The Demise of Alice: A New Book from Dissolve Publishing

The Demise of Alice: A New Book from Dissolve Publishing

Dissolve is pleased to share the release of our most recently printed book, The Demise of Alice by Evelyn Grace Vex. Vex is the pen name of Grace Hannah Perez, an author and artist from Southern California. The novel—a noir mystery set against the backdrop of New Orleans in the late 1920s—was edited by Christopher Squier and Jackie Valle and published by Dissolve in hardcover in February 2024.

Read More

Masquerading Pavilions and Asafo Flags: Na Chainkua Reindorf and Simone Leigh

Masquerading Pavilions and Asafo Flags: Na Chainkua Reindorf and Simone Leigh

Artist and Dissolve contributor Na Chainkua Reindorf represented Ghana in last summer’s Venice Biennale as part of the exhibition Black Star – The Museum as Freedom. Her installation transformed the architecture of the pavilion into a mythic garment of glass and plastic beads, fiberglass, and steel cabling, weaving together West African masquerade traditions with concepts of bodily autonomy and adornment. In a related gesture, artist Simone Leigh disguised the US pavilion’s neoclassical columns and brick façade in a hybrid form of architecture-as-garment based in the traditions of Guinean ritual dress and the Paris Colonial Exposition of 1931. In combination, the two artists highlight the critical and ambiguous functions of masquerade to tackle issues of authority, sovereignty, myth, and scale.

Read More

Where the Anthropocene turns obscure, an essay by Christopher Squier

Where the Anthropocene turns obscure, an essay by Christopher Squier

Dissolve invites you to consider the dirt and grease that comprise much of the matter by which industrial and postindustrial landscapes are made. In “The Anthrobscure: Earthworks, Coal Mines, and Michel Gérard’s Geological Investigations of the Underground,” Christopher Squier uses the “Anthrobscure” as a framework for examining artworks that operate outside of the often pristine landscapes of today’s Land Art destinations. The essay rearticulates the Anthropocene as a visual experience which moves one toward obscurity; we are in an optically-centered era that employs strategies of obfuscation to cover, stratify, and sanitize its contaminated landscapes.  

Read More

COVID-19 and Immersive Installation: Annette Messager’s “Penetrables” by Kathryn Barulich

COVID-19 and Immersive Installation: Annette Messager’s “Penetrables” by Kathryn Barulich

As we enter another year, Dissolve invites you to partake in Annette Messager’s work and reflect on the flesh, marrow, and sinew existing at the interior of life. Messager’s immersive installation Penetration brings the beholder inside of the body into a forest of organs. The work takes up the iconography of anatomical illustration, a specific tradition of knowledge production that calls for re-examination considering our recent and ongoing experience of the COVID-19 pandemic, and, more specifically, the imaging of the virus. In this essay, Kathryn Barulich interrogates how the body and selfhood might be conceived of differently.

Read More

"Boys Fight," a poem by Marina Tëmkina with images by Michel Gérard

"Boys Fight," a poem by Marina Tëmkina with images by Michel Gérard

Dissolve is pleased to announce the online publication of Marina Tëmkina’s poem “Boys Fight.” Here, one finds a taxonomy of masculinity in Tëmkina’s inventory of big boys, old boys, mainstream boys, golden boys, and girls who look up to boys—all combative, doing intellectual battle, raging and sparring, and driven. Tëmkina’s lines are paired with the mixed-media drawings of Michel Gérard, which take their cue from an illustration of boxing techniques in the Nouveau Petit Larousse Illustré, a popular and practical French-language encyclopedic dictionary first published in 1905. Read the announcement here.

Read More

The Bureau of Longitudes Restored

The Bureau of Longitudes Restored

We’re excited to announce that The Bureau of Longitudes ‘Volume I’ has been archived online at Dissolve’s main site. As many of us emerge from our slumbers and the isolation of the past few years, Dissolve has been busy. We’ve taken this period to resurface our 2016-2018 archive of writing, includingThe Bureau of Longitudes . Read this volume under our “Past Issues.”

Read More

The Bureau of Longitudes: Call for Submissions

The Bureau of Longitudes: Call for Submissions

The Bureau of Longitudes is a new office of Dissolve: a site for archiving accounts of place in various languages, organized by each topic’s degrees of longitude. Working with editors based in San Francisco and Mexico City, the Bureau is interested in alternative approaches to cartography and place-making (i.e. affective, nonvisual, Marxist, feminist, queer).

Read More

Missive from Mexico City: Dissolve at the ELSE Foundation

Missive from Mexico City: Dissolve at the ELSE Foundation

Direct from the ELSE Foundation’s symposium at Casa Maauad in Mexico City. As part of our presentation, we shared an evocative video piece from our interview with curator Shaghayegh Cyrous for Trace, Shirin Abedinirad and Dionne Lee’s video Before Getting on With the World Again, which shows clouds merging and crossing through each other above two disparate points on the globe, Tehran (Iran) and Oakland, California (US). We also shared a poem by Moira Roth, written in English and translated into Spanish for our fifth issue on Cartographies.

Read More

Announcement: Dissolve to participate in ELSE Foundation Symposium, Mexico City

Announcement: Dissolve to participate in ELSE Foundation Symposium, Mexico City

Dissolve is thrilled to join the Transart Institute for Creative Research and the ELSE Foundation in their symposium on contemporary approaches to cartography and global entanglement. The symposium will take place at Casa Maauad in Mexico City on January 13 to 14, 2018 and will culminate with an issue of ELSE Journal. We invite you to join us.

Read More

Issue 5: Mapping the Unmappable / Mapeando lo intrazable

Issue 5: Mapping the Unmappable / Mapeando lo intrazable

Mapping the Unmappable / Mapeando lo intrazable is the result of a particular collaboration across geographic and linguistic lines. Bogotá-based editor, Juan Pablo Pacheco, worked with three distinct Colombian voices, while Dissolve worked with three voices based, more or less, in the Bay Area. All of the articles, published in both Spanish and English, have been translated in order to compile two iterations of the issue, mirroring each another—with both Spanish and English texts.

Read More