Ecoes Issue 6
Ecoes Issue 6
Ecoes Issue 6
Ecoes Issue 6
Ecoes Issue 6
Ecoes Issue 6
Ecoes Issue 6

Ecoes Issue 6

Regular price £12.00 Sale

Ecoes, the magazine about ‘art in the age of pollution’, launches a new trajectory for the Sonic Acts Press. Founded in 2021 and currently in its fourth issue, Ecoes is published twice a year and presents artworks engaging with the past, future or afterlives of environmental harm, toxicity and waste.

"Featuring:
Adriana Knouf, Annika Kappner, Anton Spice, Arjuna Neuman, Denise Ferreira da Silva, Astrida Neimanis, David Abram, Elena Khurtova, Anika Schwarzlose, Elvia Wilk, Francois J. Bonnet, Hannah Pezzack, Juan Arturo García, Lukas Marxt, Maïté Moloney, Margarida Mendes, Margarita Osipian, Maud Seuntjens, Minji Kim, Pedro Matias, Ren Ewart, Sally-Jane Norman, Sasha Litvintseva, Beny Wagner, Susan Schuppli, Tarek Atoui, Kristina Andersen, Yeon Sung

Published to accompany the 30th anniversary edition of the Sonic Acts Biennial, Ecoes #6 draws inspiration from the landmark book, The Spell of the Sensuous (1996), authored by the ecologist and philosopher David Abram. Under this spell, the magazine explores the web of relations – experienced and perceived through the ‘sensuous body’ – that evoke our rootedness in the larger ecology of earth beings. Incorporating theorists, artists, musicians, and performers who are featured as part of the Sonic Acts Biennial 2024, including a text by Abram himself, Ecoes #6 centres on the role of intuition and sensing. Fascinating interviews, evocative visual contributions, and prosaic essays envision the body as an open, fluid, and porous entity, with boundaries like membranes, forming a surface of metamorphosis and exchange. A portmanteau of ‘ecology’ and ‘echoes’, Ecoes is a bi-annual magazine about ‘art in the age of pollution’. Showcasing compelling artistic and critical perspectives that engage with the past, future, or afterlives of environmental harm, toxicity, extraction, and waste, the magazine unpacks alternatives to the anthropocentric perspective that approaches the nonhuman as a resource."