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COLLAGE ON VIEW Many Worlds Are BornAt 516 ARTS in Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA, 19 February-14 May 2022. “Many Worlds Are Born” is the first of two exhibitions that look at how the divergent histories of race, conflict, and colonialism in New Mexico inform how we imagine our futures. Curated by Ric Kasini Kadour and Alicia Inez Guzmán, PhD, among the artworks on view is collage by Jeanna Penn (image here) and an in-camera collage by EveNSteve. MORE |
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FROM KOLAJ 34 Wild Goddess OracleBy Amy Zerner and Monte Faber. Quarto, 2021. Wild Goddess Oracle features 52 illustrated cards done in Amy Zerner’s signature style, along with a guidebook by Monte Farber, that explore the mysteries of the universe outside and within through the power of goddess archetypes. This will help you expand your practice of self-discovery and empowerment. MORE LAST CHANCE TO SUBSCIBE |
FROM THE ARTIST DIRECTORY A Woman of Passion & PurposeRialto, California, USA. US Air Force Veteran Yvonne Coleman Burney writes, "There are many subjects in which I can express my art, but I choose to express it right here and right now in love, making it all about the beautiful women and the qualities they possess and bring to the world rather than the injustice and racism that is so evident today still. For me, nothing has changed since the fifties in which I grew up. But now in my mind and spirit, I can paint all that is beautiful to me instead of the things that cause us pain and distance. My only desire is to make a difference through a creative venue that will someday leave a mark that cannot be erased." MORE |
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COLLAGE ON VIEW This Color Reminds Me of YouErin McCluskey Wheeler at the Creighton Lied Art Gallery in Omaha, Nebraska, USA through 1 March 2022. “This Color Reminds Me of You” is a collaborative collage project with Creighton students and artist Erin McCluskey Wheeler, along with Wheeler’s own works. McCluskey Wheeler makes artwork about memory, language and color. McCluskey Wheeler is the 2022 World Collage Day Poster Artist. MORE |
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FROM THE ARTIST DIRECTORY The Cracks in the MoldingTwentynine Palms, California, USA. L.I. Henley became attracted to the risk, disappointment, and surprise of mixed media, writing, "I like the mess. The shards. The cracks in the molding. The faces hidden in the walls and bushes. The times, too, when the piece doesn’t move for days and I stare and stare, waiting to learn what it wants to become...Many of my pieces use erasure, blackout, and other techniques to create small poems or mantras that lift female-identifying persons up out of the mire of stereotypical domestic captivity and reaffirm their individuality and potency." MORE |
CALL FOR ARTISTS Todo Loco IVDeadline: Friday, 18 March 2022. Australian and international artists are invited to propose collage-based artworks (digital, analog or moving image) for inclusion in the fourth edition of Todo Loco. The exhibition is produced and curated by 2020 World Collage Day poster artist Emma Anna. The exhibition will pop up in a series of shopfront display spaces across Frankston, a suburb of Melbourne, Australia, from late April through to mid-May 2022 coinciding with World Collage Day 2022. MORE Save the Date: |
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COLLAGE ON VIEW Fever DreamSharon Shapiro at Garvey | Simon in New York, New York, USA through 16 June 2022. Sharon Shapiro's “Fever Dream” includes a selection of large-scale paintings and intimate collage work. Shapiro draws on her experience growing up female in the American South as fodder for her imagery. “Fever Dream” is at once narrative and enigmatic, presenting a contemporary viewpoint on feminism and commentary on racial and climate crisis. Shapiro was profiled by Elyana Shamselangeroodi in Kolaj 32. MORE |
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Current Issue |
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Our goal with every issue is that Kolaj Magazine is essential reading for anyone interested in the role of contemporary collage in art, culture, and society. We not only hope you enjoy the articles and images in Kolaj 34, we hope it leads you to asking great questions. |
PRINT MAGAZINE Kolaj 34From Rockwall, Texas to Belarus to Dublin, Ireland, Kolaj 34 offers an international view of collage. In this issue we look at how the medium is being used to critique fashion advertising, build community, and investigate Black, Victorian spirituality. Writers wrestle with ideas about illusionary spaces, the psychology of the creative process, and concepts that expand our understanding of collage. Each issue of Kolaj Magazine shows how collage artists are making their way through the world. International in scope, we explore all aspects of collage and its impact on society and culture. MORE |
Recent Publications |
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ORDER A COPYThe exhibition, "Empty Columns Are a Place to Dream" is on view at the Knoxville Museum of Art until February 19, 2022. MORE
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BOOK Empty Columns Are a Place to DreamA companion book to the project of the same name, Ric Kasini Kadour unpacks what monuments are and their role in our communities. He takes the reader on a tour from the Megalithic Temples of Malta to Brú na Bóinne in Ireland to the Confederate monuments of Obion County, Tennessee to the empty column in the center of Birr, County Offaly, Ireland. Kadour asks us to consider monuments as sites of collective memory and as places to reflect upon history, even when that history is false or misleading. He then shows us what happens when collage artists reimagine these spaces as sites of truth and reconciliation. The book features the collages of eighteen international artists made a series of collages that reimagined the empty column in the center of Birr, County Offaly, Ireland, which, from 1747 to 1915, commemorated the Duke of Cumberland's 1745 victory over the Scots at Culloden, as 21st century beacons of hope and reconciliation. MORE |
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COLLAGE BOOK Tissue Box:
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COLLAGE BOOK transitional MOMENTStransitional MOMENTS: restoring equilibrium through the art of collage includes one hundred collages selected from over 2000 submissions created from 600 collage packets sent to artists around the world for World Collage Day 2021 by the Arizona Collage Collective. transitional MOMENTS "reflects our current state of uncertainty as we wrestle with feeling constrained, disoriented and suspended in air between what was and what will be. Yet, these thresholds, unsettling as they are, can be spaces of great creativity and transformation," writes ACC's Suzanne Winkel. MORE |
NEW BOOK Oh, Money! Money!
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BOOK Radical ReimaginingsThe curators of the 96-page book invited artists who use collage in their practice to put forward a work of art that offers a visual narrative that speaks to the unprecedented change unfolding in 2020. An essay by Ric Kasini Kadour reflects upon collage's unique ability to imagine new realities. Forty artists from nine countries and multiple Indigenous peoples—Salish-Kootenai/Métis-Cree/Sho-Ban, Tlingit/Nisga’a, Oglala/Lakota, and Seneca Nation—offer a variety of perspectives. The voices of Black, Latinx, Native, and white Americans mingle with those from Chile, Colombia, Mexico, Peru, Argentina, Canada, France, and Germany. Artwork is accompanied by a statement in which the artists describe how they want to reimagine the world. MORE |
BOOK Collage Magic
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BOOK Revolutionary PathsWhen the collage is presented in exhibition, it is often done so without the critical framework granted other mediums. In "Revolutionary Paths: Critical Issues in Collage", exhibition curator Ric Kasini Kadour presents examples of collage that represent various aspects and takes on the medium. Each work in the exhibition represents the potential for deeper inquiry and further curatorial exploration of the medium. MORE |
BOOK Cultural DeconstructionsCollage is unique as a medium in that it uses as its material artifacts from the world itself. To harvest those fragments, the artist must first deconstruct culture; they must select, cut, and remove the elements they do not wish to use and then reconstruct work that tells a new story. In "Cultural Deconstructions: Critical Issues in Collage", exhibition curator Ric Kasini Kadour presents examples of collage artists who are deconstructing identity as a way to critique culture. MORE |
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BOOK The Money $how: Cash, Labor, Capitalism & CollageThe Money $how juxtaposes contemporary artwork against fragments of history and literature as a way of showing how collage can help us deconstruct culture and understand the world differently. Artists collage dollar bills into flowers and mine material remnants to tell stories about home economics. MORE |
SPECIAL EDITION World Collage Day 2021In honour of World Collage Day, May 8, 2021, Kolaj Magazine is releasing a special edition of the magazine. The Special Edition is full of Cut-Out Pages and stories from inspiring collage artists. MORE Note: The World Collage Day Special Edition is not included in a regular Kolaj Magazine subscription. |
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COLLAGE BOOK Unfamiliar Vegetables: Variations in CollageUnfamiliar Vegetables is a collection of collage where each of the fifty artists interpreted, in their own way, Carlotta Bonnecaze’s 1892 Carnival float design Familiar Vegetables. Project organizer Christopher Kurts observed, “Unfamiliar Vegetables is an experiment in controlled chaos….tiny variations within each artist’s creative sphere accumulate until the outcomes are as unique as the people creating them.” MORE |
COLLAGE COMMUNITIES The International Directory of Collage CommunitiesThe 104-page book is a survey of collage networks, guilds, communities, and projects as well as online efforts and groups focused on collage research. For each community, the directory presents their key activities, mission, how to join, and a bit of their history. Copious images illustrate the book. MORE |
Our goal with every issue is that Kolaj Magazine is essential reading for anyone interested in the role of contemporary collage in art, culture, and society. Each issue of Kolaj Magazine is dedicated to reviewing and surveying contemporary collage with an international perspective. We are interested in collage as a medium, a genre, a community, and a 21st century art movement. Don't miss out! Get it in your mailbox! |
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How to Get A Copy of KolajWe offer three options to get Kolaj Magazines and Publications. |
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About Kolaj MagazineKolaj Magazine is a quarterly, printed, art magazine reviewing and surveying contemporary collage with an international perspective. We are interested in collage as a medium, a genre, a community, and a 21st century art movement. Kolaj is published in Montreal, Quebec by Maison Kasini. Visit Kolaj Magazine online. WEBSITE | ARTIST DIRECTORY | SHOP About Kolaj InstituteThe mission of Kolaj Institute is to support artists, curators, and writers who seek to study, document, & disseminate ideas that deepen our understanding of collage as a medium, a genre, a community, and a 21st century movement. We operate a number of initiatives meant to bring together community, investigate critical issues, and raise collage’s standing in the art world. ABOUT | PROGRAMS | PUBLICATIONS | NEWS | SUPPORT |
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Kolaj Magazine. info@kolajmagazine.com |
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