actions are intentionally humiliating, offensive, and arguably immoral, pushing the worlds of art and privilege face first into a nightmarish and desperate reality of the less fortunate. They pose daunting questions about our society from the vantage point of the disadvantaged, where these questions are not merely theoretical, but fundamentally existential. Exploitation is their mortar, despair is their bottom line.

Not surprisingly, Sierra’s works have frequently generated not only consternation and discussion, but public outrage. Again and again, pieces have been removed or cancelled, banned from YouTube, and publicly condemned by politicians and the press. But if anything, the debates around his actions bear testimony to their relentless effectiveness. Condensing complex and charged issues of capitalism, injustice, power, racism, migration, poverty, and greed into minimal and brutal gestures, Sierra’s work maintains that rare and unpredictable capacity to shock.

With mono.kultur, Santiago Sierra talked about the mechanics of exploitation, the price of controversy, and the joy in vandalism.

Visually, the issue was treated with Sierra’s remedy of a quick poison and a slow balm: offering spread after spread of the artist’s works on the surface, each page needs to be unfolded to reveal context and conversation. mono.kultur #49 comes entirely in black and white: a magazine as a dirty marvel.

In short, a highly entertaining and provocative read for darkening days. Available as ever through our online store mono.konsum, or at the trusted book dealer of your choice very soon indeed.

Enjoy and all our best,
mono.kultur

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mono.kultur #49
SANTIAGO SIERRA: ANTI AVARICE ACTS
“I am just showing a spark of he persistent evil that is out there.”

Autumn 2021 / English / 15 x 20 cm / 56 Pages / 14 Fold-Outs

Interview by Guillermo Espinosa
Works by Santiago Sierra
Design by mono.studio

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MONO.KULTUR #48: EYAL WEIZMAN / FORENSIC ARCHITECTURE

Dear Friends,

in this strange year of a global pandemic, race riots, and an increasingly toxic discourse in politics and society, our new issue couldn’t come more timely, featuring Eyal Weizman, the outspoken founder of Forensic Architecture.

Made up of architects, lawyers, journalists, scientists, designers, and more, Forensic Architecture is part investigative research lab, human rights activism hub, political think tank, journalism bureau, artists’ collective, and detective agency. Based at Goldsmiths, University of London, the group investigate the wider repercussions of human rights and environmental violations by the means of architectural thinking. In 10 years of work, they have researched illegal detention sites in Cameroon, examined police shootings in Chicago and elsewhere, modelled a prison in Syria using victims’ memories of sound, and digitally recreated the fires at Grenfell Tower in London. At its forefront is Eyal Weizman, a British Israeli architect.

Born in 1970 in Haifa, Weizman studied at the Architectural Association in London before gaining international recognition with an exhibition of models of Jewish settlements built in the occupied Palestinian territories. The work spoke of his projects to come: of his use of architecture as a means of investigation, and refusal to be silenced by those in a position of power.

Forensic Architecture has since used a range of pioneering techniques, from reading the ‘fingerprints’ of smoke clouds left behind by missile strikes, to programming algorithms to sift through thousands of online videos. Their research is used mainly as evidence in court cases and tribunals, but has also leaked into the public spheres of museums and art exhibitions – including their contribution to last year’s Whitney Biennial in New York, where they exposed the vice chair of the Whitney board as owner of Safariland, a corporation earning their fortunes with the manufacturing of ‘less-lethal weapons’.

With mono.kultur, Eyal Weizman talked about obsessing over split seconds, information as a form of power, and the smell of tear gas.

The issue comes bursting at the seams with content, featuring one of our longest interviews yet, as well as dozens of projects by Forensic Architecture, all extensively explained and illustrated.

In short, mono.kultur #48 tackles plenty of contemporary issues highly relevant this of all years. Available as ever through our online store mono.konsum, or at the trusted book dealer of your choice very soon indeed.

Enjoy and all our best,
mono.kultur

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mono.kultur #48

EYAL WEIZMAN / FORENSIC ARCHITECTURE: EVERYTHING RECORDS
“The secret is already out there, if you know how to look.”

Autumn 2020 / English / 15 x 20 cm / 44 Pages

Interview by Freya Marshall
Works by Forensic Architecture
Design by Hui Yeon Hwang

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50 IS ONLY A NUMBER

Happy anniversary to ECM records for an astounding 50 years of exploring and recording new music. The legendary label from Munich which redefined jazz and contemporary classic music with milestone records by the likes of Keith Jarrett or Arvo Pärt feels as age- and timeless as ever, so 50 somehow comes as a surprise – as we guess it always does. If you are nearby, catch their annivesary events in San Franciso, New York, Milan, Brussels or Warsaw – failing that, take some time out to relisten to Keith Jarrett’s The Köln Concert, or reread our interview with ECM’s mastermind Manfred Eicher, still available at mono.konsum.

MONO.KULTUR #47: IRIS VAN HERPEN

Dear Friends,

‘Haute couture’s chief scientist’, ‘sorceress of style’, ‘avant-garde technologist’ are just some of the terms the press have used to describe the extraordinary Dutch fashion designer Iris van Herpen. Having launched her eponymous label just over a decade ago, Iris van Herpen soon gained widespread attention for her futuristic, otherworldly creations. Whether developing 3D printed dresses, materials grown by the forces of magnetism, or clothes mimicking the different states of water: her collections frequently combine cutting-edge technologies with traditional craftsmanship, fusing artistry with sheer inventiveness. The results are, quite simply, spectacular.

Iris van Herpen’s designs are driven by her curiosity beyond fashion, drawing from disciplines like architecture, science, and technology. She has worked with numerous specialists and artists, created costumes for the Paris Opera, and exhibited her work at institutions like the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. She developed dresses for Tilda Swinton, Solange, and Björk, while also conversing with scientists at CERN, the European Organisation for Nuclear Research, on her constant quest to develop new materials. It is an open-ended approach of collaboration and experiment, of channeling different influences and disciplines into a vision that is wide open and singular all at the same time.

In a thrilling and expansive conversation with mono.kultur, Iris van Herpen talked about fashion as a form of art, the inspirations of lucid dreaming, and the exquisite sensation of skydiving.

The issue presents a small retrospective of a decade of Iris van Herpen’s designs with images by some of the luminaries of contemporary fashion photography, including Inez & Vinoodh, Juergen TellerEllen von Unwerth, and Nick Knight. And since everything is related, we let ourselves be inspired by Iris’ multi-dimensional design practice, manipulating the very paper the issue is printed on, with each page cut away to reveal slivers of what is lying underneath.

In short, mono.kultur #47 makes for inspired reading, if you don’t mind us saying so. Available as ever through our online store mono.konsum, or at the trusted book dealer of your choice very soon indeed.

Enjoy and all our best,
mono.kultur

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mono.kultur #47
IRIS VAN HERPEN: THE UNKNOWNNESS OF EVERYTHING
“We’re living in the alchemist’s dream right now.”

Summer 2019 / English / 15 x 20 cm / 48 Pages / Pages trimmed to different sizes

Interview by Charmaine Li
Photography by Mathieu CesarRobert ClarkBryan Huynh; Inez & Vinoodhioulex; Nick KnightLuigi & Iango; Jean-Baptiste Mondino; Armin MorbachPetrovsky & RamoneWarren du Preez & Nick Thornton JonesRonald StoopsEmma SummertonSølve Sundsbø; Juergen Teller; Ellen von UnwerthDuy VoMichel Zoeter
Design by mono.studio

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ALTERNATIVES IN PRINT: PARTNERS

In our distracted times, where we perform on multiple levels simultaneously but lack presence on all of them, a magazine like Partners makes perfect sense. Dedicated to real relationships in the real world, printed on real paper, Partners examines the ties that make up the fabric of our lives: our relations to family, friends, partners. Launched with a cover story on Juergen Teller and his son Ed, the just released second issue talks to AA Bronson and his partner, or New York film makers the Safdie Brothers. Coming from the former editors of hugely revered, now sadly defunct fashion bible HugePartners looks just as impeccable and reads beautifully on an intimate footing. ‘A magazine about how having a bond makes for much better outcome,’ they say, and who would want to argue with that.

MONO.KULTUR #47 / SOUNDBITE 03

Forthcoming very soon indeed: our new issue mono.kultur #47 entering the world of high-end fashion.

BERLIN TEXTILES

It’s the last two days you can dig into the Berlin takeover at Everpress, a charming sort-of-like Kickstarter start-up for T-shirts from London. The idea is based on a similar principle: you can upload any design you want to see printed on a T, rally your friends and the rest of the world into ordering one, and Everpress will take care of everything else. Sounds too easy to be true? See for yourself: Ongoing is the current Berlin takeover campaign with designs from more than 40 artists hand-picked by Everpress, ending this Sunday. And ending means ending, for good.

MONO.KULTUR #47 / SOUNDBITE 02

At the printers: mono.kultur #47, indeed.