Series Four

Series Four

Jean-François Magre
A Parent's Guide To Raising Apocalypse Kids

The world of childhood builds a lot of rough drafts and (sand) castles but everything is swept away by the passage to adulthood. This sequence of collages presents a reversed view, and is intended to be a reassuring and positive guide for parents.

(A5, 16 pages, soft cover, staple-bound)


Joe Marsh
Moo-Ha-Ha

Moo-Ha-Ha finds humour in the horrors of our expressions of wealth, ownership and transaction with the natural world. It presents a visual and aural network of fragmented voices including cows; sheep; the wide-eyed crypto-Pollyanna; the reluctant young shepherd; horses; bears; the spirits of the sea.

(A5, 16 pages, soft cover, staple-bound)


Anna Reckin
Lavender and other colours

These poems explore perfume’s hybridity – how it engages with the natural world
while also being highly synthesised – with colour used as referent and filter to
negotiate its many layers.

(A5, 16 pages, soft cover, staple-bound)


Ryan Ormonde
Sugabear

Sugabear comprises two pieces, 'Sugababes Paradox' and 'Pipaluk and the Frogspawn'. Both are concerned with belonging: inclusion and exclusion. They are also both fixated on chronology and fact, treating pop-cultural events and trivia as important psychic markers in their respective quests for understanding.

(A5, 16 pages, soft cover, staple-bound)


NaoKo TakaHashi
In the Middle of the Wind

This work pushes the boundaries between text and visual artwork in writing. The work is to be activated by multiple voices in a form of live performance as well as in a form of writing.

(A5, 16 pages, soft cover, staple-bound)