https://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/api.php?action=feedcontributions&user=InvisibleFriend&feedformat=atomZineWiki - User contributions [en]2024-03-28T18:51:43ZUser contributionsMediaWiki 1.35.1https://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=My_Comrade&diff=218226My Comrade2024-03-26T23:41:47Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''My Comrade''' is a [[zine]] published and edited by Linda Simpson. <br />
<br />
The first issue of ''My Comrade'' appeared in New York City in 1987. The front cover featured artist and performer Tabboo! with a machine gun and the slogan "Gay Lib!". The second issue appeared in Spring 1988. Issue 9 was released in Summer 1992. Eleven issues were published until 1994. The magazine covered the LGBTQ scene in new York City, particularly the nightlife and drag performers. Each issue featured illustrations, photo spreads, nightlife photos, English and Spanish comic book strips, personal essays, and interviews. <br />
<br />
The flip side of the magazine was titled "Sister" and featured the women involved in the LGBTQ scene in New York City. <br />
<br />
Contributors of photography included David Armstrong, John Boyer, Henry Connell, Keith Kotick, Robbie Lourenco, Jack Pierson, Paul Teeling, Michael Wakefield, and Ande Whyman. Contributors of art included Keith Haring, and Stephen Tashjian AKA Tabboo!. Contributors of writing included Endive, Katie Krocodile, Mona Feigenbaum, and Linda Simpson, among others.<br />
<br />
Articles, photos and essays featured local and international personalities such as Lady Bunny, Fidel Cortez, Miss Demeanor, Pat Field, Mona Foot, Liz Foris, Sukhreet Gabel, Gretchen Gooden, Gregg Hubbard, [[G.B. Jones]], DJ Keoki, Lisa Lederer, Lipsynka, Page, Faux Pas, Ru Paul, Hapi Phace, Sweetie, Madge Thompson, and others. <br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]]<br />
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]<br />
[[Category:New York Zines]]<br />
[[Category:1980's publications]]<br />
[[Category:1990's publications]]<br />
[[Category:Queer]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=My_Comrade&diff=218225My Comrade2024-03-26T23:40:52Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''My Comrade''' is a [[zine]] published and edited by Linda Simpson. <br />
<br />
The first issue of ''My Comrade'' appeared in New York City in 1987. The front cover featured artist and performer Tabboo! with a machine gun and the slogan "Gay Lib!". The second issue appeared in Spring 1988. Issue 9 was released in Summer 1992. Eleven issues were published until 1994. The magazine covered the LGBTQ scene in new York City, particularly the nightlife and drag performers. Each issue featured illustrations, photo spreads, nightlife photos, English and Spanish comic book strips, personal essays, and interviews. <br />
<br />
The flip side of the magazine was titled "Sister" and featured the women involved in the LGBTQ scene in New York City. <br />
<br />
Contributors of photography included David Armstrong, John Boyer, Henry Connell, Keith Kotick, Robbie Lourenco, Jack Pierson, Paul Teeling, Michael Wakefield, and Ande Whyman. Contributors of art included Keith Haring, and Stephen Tashjian AKA Tabboo. Contributors of writing included Endive, Katie Krocodile, Mona Feigenbaum, and Linda Simpson, among others.<br />
<br />
Articles, photos and essays featured local and international personalities such as Lady Bunny, Fidel Cortez, Miss Demeanor, Pat Field, Mona Foot, Liz Foris, Sukhreet Gabel, Gretchen Gooden, Gregg Hubbard, [[G.B. Jones]], DJ Keoki, Lisa Lederer, Lipsynka, Page, Faux Pas, Ru Paul, Hapi Phace, Sweetie, Madge Thompson, and others. <br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]]<br />
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]<br />
[[Category:New York Zines]]<br />
[[Category:1980's publications]][[Category:1990's publications]]<br />
[[Category:Queer]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=My_Comrade&diff=218224My Comrade2024-03-26T23:32:23Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''My Comrade''' is a [[zine]] published and edited by Linda Simpson. <br />
<br />
The first issue of ''My Comrade'' appeared in New York City in 1987. The front cover featured Linda Simpson with a machine gun and the slogan "Gay Lib!". The second issue appeared in Spring 1988. Issue 9 was released in Summer 1992. Eleven issues were published until 1994. The magazine covered the LGBTQ scene in new York City, particularly the nightlife and drag performers. Each issue featured illustrations, photo spreads, nightlife photos, English and Spanish comic book strips, personal essays, and interviews. <br />
<br />
The flip side of the magazine was titled "Sister" and featured the women involved in the LGBTQ scene in New York City. <br />
<br />
Contributors of photography included David Armstrong, John Boyer, Henry Connell, Keith Kotick, Robbie Lourenco, Jack Pierson, Paul Teeling, Michael Wakefield, and Ande Whyman. Contributors of art included Keith Haring, and Stephen Tashjian AKA Tabboo. Contributors of writing included Endive, Katie Krocodile, Mona Feigenbaum, and Linda Simpson, among others.<br />
<br />
Articles, photos and essays featured local and international personalities such as Fidel Cortez, Lady Bunny, Pat Field, Mona Foot, Liz Foris, Sukhreet Gabel, Gretchen Gooden, Gregg Hubbard, [[G.B. Jones]], DJ Keoki, Lisa Lederer, Lipsynka, Faux Pas, Ru Paul, Hapi Phace, Sweetie, Madge Thompson, and others. <br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]]<br />
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]<br />
[[Category:New York Zines]]<br />
[[Category:1980's publications]][[Category:1990's publications]]<br />
[[Category:Queer]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=My_Comrade&diff=218223My Comrade2024-03-26T23:12:16Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''My Comrade''' is a [[zine]] published and edited by Linda Simpson. <br />
<br />
The first issue of ''My Comrade'' appeared in New York City in 1987. The front cover featured Linda Simpson with a machine gun and the slogan "Gay Lib!". The second issue appeared in Spring 1988. Issue 9 was released in Summer 1992. Eleven issues were published until 1994. The magazine covered the LGBTQ scene in new York City, particularly the nightlife and drag performers. Each issue featured illustrations, photo spreads, nightlife photos, English and Spanish comic book strips, personal essays, and interviews. <br />
<br />
The flip side of the magazine was titled "Sister" and featured the women involved in the LGBTQ scene in New York City. <br />
<br />
Contributors of photography included David Armstrong, Henry Connell, Keith Kotick, Robbie Lourenco, Jack Pierson, Paul Teeling, Michael Wakefield, and Ande Whyman. Contributors of art included Keith Haring, and Stephen Tashjian AKA Tabboo. Contributors of writing included Katie Krocodile, Mona Feigenbaum, and Linda Simpson, among others.<br />
<br />
Articles, photos and essays featured local and international personalities such as Fidel Cortez, Lady Bunny, Pat Field, Mona Foot, Liz Foris, Sukhreet Gabel, Gretchen Gooden, Gregg Hubbard, [[G.B. Jones]], [[Bruce LaBruce]], Lipsynka, Ru Paul, Hapi Phace, Madge Thompson, and others. <br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]]<br />
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]<br />
[[Category:New York Zines]]<br />
[[Category:1980's publications]][[Category:1990's publications]]<br />
[[Category:Queer]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=My_Comrade&diff=218222My Comrade2024-03-26T23:02:12Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''My Comrade''' is a [[zine]] published and edited by Linda Simpson. <br />
<br />
The first issue of ''My Comrade'' appeared in New York City in 1987. The front cover featured Linda Simpson with a machine gun and the slogan "Gay Lib!". The second issue appeared in Spring 1988. Issue 9 was released in Summer 1992. Eleven issues were published until 1994. The magazine covered the LGBTQ scene in new York City, particularly the nightlife and drag performers. Each issue featured illustrations, photo spreads, nightlife photos, English and Spanish comic book strips, personal essays, and interviews. <br />
<br />
The flip side of the magazine was titled "Sister" and featured the women involved in the LGBTQ scene in New York City. <br />
<br />
Contributors of photography included David Armstrong, Keith Kotick, Robbie Lourenco, Jack Pierson, Michael Wakefield, and Ande Whyman. Contributors of art included Keith Haring, and Stephen Tashjian AKA Tabboo.<br />
<br />
Local and international personalities such as Fidel Cortez, Lady Bunny, Pat Field, Mona Foot, Sukhreet Gabel, [[G.B. Jones]], [[Bruce LaBruce]], Lipsynka, Ru Paul, Hapi Phace, and others. <br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]]<br />
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]<br />
[[Category:New York Zines]]<br />
[[Category:1980's publications]][[Category:1990's publications]]<br />
[[Category:Queer]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=My_Comrade&diff=218221My Comrade2024-03-26T23:01:23Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''My Comrade''' is a [[zine]] published and edited by Linda Simpson. <br />
<br />
The first issue of ''My Comrade'' appeared in New York City in 1987. The front cover featured Linda Simpson with a machine gun and the slogan "Gay Lib!". The second issue appeared in Spring 1988. Issue 9 was released in Summer 1992. Eleven issues were published until 1994. The magazine covered the LGBTQ scene in new York City, particularly the nightlife and drag performers. Each issue featured illustrations, photo spreads, nightlife photos, English and Spanish comic book strips, personal essays, and interviews. <br />
<br />
The flip side of the magazine was titled "Sister" and featured the women involved in the LGBTQ scene in New York City. <br />
<br />
Contributors of photography included David Armstrong, Keith Kotick, Robbie Lourenco, Jack Pierson, Michael Wakefield, and Ande Whyman. Contributors of art included Keith Haring, and Stephen Tashjian AKA Tabboo.<br />
<br />
Local and international personalities such as Fidel Cortez, Lady Bunny, Pat Field, Mona Foot, Sukhreet Gabel, Lipsynka, Ru Paul, Hapi Phace, <br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]]<br />
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]<br />
[[Category:New York Zines]]<br />
[[Category:1980's publications]][[Category:1990's publications]]<br />
[[Category:Queer]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=My_Comrade&diff=218220My Comrade2024-03-26T22:25:02Z<p>InvisibleFriend: Created page with "'''My Comrade''' is a zine published and edited by Linda Simpson. The first issue of ''My Comrade'' appeared in New York City in 1987. The front cover featured Linda Sim..."</p>
<hr />
<div>'''My Comrade''' is a [[zine]] published and edited by Linda Simpson. <br />
<br />
The first issue of ''My Comrade'' appeared in New York City in 1987. The front cover featured Linda Simpson with a machine gun and the slogan "Gay Lib!". The second issue appeared in Spring 1988. Issue 9 was released in Summer 1992. The magizne covered the LGBTQ scene in new York City, particularly the nightlife and drag performers. <br />
<br />
The flip side of the magazine was titled "Sister" and featured the women involved in the LGBTQ scene in New York City. <br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]]<br />
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]<br />
[[Category:New York Zines]]<br />
[[Category:1980's publications]][[Category:1990's publications]]<br />
[[Category:Queer]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Zines_K-O&diff=218219Zines K-O2024-03-26T22:14:18Z<p>InvisibleFriend: /* M */</p>
<hr />
<div>==K==<br />
* [[Kablooie]]<br />
* [[Kachina]]<br />
* [[Kafenio]]<br />
* [[Kalsada Manifesto]]<br />
* [[Kantele]]<br />
* [[The Karley Knews]]<br />
* [[KART: Magazine Of Multiplicity]]<br />
* [[Karyn's Head]]<br />
* [[Kater]]<br />
* [[Kat pounce]]<br />
* [[Katzilla]]<br />
* [[Katzwijm/Katernzine]]<br />
* [[Keep Loving Keep Fighting]]<br />
* [[Keep Yer Kitty Wet]]<br />
* [[Kelp]]<br />
* [[Kelsy]]<br />
* [[The Ken Chronicles]]<br />
* [[Ker-Bloom!]]<br />
* [[Kevas and Trillium]]<br />
* [[Kevin Loves Winnie]]<br />
* [[Khatru]]<br />
* [[Kickstand]]<br />
* [[Kid Nowhere]]<br />
* [[Kid With Camera]]<br />
* [[Kids]]<br />
* [[Kids in Misery]]<br />
* [[Kids Love Weapons]]<br />
* [[Kiki Zine]]<br />
* [[Kill or maim]]<br />
* [[Kill The Robot]]<br />
* [[Kill Your Pet Puppy]]<br />
* [[Killer Nerd]]<br />
* [[The Killer Shrews Present]]<br />
* [[Kimagure No Dowa Hon]]<br />
* [[Kim Chi]]<br />
* [[Kimland]]<br />
* [[Kindergarden moshpit|Kindergarden Moshpit]]<br />
* [[Kinesis]]<br />
* [[King-Cat Comics and Stories]]<br />
* [[The Kingsboro Press]]<br />
* [[Kink]]<br />
* [[Kissoff]]<br />
* [[Kitchen Calendar]]<br />
* [[Kitpaw]]<br />
* [[Kitten Kore]]<br />
* [[Kittums]]<br />
* [[Kitty Litter]]<br />
* [[Klein Bottle]]<br />
* [[Kleine Schwalbe]]<br />
* [[Kluttered Visions]]<br />
* [[The Knarley Knews]]<br />
* [[Knightbeat]]<br />
* [[Knight Shift]]<br />
* [[Knock on Formica]]<br />
* [[Knuckle Sandwich]]<br />
* [[KOBISENA|kOBISENa]]<br />
* [[Koekrant]]<br />
* [[Komakino]]<br />
* [[Koogmo]]<br />
* [[Kook]]<br />
* [[Koo Koo]]<br />
* [[KOOL Man]]<br />
* [[Koukijin teki Shaku]]<br />
* [[Kozak Mamay Zine]]<br />
* [[Krakatoa]]<br />
* [[Die Krake]]<br />
* [[Kratophany]]<br />
* [[Krazy Katlady Cookbook]]<br />
* [[Kreme Koolers]]<br />
* [[KRITIKA]]<br />
* [[Kronos]]<br />
* [[Krunk]]<br />
* [[Kult Princess Suicide]]<br />
* [[Kumquat Popsicle]]<br />
* [[Die Kung-Fu Hund]]<br />
* [[Kurt Cobain Was Lactose Intolerant Conspiracy Zine]]<br />
* [[Kurtz's Lament]]<br />
* [[Kusp]]<br />
* [[Kuti]]<br />
* [[The Kvinde Hader Klub]]<br />
* [[Kweer Corps International]]<br />
<br />
==L==<br />
<br />
* [[La boca]]<br />
* [[La Frontera: The border]]<br />
* [[The La-La Theory]]<br />
* [[La Palabra]]<br />
* [[La Pierna Tierna]]<br />
* [[Laburnum]]<br />
* [[Lackluster]]<br />
* [[Ladies Homewrecking Journal]]<br />
* [[Ladybeard]]<br />
* [[Lady Churchill's Rosebud Wristlet]]<br />
* [[Ladyfriend]]<br />
* [[Lagoon]]<br />
* [[The Land of Conch]]<br />
* [[Language of Street]]<br />
* [[Laralalá]]<br />
* [[Laranja Ziti]]<br />
* [[Larceny]]<br />
* [[Lardass]]<br />
* [[Larry]]<br />
* [[Last Hours]]<br />
* [[Last Known Address]]<br />
* [[The Last Prom]]<br />
* [[Last Resort]]<br />
* [[Last Rites]]<br />
* [[The Last Word]]<br />
* [[Late Night Cuddle Date]]<br />
* [[Laterborn]]<br />
* [[Laughter and the Sound of Teacups]]<br />
* [[Laughing Osiris]]<br />
* [[Layers]]<br />
* [[Lazy Ways]]<br />
* [[The Le Sigh]]<br />
* [[Leading Edge]]<br />
* [[Lean (Potentially Mean) Byzantine Zine]]<br />
* [[Learning Good Consent]]<br />
* [[Learnout]]<br />
* [[Leave Nothing to Chance]]<br />
* [[Leaves]]<br />
* [[Leeking Ink]]<br />
* [[Lefnui]]<br />
* [[Left Back]]<br />
* [[Left Hip]]<br />
* [[Left of the Middle]]<br />
* [[Leisure Centre]]<br />
* [[Lemonade]]<br />
* [[Lena, You Nut!]]<br />
* [[Leper Dance]]<br />
* [[Leprechaun]]<br />
* [[Les Rues Grises (the Grey Streets)]]<br />
* [[Les Spinge]]<br />
* [[Lesley Gore News]]<br />
* [[Lessons in Loneliness]]<br />
* [[Let It Be Known]]<br />
* [[Let’s DIY]]<br />
* [[Let's Just Pretend]]<br />
* [[Let's Start a Fucking Riot Girls!]]<br />
* [[Let's Talk About Consent Baby]]<br />
* [[Lethe]]<br />
* [[Letter Bomb]]<br />
* [[Letters to Boo]]<br />
* [[Letters to Michelle]]<br />
* [[Letters to My Therapist]]<br />
* [[Le Zombie]]<br />
* [[Lezzarine]]<br />
* [[Liar]]<br />
* [[Libel]]<br />
* [[Libelo]]<br />
* [[Library Bonnet]]<br />
* [[Library Library]]<br />
* [[The Library Zine: Extended Hours]]<br />
* [[Lichtwolf]]<br />
* [[Lickety-Split]]<br />
* [[Licking Stars Off Ceilings]]<br />
* [[Lickity-Spit]]<br />
* [[The life and times of Mavis McKenzie]]<br />
* [[The Life and Times of Sheldon Grubs]]<br />
* [[Life During Wartime]]<br />
* [[Life of Buggery]]<br />
* [[Lifestyles of the Bodily Dismembered]]<br />
* [[Light]]<br />
* [[Light into Darkness]]<br />
* [[The Light Is Much Too Bright]]<br />
* [[Lighthouse]]<br />
* [[Lights Go Out]]<br />
* [[Like A Fish Flopping On The Land]]<br />
* [[Likes/Dislikes]]<br />
* [[Lil Berlin]]<br />
* [[Lila]]<br />
* [[Liliane]]<br />
* [[Lilly in Miami]]<br />
* [[Lilly On The Beach]]<br />
* [[Lime]]<br />
* [[Limousine]]<br />
* [[The Lindsay Report]]<br />
* [[Lingua Franca]]<br />
* [[Link]]<br />
* [[Link (UK)]]<br />
* [[Lint]]<br />
* [[Lint Screen]]<br />
* [[Linus Hates Me]]<br />
* [[Lip]]<br />
* [[LISFAN Monthly]]<br />
* [[List]]<br />
* [[Listen to Me Whine]]<br />
* [[The Literary Magazine of Fantasy and Terror]]<br />
* [[Littel Bird]]<br />
* [[Little]]<br />
* [[Little Acorns]]<br />
* [[Littlebrook]]<br />
* [[The Little Corpuscle]]<br />
* [[The Little Golden Book of Angst]]<br />
* [[Little Grandpa]]<br />
* [[Little Lady]]<br />
* [[The little nerd band that could]]<br />
* [[Little Pieces of Tape]]<br />
* [[The Little Sandy Review]]<br />
* [[Little Spanner]]<br />
* [[Lives of the artists]]<br />
* [[Lives of Insects]]<br />
* [[Live Wire]]<br />
* [[Livin' La Vida Autism]]<br />
* [[Living Garbage]]<br />
* [[Living in a Dying World]]<br />
* [[Living Proof]]<br />
* [[Livor Mortis Zine]]<br />
* [[Ln]]<br />
* [[Local anaesthetic]]<br />
* [[Locutus]]<br />
* [[Loki]]<br />
* [[Lollygag]]<br />
* [[Long Ago and Right Now]]<br />
* [[Looking out the window]]<br />
* [[Looking Straight Down]]<br />
* [[Looks Yellow, Tastes red]]<br />
* [[Looney Tunes]]<br />
* [[Lore (Heather/O'Leary)]]<br />
* [[Loserdom]]<br />
* [[Losergurrl]]<br />
* [[Losing Anarchist]]<br />
* [[Lost]]<br />
* [[Lost and Fun]]<br />
* [[Lost Dreams]]<br />
* [[Lost Star Found]]<br />
* [[Lost Tequila Weekend]]<br />
* [[Lost Voices]]<br />
* [[Loud As Hell]]<br />
* [[Love]]<br />
* [[The Love City Success Story]]<br />
* [[Love Fades]]<br />
* [[Love Is...Love Isn't]]<br />
* [[Love like pop]]<br />
* [[Love Makes The World Go Awry]]<br />
* [[Love or Smallpox]]<br />
* [[Love Songs]]<br />
* [[The Lovecraftsman]]<br />
* [[Lovely Ugly Cruel World]]<br />
* [[Love zine]]<br />
* [[Loveseat]]<br />
* [[Low Hug]]<br />
* [[Lower East Side Librarian]]<br />
* [[Lowlife Magazine UK]] <br />
* [[LTTR]]<br />
* [[Ludd's Mill]]<br />
* [[Lugnut]]<br />
* [[Lululand]]<br />
* [[Lump]]<br />
* [[Lumpen]]<br />
* [[Lumpy Head]]<br />
* [[Luna Monthly]]<br />
* [[Lunatic Fringe]]<br />
* [[Lushbaby]]<br />
* [[Lux]]<br />
<br />
==M==<br />
<br />
* [[M is for Monster]]<br />
* [[Maaahgazine]]<br />
* [[Macabre (Canada)]]<br />
* [[Macabre (Scotland)]]<br />
* [[Macabre (U.S.A.)]]<br />
* [[Machinebook]]<br />
* [[Machine-Gun Weilding Zebras from Hell]]<br />
* [[Macrocosm]]<br />
* [[The Mad 3 Party]]<br />
* [[Mad Girl's Lovesong]]<br />
* [[Mad moron's mirror]]<br />
* [[Madamesoille Menstruelle]]<br />
* [[Madflowr]]<br />
* [[Madness Comics]]<br />
* [[MadWoman]]<br />
* [[Magazine]]<br />
* [[The Magazine Formerly Known As...]]<br />
* [[The Magazine of Speculative Poetry]]<br />
* [[Maggot death]]<br />
* [[Magic]]<br />
* [[Magical Guide to Rainbows]]<br />
* [[Magic Realism]]<br />
* [[Magic Shoes]]<br />
* [[Maha]]<br />
* [[Mailman]]<br />
* [[Mainstream]]<br />
* [[Make Me Numb]]<br />
* [[Make Out Club]] (by Ginger Brooks)<br />
* [[The Make Out Club]] (by Trish Kelly)<br />
* [[Make Something]]<br />
* [[Make Your Own Damn Alcohol]]<br />
* [[Making Waves]]<br />
* [[Mama Girl]]<br />
* [[Mamaphiles]]<br />
* [[Manager.]]<br />
* [[Manifesto]]<br />
* [[Mannequin Reject]]<br />
* [[Mannerist]]<br />
* [[Manquer]]<br />
* [[Many Dangers of Crushing Punk Boys]]<br />
* [[The Maple Leaf Rag]]<br />
* [[Marika]]<br />
* [[Marked For Life]]<br />
* [[Marmalade Tears]]<br />
* [[Marvel Tales]]<br />
* [[Mary Had a Mammogram]]<br />
* [[Marriage and Love]]<br />
* [[Massenmörder züchten Blumen]]<br />
* [[Master Flame]]<br />
* [[Master werden ist nicht schwer, Master sein dagegen sehr!]]<br />
* [[The Match]]<br />
* [[Mathom]]<br />
* [[Maverick (Australia)]]<br />
* [[Maverick (UK)]]<br />
* [[Maximum Rock 'N' Roll]]<br />
* [[Maya]]<br />
* [[Maybe]]<br />
* [[MC2]]<br />
* [[The McCoy Tapes]]<br />
* [[McSweeney's]]<br />
* [[The Mean Green Neat-o Zine]]<br />
* [[Meat and Potatoes]]<br />
* [[MeBeMeWeBe]]<br />
* [[Medatrocity]]<br />
* [[Media Blitz]]<br />
* [[Media Whore]]<br />
* [[Medtrek]]<br />
* [[Medusa (zine)]]<br />
* [[Meek Faces and Meek Dreamscapes from Meek Diaries 1995/2005]]<br />
* [[Meeper Blue]]<br />
* [[Meeresbande]]<br />
* [[Megalomania]]<br />
* [[Megamart]]<br />
* [[Meine Zeichen]]<br />
* [[Melange]]<br />
* [[Meltdown]]<br />
* [[Men Speaking Out on Men and Sexism]]<br />
* [[Menagerie]]<br />
* [[Mend My Dress]]<br />
* [[Meniscus]]<br />
* [[The Menstrual Rage]]<br />
* [[MensuHell]]<br />
* [[The Mentor]]<br />
* [[Meridian]]<br />
* [[The Messy Eater]]<br />
* [[Mest]]<br />
* [[Meta]]<br />
* [[Metaluna]]<br />
* [[Metanoia]]<br />
* [[Metasynderyne]]<br />
* [[Metrofan]]<br />
* [[Metronome]]<br />
* [[Michael Welner's Forensic Echo]]<br />
* [[The Middle Earthworm]]<br />
* [[Midnight Fantasies]]<br />
* [[Midnight Shambler]]<br />
* [[Mild Palms]]<br />
* [[Mild Paths]]<br />
* [[Mildred Pierce]]<br />
* [[Milepost One Eleven]]<br />
* [[Milk bar]]<br />
* [[Milkheadz]]<br />
* [[A Million Birthdays]]<br />
* [[Milquetoast]]<br />
* [[Mimosa]]<br />
* [[Mince]]<br />
* [[Mind Clutter]]<br />
* [[Mind Drift]]<br />
* [[The Mind's Construction Quarterly]]<br />
* [[Mindfill]]<br />
* [[Mindsparks]]<br />
* [[Mine]]<br />
* [[Mini Majellen]]<br />
* [[Minimum Rock n Roll]]<br />
* [[The miraculous indulgement of the hairball goulash]]<br />
* [[Mirage]]<br />
* [[Mirror Tricks]]<br />
* [[Misanthrope]]<br />
* [[Misadventures in Lofi]]<br />
* [[The Miscellany]]<br />
* [[Mischa]]<br />
* [[Miserable Mildrid]]<br />
* [[Misha]]<br />
* [[Mishap]]<br />
* [[The Miskatonic]]<br />
* [[Misogynist]]<br />
* [[Miss Mary Mack]]<br />
* [[Miss Sequential]]<br />
* [[Miss Sally's Distillery]]<br />
* [[Mistake]]<br />
* [[Mister Fujiyama Loves You]]<br />
* [[Misuse]]<br />
* [[Mixtape baby]]<br />
* [[Mixtape Zine]]<br />
* [[MLR]]<br />
* [[MM]]<br />
* [[Mnemonic Hi-Fi]]<br />
* [[Modern Nihilist]]<br />
* [[The Moffatt House Abroad]]<br />
* [[Le Moindre]]<br />
* [[Mojo-Navigator Rock & Roll News]]<br />
* [[Mondo Cine]]<br />
* [[Mongrel zine]]<br />
* [[Monk Mink Pink Punk]]<br />
* [[Monkey business skazine]]<br />
* [[monochrom]]<br />
* [[Monozine]]<br />
* [[Mon petit vulcan]]<br />
* [[Mons of Venus]]<br />
* [[Monster of Fun]]<br />
* [[Monsters News]]<br />
* [[The Monthly Monthly]]<br />
* [[Moo Juice]]<br />
* [[Moon Fuzz]]<br />
* [[Moonbroth]]<br />
* [[Moonlight Chronicles]]<br />
* [[Moonshine (Canada)]]<br />
* [[Moonshine (USA)]]<br />
* [[Morbid Outlook]]<br />
* [[Morbidities]]<br />
* [[More Noise and Other Disturbances]]<br />
* [[More On]]<br />
* [[More Signs You Do a Zine]]<br />
* [[More than Default-Male]]<br />
* [[Morgan Anne and the Pirates]]<br />
* [[Morgenmuffel]]<br />
* [[The Morning After]]<br />
* [[Mosh zine]]<br />
* [[Mostly Hand Written]]<br />
* [[Mota]]<br />
* [[MOTE]]<br />
* [[MoTHER (has words…)]]<br />
* [[Mother Rebel]]<br />
* [[Mothers News]]<br />
* [[Motorbooty]]<br />
* [[Motorway Dreamer]]<br />
* [[Mousie]]<br />
* [[MPD For You And Me]]<br />
* [[Mr. Ken's Clean-Air System]]<br />
* [[Mr. Peabody's Soiled Trousers]]<br />
* [[Mrs. Noggle]]<br />
* [[Ms America zine]]<br />
* [[MSF Zine]]<br />
* [[MSFire]]<br />
* [[MSRRT Newsletter]]<br />
* [[Muchacha]]<br />
* [[Muckefuck]]<br />
* [[Mudflap]]<br />
* [[MudgeeNation;]]<br />
* [[Muffin Bones]]<br />
* [[Mujeres y Anarkia]]<br />
* [[Mujinga]]<br />
* [[A Multitude of Voices]]<br />
* [[Multiverse]]<br />
* [[Mumblings from Munchkinland]]<br />
* [[MungBeing]]<br />
* [[Murder Can Be Fun]]<br />
* [[Murtaugh]]<br />
* [[Muse]]<br />
* [[The Muse-An International Journal of Poetry: INDIA]] <br />
* [[Musea]]<br />
* [[The Music Box]]<br />
* [[Music Comics]]<br />
* [[Mustard]]<br />
* [[The Mutant]]<br />
* [[Mutate Zine]]<br />
* [[Mute as bottles]]<br />
* [[Mute Elation]]<br />
* [[Mutiny]]<br />
* [[Mutual Oblivion]]<br />
* [[Muzbo]]<br />
* [[Muzzy]]<br />
* [[Mwaguzi]]<br />
* [[My]]<br />
* [[My Brain Hurts]]<br />
* [[My Comrade]]<br />
* [[My Evil Twin Sister]]<br />
* [[My First Zine]]<br />
* [[My F-Ed Up Apartment Building]] <br />
* [[My Generation Sucks]]<br />
* [[My Heart the Doormat]]<br />
* [[My Last Nerve]]<br />
* [[My Letter to the World]]<br />
* [[My life as a mega-rich bombshell]]<br />
* [[My Life As A Muppet]]<br />
* [[My Mystery Girl]]<br />
* [[My name is not Susan ]]<br />
* [[My Own Make Believe]]<br />
* [[My Small Diary]]<br />
* [[My Summer of Potter]]<br />
* [[My Super Secret]]<br />
* [[MYLXINE]]<br />
* [[Myrddin]]<br />
* [[The Mysterious Doors of Stanley Halls]]<br />
* [[Mystery Date]]<br />
* [[The Mystery Fancier]]<br />
* [[Mythic Delirium]]<br />
* [[Mythologies]]<br />
<br />
==N==<br />
<br />
* [[Nag Nag Nag]]<br />
* [[Namaste]]<br />
* [[Names Have Been Changed]]<br />
* [[Nancy's Magazine]]<br />
* [[Nandu]]<br />
* [[Nargothrond]]<br />
* [[Nappy kill fanzine]]<br />
* [[Napkin News]]<br />
* [[The National Fantasy Fan]]<br />
* [[Native Son]]<br />
* [[Navigator Equator]]<br />
* [[Navy Blue]]<br />
* [[Nay Nay and Thrice Nay]]<br />
* [[Nazgul's Bane]]<br />
* [[The Nearsighted Revolution]]<br />
* [[Necrolatrism]]<br />
* [[Necronomicon]]<br />
* [[Nega-tiva|nega-tiva]]<br />
* [[Negative Capability]]<br />
* [[Negative Print]]<br />
* [[The Nekromantikon]]<br />
* [[Nekudemus]]<br />
* [[The Neighbors]]<br />
* [[Negative Nancy]]<br />
* [[Nemonymous]]<br />
* [[NeoLithic]]<br />
* [[Neology]]<br />
* [[NeonFUSION]]<br />
* [[Nepenthe]]<br />
* [[Nerd Girl]]<br />
* [[Nerf jihad]]<br />
* [[The Nerve]]<br />
* [[Nerve Gardens]]<br />
* [[Neufutur]]<br />
* [[Never Kneel]]<br />
* [[New Canadian Fandom]]<br />
* [[New Clear Life]]<br />
* [[The New England Journal of My Ass]]<br />
* [[The new escapologist]]<br />
* [[New Fandom]]<br />
* [[The New Hieroglyph]]<br />
* [[The New millennial harbinger]]<br />
* [[New Philistine]]<br />
* [[The new pollution]]<br />
* [[New Red Archives]]<br />
* [[The New Wave of Cut & Paste]]<br />
* [[New Wavy Gravy]]<br />
* [[Nexus]]<br />
* [[Nice Catch]]<br />
* [[Nice Places To Live]]<br />
* [[Niekas]]<br />
* [[Nightgaunt]]<br />
* [[Nightly zine]]<br />
* [[The nighttime, sniffling, sneezing, coughing, aching, stuffy-head, fever, so you can rest 'zine]]<br />
* [[Nihilistic News]]<br />
* [[Nipple Hardness Factor]]<br />
* [[Nit wit zine]]<br />
* [[No Apologies]]<br />
* [[No Award]]<br />
* [[No Better Voice]]<br />
* [[Nobody can eat 50 Eggs]]<br />
* [[No Cause For Concern?]]<br />
* [[No Class]]<br />
* [[No Class (Irish zine)]]<br />
* [[Noctulpa]]<br />
* [[Nocturnal Journal]]<br />
* [[No/Division]]<br />
* [[No Ego]]<br />
* [[No Exit]]<br />
* [[No External Compulsion]]<br />
* [[No frills]]<br />
* [[No Gods No Mattress]]<br />
* [[No Idea]]<br />
* [[Noise Level]]<br />
* [[Noise Queen]]<br />
* [[Noisemaker]]<br />
* [[Noise Noise Noise]]<br />
* [[Noisy]]<br />
* [[No KKK No Fascist USA]]<br />
* [[NOLAzine]]<br />
* [[No More Ms. Nice Girl!]]<br />
* [[No name (Lloydved)]]<br />
* [[Nonesuch]]<br />
* [[Nonsensical]]<br />
* [[Noodle]]<br />
* [[Nope!]]<br />
* [[No Pictures]]<br />
* [[No Reason]]<br />
* [[The Norm]]<br />
* [[Normal]]<br />
* [[No Room For Squares]]<br />
* [[North Bi North West]]<br />
* [[North Houston Zine]]<br />
* [[Northbound]]<br />
* [[No Scene Zine]]<br />
* [[Nosedive]]<br />
* [[No Snow Here]]<br />
* [[Nostalgic Boxtops]]<br />
* [[Notes on Anarchism]]<br />
* [[Not Even]]<br />
* [[Not Far Enough]]<br />
* [[Not Guilty]]<br />
* [[Nothing But A Carpet Bag]]<br />
* [[Nothing is Cool]]<br />
* [[Nothing Rhymes]]<br />
* [[Nothing To Declare]]<br />
* [[Not like you]]<br />
* [[Not My Small Diary]]<br />
* [[Not One Of Us]]<br />
* [[Not Sorry]]<br />
* [[Not the Job Hunter]]<br />
* [[Not trying hard enough]]<br />
* [[Not Your Bastard]]<br />
* [[Not Your Bitch]]<br />
* [[The Notional]]<br />
* [[Novacious]]<br />
* [[Now & Then]]<br />
* [[Now I Devour You]]<br />
* [[Now I Don the Mask of Melancholy]]<br />
* [[Now I Write A Dictionary]]<br />
* [[Now Meet Satan]]<br />
* [[Now Read On]]<br />
* [[Now You're Cooking With Food]]<br />
* [[Nova (1930s)]]<br />
* [[Nova (1940s)]]<br />
* [[Nova Wreck]]<br />
* [[Novae Terrae]]<br />
* [[No. Zine]]<br />
* [[Nu Pogodi!]]<br />
* [[Nuances]]<br />
* [[The Nucleus]]<br />
* [[Numb]]<br />
* [[Nuns I've Known]]<br />
* [[Nuts!]]<br />
* [[Nyctalops]]<br />
<br />
==O==<br />
* [[Oblique]]<br />
* [[Oblivion]]<br />
* [[Oblivious Nation]]<br />
* [[Oblong]]<br />
* [[Obscene Emission]]<br />
* [[The ocean roars]]<br />
* [[Octarine]]<br />
* [[Ocular Eclipse]]<br />
* [[ODmagazine]]<br />
* [[ODD]]<br />
* [[OFF-Line]]<br />
* [[Off My Jammy]]<br />
* [[Off the Map]]<br />
* [[Offene Räume]]<br />
* [[Office Supply Junkie]]<br />
* [[The Offset Printing Journal]]<br />
* [[Oh]]<br />
* [[Oh boy]]<br />
* [[Oh Oh Cheri]]<br />
* [[Oh No! The Robot]]<br />
* [[Okay, okay]]<br />
* [[Old Bones]]<br />
* [[Old Crow Review]]<br />
* [[The Old Detective's Watering Hole]]<br />
* [[Old Toys]]<br />
* [[Old Weird America]]<br />
* [[Ollyollyoxenfree]]<br />
* [[Oma Emde]]<br />
* [[Omega]]<br />
* [[On Edge]]<br />
* [[On Random Hold]]<br />
* [[On Subbing]]<br />
* [[On The 7th Day]]<br />
* [[Once Upon a Haiku]]<br />
* [[One Armed Bastard]]<br />
* [[One Girl]]<br />
* [[One Night Stand]]<br />
* [[One of My Kind]]<br />
* [[One Shot]]<br />
* [[One Solution]]<br />
* [[One Way Ticket]]<br />
* [[Only Piece That You Get]]<br />
* [[Ont Road]]<br />
* [[Oompa! Oompa!]]<br />
* [[Oops, typo]]<br />
* [[Oopsla!]]<br />
* [[Opal Zine]]<br />
* [[Open me up]]<br />
* [[The Opera Glass]]<br />
* [[Opera Vagabond]]<br />
* [[Operation Headrush]]<br />
* [[Operations Manual]]<br />
* [[Opposites Subtract]]<br />
* [[Oppress This]]<br />
* [[Oppression]]<br />
* [[Oppression Song]]<br />
* [[Option Paralysis]]<br />
* [[Opuntia]]<br />
* [[Orange Ghoulius!]]<br />
* [[Orb]]<br />
* [[Orca]]<br />
* [[Orcrist]]<br />
* [[Ordinary Language]]<br />
* [[Ordure]]<br />
* [[Organ & Bongos]]<br />
* [[The Orifice]]<br />
* [[The Original Universe]]<br />
* [[Origins and meaning of WWI]]<br />
* [[Orion]]<br />
* [[Orion's Child Science Fiction & Fantasy Magazine]]<br />
* [[Ormolu]]<br />
* [[Ornithopter]]<br />
* [[O.S.Y. zine]]<br />
* [[Os Positivos]]<br />
* [[OSFS Statement]]<br />
* [[The Ostrich]]<br />
* [[Otaku]]<br />
* [[Other Worlds]]<br />
* [[Our World]]<br />
* [[Out, Damn Spot]]<br />
* [[The Outer Banks]]<br />
* [[The Outhouse]]<br />
* [[The Outlander]]<br />
* [[Outlaw midwives]]<br />
* [[Out of Our]]<br />
* [[Out of our lives]]<br />
* [[Out of Sight]]<br />
* [[Out of the Blue]]<br />
* [[Out of the Closets and Into the Libraries]]<br />
* [[Outpunk]]<br />
* [[Outre (McDaniel)|Outre]]<br />
* [[The Outsider]]<br />
* [[Outworlds]]<br />
* [[Out Your Backdoor]]<br />
* [[Overmatter]]<br />
* [[Override]]<br />
* [[Overspace]]<br />
* [[Owlflight]]<br />
* [[Oxytocic]]<br />
* [[OZ (Australia)]]<br />
* [[Oz (UK)]]<br />
<br />
<br />
{{Title_navigation}}</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Copy_Machine_Manifesto&diff=218218Copy Machine Manifesto2024-03-26T22:11:49Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Copy Machine Manifestos''' was an exhibition of zines by artists at the Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
The exhibition ran from November 17, 2023, till March 31, 2024, and featured hundreds of zines that have been made by artists. The exhibition travels next to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancounver, BC, Canada from May 12 till September 20th, 2024. <br />
<br />
The Vancouver Art Gallery website describes the exhbition in this way: "Artists have harnessed the medium’s essential role in communication and community building and used it to transform material and conceptual approaches to art making across all media. This canon-expanding exhibition documents zines’ relationship to various subcultures and avant-garde practices, from punk and street culture to conceptual, queer and feminist art. It also examines zines’ intersections with other mediums, including collage, craft, film, drawing, painting, performance, photography, sculpture and video. Featuring nearly one thousand zines and artworks by nearly one hundred artists, Copy Machine Manifestos demonstrates the importance of zines to artistic production and its reception across North America."<br />
<br />
Some of the many publications and events featured included: <br />
<br />
*[[Artaud-Mania]]<br />
*[[Beehive]]<br />
*[[Bikini Girl]]<br />
*[[Bikini Kill]]<br />
*[[Brains]]<br />
*[[Chica Loca]]<br />
*[[Chop Suey Spex]]<br />
*[[Dadazine]]<br />
*[[Dirt (Morrisroe and White)]]<br />
*[[Dr. Smith]]<br />
*[[Egozine]]<br />
*[[Evolution of a Race Riot]]<br />
*[[Fag School]]<br />
*[[Farm]]<br />
*[[Fertile LaToyah Jackson]]<br />
*[[Gay Goth Scene]]<br />
*[[The Gentlewomen of California]]<br />
*[[Gunk]]<br />
*[[Homocore]]<br />
*[[I Heart Amy Carter]]<br />
*[[International Graffiti Times]]<br />
*[[J.D.s]]<br />
*[[Joanie4Jackie]]<br />
*[[Just Another Asshole]]<br />
*[[LTTR]]<br />
*[[Mobilivre-Bookmobile]]<br />
*[[Modern Crorrespondence Magazine]]<br />
*[[Mudflap]]<br />
*[[My Comrade]]<br />
*[[Nitrous Oxide]]<br />
*[[NYCS Weekly Breeder]]<br />
*[[Poser]]<br />
*[[Rebel Fux!]]<br />
*[[Schlepp Fanzine]]<br />
*[[Shotgun Seamstress]]<br />
*[[Snarla]]<br />
*[[Thing]]<br />
*[[This Is The Salivation Army]]<br />
*[[Vile]]<br />
*[[Yes, Ms. Davis]]<br />
<br />
The Brooklyn Museum also produced a 448 page catalog book documenting the exhibition which was published and available through book distributors internationally. Fully illustrated with hundreds of zine covers and interiors, alongside work in other media, such as painting, photography, film, video, and performance, the book also features brief biographies for more than 100 zine-makers including Beverly Buchanan, Mark Gonzales, [[G.B. Jones]], Miranda July, Terence Koh, [[LTTR]], Ari Marcopoulos, Mark Morrisroe, [[Raymond Pettibon]], [[Brontez|Brontez Purnell]], Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Kandis Williams. It includes contributions by: Gwen Allen, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tavia Nyong’o, Alexis Salas, and [[Mimi Thi Nguyen]], and cover photo by [[Jena von Brucker]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]<br />
[[Category:Exhibition]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Copy_Machine_Manifesto&diff=218217Copy Machine Manifesto2024-03-26T22:11:32Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Copy Machine Manifestos''' was an exhibition of zines by artists at the Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
The exhibition ran from November 17, 2023, till March 31, 2024, and featured hundreds of zines that have been made by artists. The exhibition travels next to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancounver, BC, Canada from May 12 till September 20th, 2024. <br />
<br />
The Vancouver Art Gallery website describes the exhbition in this way: "Artists have harnessed the medium’s essential role in communication and community building and used it to transform material and conceptual approaches to art making across all media. This canon-expanding exhibition documents zines’ relationship to various subcultures and avant-garde practices, from punk and street culture to conceptual, queer and feminist art. It also examines zines’ intersections with other mediums, including collage, craft, film, drawing, painting, performance, photography, sculpture and video. Featuring nearly one thousand zines and artworks by nearly one hundred artists, Copy Machine Manifestos demonstrates the importance of zines to artistic production and its reception across North America."<br />
<br />
Some of the many publications and events featured included: <br />
<br />
*[[Artaud-Mania]]<br />
*[[Beehive]]<br />
*[[Bikini Girl]]<br />
*[[Bikini Kill]]<br />
*[[Brains]]<br />
*[[Chica Loca]]<br />
*[[Chop Suey Spex]]<br />
*[[Dadazine]]<br />
*[[Dirt (Morrisroe and White)]]<br />
*[[Dr. Smith]]<br />
*[[Egozine]]<br />
*[[Evolution of a Race Riot]]<br />
*[[Fag School]]<br />
*[[Farm]]<br />
*[[Fertile LaToyah Jackson]]<br />
*[[Gay Goth Scene]]<br />
*[[The Gentlewomen of California]]<br />
*[[Gunk]]<br />
*[[Homocore]]<br />
*[[I Heart Amy Carter]]<br />
*[[International Graffiti Times]]<br />
*[[J.D.s]]<br />
*[[Joanie4Jackie]]<br />
*[[Just Another Asshole]]<br />
*[[LTTR]]<br />
*[[Mobilivre-Bookmobile]]<br />
*[[Modern Crorrespondence Magazine<br />
*[[Mudflap]]<br />
*[[My Comrade]]<br />
*[[Nitrous Oxide]]<br />
*[[NYCS Weekly Breeder]]<br />
*[[Poser]]<br />
*[[Rebel Fux!]]<br />
*[[Schlepp Fanzine]]<br />
*[[Shotgun Seamstress]]<br />
*[[Snarla]]<br />
*[[Thing]]<br />
*[[This Is The Salivation Army]]<br />
*[[Vile]]<br />
*[[Yes, Ms. Davis]]<br />
<br />
The Brooklyn Museum also produced a 448 page catalog book documenting the exhibition which was published and available through book distributors internationally. Fully illustrated with hundreds of zine covers and interiors, alongside work in other media, such as painting, photography, film, video, and performance, the book also features brief biographies for more than 100 zine-makers including Beverly Buchanan, Mark Gonzales, [[G.B. Jones]], Miranda July, Terence Koh, [[LTTR]], Ari Marcopoulos, Mark Morrisroe, [[Raymond Pettibon]], [[Brontez|Brontez Purnell]], Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Kandis Williams. It includes contributions by: Gwen Allen, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tavia Nyong’o, Alexis Salas, and [[Mimi Thi Nguyen]], and cover photo by [[Jena von Brucker]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]<br />
[[Category:Exhibition]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Copy_Machine_Manifesto&diff=218216Copy Machine Manifesto2024-03-26T22:11:06Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Copy Machine Manifestos''' was an exhibition of zines by artists at the Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
The exhibition ran from November 17, 2023, till March 31, 2024, and featured hundreds of zines that have been made by artists. The exhibition travels next to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancounver, BC, Canada from May 12 till September 20th, 2024. <br />
<br />
The Vancouver Art Gallery website describes the exhbition in this way: "Artists have harnessed the medium’s essential role in communication and community building and used it to transform material and conceptual approaches to art making across all media. This canon-expanding exhibition documents zines’ relationship to various subcultures and avant-garde practices, from punk and street culture to conceptual, queer and feminist art. It also examines zines’ intersections with other mediums, including collage, craft, film, drawing, painting, performance, photography, sculpture and video. Featuring nearly one thousand zines and artworks by nearly one hundred artists, Copy Machine Manifestos demonstrates the importance of zines to artistic production and its reception across North America."<br />
<br />
Some of the many publications and events featured included: <br />
<br />
*[[Artaud-Mania]]<br />
*[[Beehive]]<br />
*[[Bikini Girl]]<br />
*[[Bikini Kill]]<br />
*[[Brains]]<br />
*[[Chica Loca]]<br />
*[[Chop Suey Spex]]<br />
*[[Dadazine]]<br />
*[[Dirt (Morrisroe and White)]]<br />
*[[Dr. Smith]]<br />
*[[Egozine]]<br />
*[[Evolution of a Race Riot]]<br />
*[[Fag School]]<br />
*[[Farm]]<br />
*[[Fertile LaToyah Jackson]]<br />
*[[Gay Goth Scene]]<br />
*[[The Gentlewomen of California]]<br />
*[[Gunk]]<br />
*[[Homocore]]<br />
*[[I Heart Amy Carter]]<br />
*[[International Graffiti Times]]<br />
*[[J.D.s]]<br />
*[[Joanie4Jackie]]<br />
*[[Just Another Asshole]]<br />
*[[LTTR]]<br />
*[[Mobilivre-Bookmobile]]<br />
8[[Modern Crorrespondence Magazine<br />
*[[Mudflap]]<br />
*[[My Comrade]]<br />
*[[Nitrous Oxide]]<br />
*[[NYCS Weekly Breeder]]<br />
*[[Poser]]<br />
*[[Rebel Fux!]]<br />
*[[Schlepp Fanzine]]<br />
*[[Shotgun Seamstress]]<br />
*[[Snarla]]<br />
*[[Thing]]<br />
*[[This Is The Salivation Army]]<br />
*[[Vile]]<br />
*[[Yes, Ms. Davis]]<br />
<br />
The Brooklyn Museum also produced a 448 page catalog book documenting the exhibition which was published and available through book distributors internationally. Fully illustrated with hundreds of zine covers and interiors, alongside work in other media, such as painting, photography, film, video, and performance, the book also features brief biographies for more than 100 zine-makers including Beverly Buchanan, Mark Gonzales, [[G.B. Jones]], Miranda July, Terence Koh, [[LTTR]], Ari Marcopoulos, Mark Morrisroe, [[Raymond Pettibon]], [[Brontez|Brontez Purnell]], Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Kandis Williams. It includes contributions by: Gwen Allen, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tavia Nyong’o, Alexis Salas, and [[Mimi Thi Nguyen]], and cover photo by [[Jena von Brucker]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]<br />
[[Category:Exhibition]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Johanna_Fateman&diff=218209Johanna Fateman2024-03-16T03:39:01Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div><br />
'''Johanna Fateman''', probably best known as a member of the band Le Tigre, attended Reed College of [[Portland, OR]] -- notorious for academic excellence contrasted with an unconventional grading system -- where, Fateman writes, she "started making a fanzine called [[Snarla]] with my best friend from high school, [[Miranda July]]." <br />
<br />
Fateman went on to pen such titles as [[My Need to Speak on the Subject of Jackson Pollock]], [[The Opposite]] and [[Artaud-Mania]], the latter of which detailed Fateman's hilarious in-class feuds with an abrasive art professor.<br />
<br />
She met [[Kathleen Hanna]] at a Bikini Kill show, and the two became fast friends when Fateman gave Hanna one of her [[zine]]s. Fateman dropped out of Reed and, when Hanna moved to town, they embarked on their first musical collaboration, a band called The Troublemakers, after the film of the same name by [[G.B. Jones]]. The band played often in Portland at basement parties in the house the two women shared, until Fateman moved to New York City to go to school. After Fateman graduated, Kathleen Hanna moved up to the east coast and they formed Le Tigre with Sadie Benning. After the release of the groups's first album Benning left the band and JD Samson filled her place. The band released a number of recordings before going on hiatus in 2006.<br />
<br />
Fateman then began the musical project MEN with JD Samson.<br />
<br />
Johanna Fateman writes for "Bookforum" and ''Artforum'' magazines. In 2013, she wrote an introduction for ''[[The Riot Grrrl Collection]]'', an anthology compiled by Lisa Darms, gathered from the archives of The Fales Library of NYU Riot Grrrl Archives.<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
*[http://www.papermag.com/2013/05/images_from_the_riot_grrrl_col.php '''Johanna Fateman''' on Riot Grrrl zine culture]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zinester|Fateman]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Shotgun_Seamstress&diff=218208Shotgun Seamstress2024-03-16T03:05:33Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Shotgun Seamstress''' is a [[fanzine]] by, for, and about black [[punk]] rockers published by Osa Atoe since 2009. The first six issues are compiled in ''Shotgun Seamstress Zine Collection'', a book published in 2012 by [[Mend My Dress]] Press.<br />
<br />
Description of '''Shotgun Seamstress''' [[zine]] from [https://www.facebook.com/shotgunseamstresszine/ Shotgun Seamstress on Facebook]:<br />
<br />
"Based on the experience of isolation in being one of the only black kids in the punk scene, Shotgun Seamstress exists for those of us who grow up in the margins of subculture. This fanzine proves that punk isn't a 'white thing' through countless examples of intersecting identities and black creativity, mostly within the realm of punk rock. Black folks need DIY culture. That way, we can be encouraged to be active participants and creators instead of passive consumers of corporate culture. Shotgun Seamstress includes tons of interviews with the likes of James Spooner ("Afro-Punk" director), Brontez Purnell, Mick Collins of The Gories, Kali Boyce of Nasty Facts, Trash Kit (UK), DJ Soul Sister, Poly Styrene of X-Ray Spex, and more."<br />
<br />
==Anthology book==<br />
<br />
The first six issues are compiled in ''Shotgun Seamstress Zine Collection''. A first edition was published in 2012 by [[Mend My Dress]] Press.<br />
<br />
A second edition of the book was published as ''Shotgun Seamstress: the complete zine collection'' on November 29, 2022 by Soft Skull Press. To celebrate the launch of the second edition Osa held a panel launch with Osa in discussion from Black zinesters including [[Alex Smith]] ([[Arkdust]]), [[Ray Aggs]] ([[I Trust My Guitar]] zine), [[Ambrose Nzams]] ([[Demystification]] zine) and [[Fabiola Ching]] ([[Hermetic State]]) at the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library in Washington D.C.<br />
<br />
''Shotgun Seamstress'' is one of the titles featured in the 2023-2024 exhibition at Brooklyn Museum devotd to artist-made zines, [[Copy Machine Manifesto]].<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
<br />
* [http://shotgunseamstress.blogspot.com/ Shotgun Seamstress website]<br />
* [https://dclibrary.libnet.info/event/7524994 Anthology second edition launch event information] at DC Public Library website<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:2000's publications]] [[Category:2010's publications]] [[Category:Fanzines]] [[Category:Music Zines]] [[Category:Punk]] [[Category:POC Zine]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Copy_Machine_Manifesto&diff=218207Copy Machine Manifesto2024-03-16T03:04:39Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Copy Machine Manifesto''' was an exhibition of zines by artists at the Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
The exhibition ran from November 17, 2023, till March 31, 2024, and featured hundreds of zines that have been made by artists. The exhibition travels next to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancounver, BC, Canada from May 12 till September 20th, 2024. <br />
<br />
The Vancouver Art Gallery website describes the exhbition in this way: "Artists have harnessed the medium’s essential role in communication and community building and used it to transform material and conceptual approaches to art making across all media. This canon-expanding exhibition documents zines’ relationship to various subcultures and avant-garde practices, from punk and street culture to conceptual, queer and feminist art. It also examines zines’ intersections with other mediums, including collage, craft, film, drawing, painting, performance, photography, sculpture and video. Featuring nearly one thousand zines and artworks by nearly one hundred artists, Copy Machine Manifestos demonstrates the importance of zines to artistic production and its reception across North America."<br />
<br />
Some of the many publications and events featured included: <br />
<br />
*[[Artaud-Mania]]<br />
*[[Beehive]]<br />
*[[Bikini Girl]]<br />
*[[Bikini Kill]]<br />
*[[Brains]]<br />
*[[Chica Loca]]<br />
*[[Chop Suey Spex]]<br />
*[[Dirt (Morrisroe and White)]]<br />
*[[Egozine]]<br />
*[[Evolution of a Race Riot]]<br />
*[[Fag School]]<br />
*[[Farm]]<br />
*[[Fertile LaToyah Jackson]]<br />
*[[Gay Goth Scene]]<br />
*[[The Gentlewomen of California]]<br />
*[[Gunk]]<br />
*[[Homocore]]<br />
*[[I Heart Amy Carter]]<br />
*[[International Graffiti Times]]<br />
*[[J.D.s]]<br />
*[[Joanie4Jackie]]<br />
*[[LTTR]]<br />
*[[Mobilivre-Bookmobile]]<br />
*[[Mudflap]]<br />
*[[Poser]]<br />
*[[Rebel Fux!]]<br />
*[[Schlepp Fanzine]]<br />
*[[Shotgun Seamstress]]<br />
*[[Snarla]]<br />
*[[Thing]]<br />
*[[This Is The Salivation Army]]<br />
*[[Vile]]<br />
*[[Yes, Ms. Davis]]<br />
<br />
The Brooklyn Museum also produced a 448 page catalog documenting the exhibition, Fully illustrated with hundreds of zine covers and interiors, alongside work in other media, such as painting, photography, film, video, and performance, the book also features brief biographies for more than 100 zine-makers including Beverly Buchanan, Mark Gonzales, [[G.B. Jones]], Miranda July, Terence Koh, [[LTTR]], Ari Marcopoulos, Mark Morrisroe, Raymond Pettibon, Brontez Purnell, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Kandis Williams. It includes contributions by: Gwen Allen, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tavia Nyong’o, Alexis Salas, and [[Mimi Thi Nguyen]], and cover photo by [[Jena von Brucker]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]<br />
[[Category:Exhibition]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Schlepp_Fanzine&diff=218206Schlepp Fanzine2024-03-16T03:03:31Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Schlepp Fanzine''' is a [[zine]] by [[Brontez]].<br />
<br />
The first issue of '''Schlepp Fanzine''' was published in Huntsville, Alabama, but by the second issue editor Brontez had moved to Chattanooga, Tennessee. '''Schlepp Fanzine''' is a queer [[punk]] zine, released in the 2000's. Interviews with bands such as The Gossip, Operation Makeout, Stella Marie, Los Rabbi's, and Suckerpunch are featured. Also included is an interview with LadyKilla, the editor of [[Crackwhore]] zine, and an article on the [[DIY]] tape label Stop & Rewind.<br />
<br />
Brontez also writes about what it's like to grow up queer and black in a "hardcore Christian" environment. In articles such as "My Totally Fag-A-Licious Bedroom Dance Party Mixtape" he writes, "All during highschool while all my friends were getting high and pregnant I was in my room dancing to records (LOOOOOOSER!!!)" and, listing his favorite mixtape songs, he says Mixtapes are "a blessing, a curse". He also writes about sharing rides with his "sleazy spoiled brat cousin" and relates how "It is super scary to watch a "certified down N***A speed down the highway while BLASTING country music (like he's ACTUALLY into country music - CREEPY)". The zine winds up with the "Top Ten Makeout Lists" of members of the groups Operation Makeout, Stella Marie, Queerwolf, Manhandlers, and many others.<br />
<br />
Brontez also produced the zine [[Fag School]]. He performed in the band Gravy Train!!!!<br />
<br />
''Schlepp Fanzine'' is one of the titles featured in the 2023-2024 exhibition at Brooklyn Museum devotd to artist-made zines, [[Copy Machine Manifesto]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]] [[Category:2000's publications]] [[Category:Queer]] [[Category: POC Zine]][[category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:Alabama Zines]] [[Category:Tennessee Zines]] [[Category:The South]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Copy_Machine_Manifesto&diff=218205Copy Machine Manifesto2024-03-16T02:58:55Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Copy Machine Manifesto''' was an exhibition of zines by artists at the Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
The exhibition ran from November 17, 2023, till March 31, 2024, and featured hundreds of zines that have been made by artists. The exhibition travels next to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancounver, BC, Canada from May 12 till September 20th, 2024. <br />
<br />
The Vancouver Art Gallery website describes the exhbition in this way: "Artists have harnessed the medium’s essential role in communication and community building and used it to transform material and conceptual approaches to art making across all media. This canon-expanding exhibition documents zines’ relationship to various subcultures and avant-garde practices, from punk and street culture to conceptual, queer and feminist art. It also examines zines’ intersections with other mediums, including collage, craft, film, drawing, painting, performance, photography, sculpture and video. Featuring nearly one thousand zines and artworks by nearly one hundred artists, Copy Machine Manifestos demonstrates the importance of zines to artistic production and its reception across North America."<br />
<br />
Some of the many publications and events featured included: <br />
<br />
*[[Artaud-Mania]]<br />
*[[Beehive]]<br />
*[[Bikini Girl]]<br />
*[[Bikini Kill]]<br />
*[[Brains]]<br />
*[[Chica Loca]]<br />
*[[Chop Suey Spex]]<br />
*[[Dirt (Morrisroe and White)]]<br />
*[[Egozine]]<br />
*[[Evolution of a Race Riot]]<br />
*[[Fag School]]<br />
*[[Farm]]<br />
*[[Fertile LaToyah Jackson]]<br />
*[[Gay Goth Scene]]<br />
*[[The Gentlewomen of California]]<br />
*[[Gunk]]<br />
*[[Homocore]]<br />
*[[I Heart Amy Carter]]<br />
*[[International Graffiti Times]]<br />
*[[J.D.s]]<br />
*[[Joanie4Jackie]]<br />
*[[LTTR]]<br />
*[[Mobilivre-Bookmobile]]<br />
*[[Mudflap]]<br />
*[[Poser]]<br />
*[[Rebel Fux!]]<br />
*[[Snarla]]<br />
*[[Thing]]<br />
*[[This Is The Salivation Army]]<br />
*[[Vile]]<br />
*[[Yes, Ms. Davis]]<br />
<br />
The Brooklyn Museum also produced a 448 page catalog documenting the exhibition, Fully illustrated with hundreds of zine covers and interiors, alongside work in other media, such as painting, photography, film, video, and performance, the book also features brief biographies for more than 100 zine-makers including Beverly Buchanan, Mark Gonzales, [[G.B. Jones]], Miranda July, Terence Koh, [[LTTR]], Ari Marcopoulos, Mark Morrisroe, Raymond Pettibon, Brontez Purnell, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Kandis Williams. It includes contributions by: Gwen Allen, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tavia Nyong’o, Alexis Salas, and [[Mimi Thi Nguyen]], and cover photo by [[Jena von Brucker]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]<br />
[[Category:Exhibition]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Copy_Machine_Manifesto&diff=218204Copy Machine Manifesto2024-03-16T02:56:06Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Copy Machine Manifesto''' was an exhibition of zines by artists at the Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
The exhibition ran from November 17, 2023, till March 31, 2024, and featured hundreds of zines that have been made by artists. The exhibition travels next to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancounver, BC, Canada from May 12 till September 20th, 2024. <br />
<br />
The Vancouver Art Gallery website describes the exhbition in this way: "Artists have harnessed the medium’s essential role in communication and community building and used it to transform material and conceptual approaches to art making across all media. This canon-expanding exhibition documents zines’ relationship to various subcultures and avant-garde practices, from punk and street culture to conceptual, queer and feminist art. It also examines zines’ intersections with other mediums, including collage, craft, film, drawing, painting, performance, photography, sculpture and video. Featuring nearly one thousand zines and artworks by nearly one hundred artists, Copy Machine Manifestos demonstrates the importance of zines to artistic production and its reception across North America."<br />
<br />
Some of the many publications featured included: <br />
<br />
*[[Artaud-Mania]]<br />
*[[Beehive]]<br />
*[[Bikini Girl]]<br />
*[[Bikini Kill]]<br />
*[[Brains]]<br />
*[[Chica Loca]]<br />
*[[Chop Suey Spex]]<br />
*[[Dirt (Morrisroe and White)]]<br />
*[[Egozine]]<br />
*[[Evolution of a Race Riot]]<br />
*[[Fag School]]<br />
*[[Farm]]<br />
*[[Fertile LaToyah Jackson]]<br />
*[[Gay Goth Scene]]<br />
*[[The Gentlewomen of California]]<br />
*[[Gunk]]<br />
*[[Homocore]]<br />
*[[I Heart Amy Carter]]<br />
*[[International Graffiti Times]]<br />
*[[J.D.s]]<br />
*[[Joanie4Jackie]]<br />
*[[LTTR]]<br />
*[[Mudflap]]<br />
*[[Poser]]<br />
*[[Rebel Fux!]]<br />
*[[Snarla]]<br />
*[[Thing]]<br />
*[[This Is The Salivation Army]]<br />
*[[Vile]]<br />
*[[Yes, Ms. Davis]]<br />
<br />
The Brooklyn Museum also produced a 448 page catalog documenting the exhibition, Fully illustrated with hundreds of zine covers and interiors, alongside work in other media, such as painting, photography, film, video, and performance, the book also features brief biographies for more than 100 zine-makers including Beverly Buchanan, Mark Gonzales, [[G.B. Jones]], Miranda July, Terence Koh, [[LTTR]], Ari Marcopoulos, Mark Morrisroe, Raymond Pettibon, Brontez Purnell, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Kandis Williams. It includes contributions by: Gwen Allen, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tavia Nyong’o, Alexis Salas, and [[Mimi Thi Nguyen]], and cover photo by [[Jena von Brucker]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]<br />
[[Category:Exhibition]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Copy_Machine_Manifesto&diff=218203Copy Machine Manifesto2024-03-16T02:55:46Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Copy Machine Manifesto''' was an exhibition of zines by artists at the Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
The exhibition ran from November 17, 2023, till March 31, 2024, and featured hundreds of zines that have been made by artists. The exhibition travels next to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancounver, BC, Canada from May 12 till September 20th, 2024. <br />
<br />
The Vancouver Art Gallery website describes the exhbition in this way: "Artists have harnessed the medium’s essential role in communication and community building and used it to transform material and conceptual approaches to art making across all media. This canon-expanding exhibition documents zines’ relationship to various subcultures and avant-garde practices, from punk and street culture to conceptual, queer and feminist art. It also examines zines’ intersections with other mediums, including collage, craft, film, drawing, painting, performance, photography, sculpture and video. Featuring nearly one thousand zines and artworks by nearly one hundred artists, Copy Machine Manifestos demonstrates the importance of zines to artistic production and its reception across North America."<br />
<br />
Some of the many publications featured included: <br />
<br />
*[[Artaud-Mania]]<br />
*[[Beehive]]<br />
*[[Bikini Girl]]<br />
*[[Bikini Kill]]<br />
*[[Bookmobile]]<br />
*[[Brains]]<br />
*[[Chica Loca]]<br />
*[[Chop Suey Spex]]<br />
*[[Dirt (Morrisroe and White)]]<br />
*[[Egozine]]<br />
*[[Evolution of a Race Riot]]<br />
*[[Fag School]]<br />
*[[Farm]]<br />
*[[Fertile LaToyah Jackson]]<br />
*[[Gay Goth Scene]]<br />
*[[The Gentlewomen of California]]<br />
*[[Gunk]]<br />
*[[Homocore]]<br />
*[[I Heart Amy Carter]]<br />
*[[International Graffiti Times]]<br />
*[[J.D.s]]<br />
*[[Joanie4Jackie]]<br />
*[[LTTR]]<br />
*[[Mudflap]]<br />
*[[Poser]]<br />
*[[Rebel Fux!]]<br />
*[[Snarla]]<br />
*[[Thing]]<br />
*[[This Is The Salivation Army]]<br />
*[[Vile]]<br />
*[[Yes, Ms. Davis]]<br />
<br />
The Brooklyn Museum also produced a 448 page catalog documenting the exhibition, Fully illustrated with hundreds of zine covers and interiors, alongside work in other media, such as painting, photography, film, video, and performance, the book also features brief biographies for more than 100 zine-makers including Beverly Buchanan, Mark Gonzales, [[G.B. Jones]], Miranda July, Terence Koh, [[LTTR]], Ari Marcopoulos, Mark Morrisroe, Raymond Pettibon, Brontez Purnell, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Kandis Williams. It includes contributions by: Gwen Allen, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tavia Nyong’o, Alexis Salas, and [[Mimi Thi Nguyen]], and cover photo by [[Jena von Brucker]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]<br />
[[Category:Exhibition]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Copy_Machine_Manifesto&diff=218202Copy Machine Manifesto2024-03-16T02:55:16Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Copy Machine Manifesto''' was an exhibition of zines by artists at the Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
The exhibition ran from November 17, 2023, till March 31, 2024, and featured hundreds of zines that have been made by artists. The exhibition travels next to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancounver, BC, Canada from May 12 till September 20th, 2024. <br />
<br />
The Vancouver Art Gallery website describes the exhbition in this way: "Artists have harnessed the medium’s essential role in communication and community building and used it to transform material and conceptual approaches to art making across all media. This canon-expanding exhibition documents zines’ relationship to various subcultures and avant-garde practices, from punk and street culture to conceptual, queer and feminist art. It also examines zines’ intersections with other mediums, including collage, craft, film, drawing, painting, performance, photography, sculpture and video. Featuring nearly one thousand zines and artworks by nearly one hundred artists, Copy Machine Manifestos demonstrates the importance of zines to artistic production and its reception across North America."<br />
<br />
Some of the many publications featured included: <br />
<br />
*[[Artaud-Mania]]<br />
*[[Beehive]]<br />
*[[Bikini Girl]]<br />
*[[Bikini Kill]]<br />
*[[Brains]]<br />
*[[Chica Loca]]<br />
*[[Chop Suey Spex]]<br />
*[[Dirt (Morrisroe and White)]]<br />
*[[Egozine]]<br />
*[[Evolution of a Race Riot]]<br />
*[[Fag School]]<br />
*[[Farm]]<br />
*[[Fertile LaToyah Jackson]]<br />
*[[Gay Goth Scene]]<br />
*[[The Gentlewomen of California]]<br />
*[[Gunk]]<br />
*[[Homocore]]<br />
*[[I Heart Amy Carter]]<br />
*[[International Graffiti Times]]<br />
*[[J.D.s]]<br />
*[[Joanie4Jackie]]<br />
*[[LTTR]]<br />
*[[Mudflap]]<br />
*[[Poser]]<br />
*[[Rebel Fux!]]<br />
*[[Snarla]]<br />
*[[Thing]]<br />
*[[This Is The Salivation Army]]<br />
*[[Vile]]<br />
*[[Yes, Ms. Davis]]<br />
<br />
The Brooklyn Museum also produced a 448 page catalog documenting the exhibition, Fully illustrated with hundreds of zine covers and interiors, alongside work in other media, such as painting, photography, film, video, and performance, the book also features brief biographies for more than 100 zine-makers including Beverly Buchanan, Mark Gonzales, [[G.B. Jones]], Miranda July, Terence Koh, [[LTTR]], Ari Marcopoulos, Mark Morrisroe, Raymond Pettibon, Brontez Purnell, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Kandis Williams. It includes contributions by: Gwen Allen, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tavia Nyong’o, Alexis Salas, and [[Mimi Thi Nguyen]], and cover photo by [[Jena von Brucker]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]<br />
[[Category:Exhibition]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Copy_Machine_Manifesto&diff=218201Copy Machine Manifesto2024-03-16T02:51:52Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Copy Machine Manifesto''' was an exhibition of zines by artists at the Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
The exhibition ran from November 17, 2023, till March 31, 2024, and featured hundreds of zines that have been made by artists. The exhibition travels next to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancounver, BC, Canada from May 12 till September 20th, 2024. <br />
<br />
The Vancouver Art Gallery website describes the exhbition in this way: "Artists have harnessed the medium’s essential role in communication and community building and used it to transform material and conceptual approaches to art making across all media. This canon-expanding exhibition documents zines’ relationship to various subcultures and avant-garde practices, from punk and street culture to conceptual, queer and feminist art. It also examines zines’ intersections with other mediums, including collage, craft, film, drawing, painting, performance, photography, sculpture and video. Featuring nearly one thousand zines and artworks by nearly one hundred artists, Copy Machine Manifestos demonstrates the importance of zines to artistic production and its reception across North America."<br />
<br />
Some of the many publications featured included: <br />
<br />
*[[Artaud-Mania]]<br />
*[[Beehive]]<br />
*[[Bikini Girl]]<br />
*[[Bikini Kill]]<br />
*[[Brains]]<br />
*[[Chica Loca]]<br />
*[[Chop Suey Spex]]<br />
*[[Dirt (Morrisroe and White)]]<br />
*[[Egozine]]<br />
*[[Evolution of a Race Riot]]<br />
*[[Fag School]]<br />
*[[Farm]]<br />
*[[Fertile LaToyah Jackson]]<br />
*[[The Gentlewomen of California]]<br />
*[[Gunk]]<br />
*[[Homocore]]<br />
*[[I Heart Amy Carter]]<br />
*[[International Graffiti Times]]<br />
*[[J.D.s]]<br />
*[[Joanie4Jackie]]<br />
*[[LTTR]]<br />
*[[Mudflap]]<br />
*[[Poser]]<br />
*[[Rebel Fux!]]<br />
*[[Snarla]]<br />
*[[Thing]]<br />
*[[This Is The Salivation Army]]<br />
*[[Vile]]<br />
*[[Yes, Ms. Davis]]<br />
<br />
The Brooklyn Museum also produced a 448 page catalog documenting the exhibition, Fully illustrated with hundreds of zine covers and interiors, alongside work in other media, such as painting, photography, film, video, and performance, the book also features brief biographies for more than 100 zine-makers including Beverly Buchanan, Mark Gonzales, [[G.B. Jones]], Miranda July, Terence Koh, [[LTTR]], Ari Marcopoulos, Mark Morrisroe, Raymond Pettibon, Brontez Purnell, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Kandis Williams. It includes contributions by: Gwen Allen, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tavia Nyong’o, Alexis Salas, and [[Mimi Thi Nguyen]], and cover photo by [[Jena von Brucker]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]<br />
[[Category:Exhibition]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Rebel_Fux!&diff=218200Rebel Fux!2024-03-16T02:51:39Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:Rebel.jpg|115px|thumb|right|'''Rebel Fux''' Issue Twenty-Three]]<br />
'''Rebel Fux''' was a [[zine]] by [[Kate Huh]], published in New York City, NY, U.S.A. from 1996 till 2001.<br />
<br />
''Rebel Fux'' is a tiny pocket size zine measuring 2 1/2 inches wide by 4 inches tall. It was filled with a variety of [[Cut and Paste|cut and pasted]] images to which text is added, resulting in new and different meanings. In the tradition of the Dadaists, and bricolage, sometimes the text will comment on the image and sometimes not. Some of the images were familiar, such as a photo of actor James Dean, and some are obscure, some are drawings and some are collages. Issue two featured a young man and an older woman on the cover, with the caption "Charles Baudelaire and Madame Alexandra David-Neel met on the street..." Issue four was the pairing of "Mary Shelley and J. Robert Oppenheimer". On the cover of issue five "Antonin Artaud and Maya Deren" were "reclaiming the soul from the abyss". The cover of issue twenty-three announced "The Queers Are Revolting by Allen Ginsberg Sappho James Baldwin Monique Wittig", and issue twenty-five announced "Violence and Disruption in Society". Rebel Fux was free.<br />
<br />
''Rebel Fux!'' was one of the featured titles in the 2023-2024 Brooklyn Museum exhibition devoted to artist-made zines, [[Copy Machine Manifesto]].<br />
<br />
==External Link==<br />
*[https://archive.qzap.org/index.php/Detail/Object/Show/object_id/105 Rebel Fux!] at [[QZAP]]<br />
<br />
[[category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:New York zines]] [[Category:1990's publications]] [[Category:2000's publications]] [[Category:Queer]] [[Category:Art Zines]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Copy_Machine_Manifesto&diff=218199Copy Machine Manifesto2024-03-16T02:50:46Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Copy Machine Manifesto''' was an exhibition of zines by artists at the Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
The exhibition ran from November 17, 2023, till March 31, 2024, and featured hundreds of zines that have been made by artists. The exhibition travels next to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancounver, BC, Canada from May 12 till September 20th, 2024. <br />
<br />
The Vancouver Art Gallery website describes the exhbition in this way: "Artists have harnessed the medium’s essential role in communication and community building and used it to transform material and conceptual approaches to art making across all media. This canon-expanding exhibition documents zines’ relationship to various subcultures and avant-garde practices, from punk and street culture to conceptual, queer and feminist art. It also examines zines’ intersections with other mediums, including collage, craft, film, drawing, painting, performance, photography, sculpture and video. Featuring nearly one thousand zines and artworks by nearly one hundred artists, Copy Machine Manifestos demonstrates the importance of zines to artistic production and its reception across North America."<br />
<br />
Some of the many publications featured included: <br />
<br />
*[[Artaud-Mania]]<br />
*[[Beehive]]<br />
*[[Bikini Girl]]<br />
*[[Bikini Kill]]<br />
*[[Brains]]<br />
*[[Chica Loca]]<br />
*[[Chop Suey Spex]]<br />
*[[Dirt (Morrisroe and White)]]<br />
*[[Egozine]]<br />
*[[Evolution of a Race Riot]]<br />
*[[Fag School]]<br />
*[[Farm]]<br />
*[[Fertile LaToyah Jackson]]<br />
*[[The Gentlewomen of California]]<br />
*[[Gunk]]<br />
*[[Homocore]]<br />
*[[I Heart Amy Carter]]<br />
*[[International Graffiti Times]]<br />
*[[J.D.s]]<br />
*[[Joanie4Jackie]]<br />
*[[LTTR]]<br />
*[[Mudflap]]<br />
*[[Poser]]<br />
*[[Rebel Fux]]<br />
*[[Snarla]]<br />
*[[Thing]]<br />
*[[This Is The Salivation Army]]<br />
*[[Vile]]<br />
*[[Yes, Ms. Davis]]<br />
<br />
The Brooklyn Museum also produced a 448 page catalog documenting the exhibition, Fully illustrated with hundreds of zine covers and interiors, alongside work in other media, such as painting, photography, film, video, and performance, the book also features brief biographies for more than 100 zine-makers including Beverly Buchanan, Mark Gonzales, [[G.B. Jones]], Miranda July, Terence Koh, [[LTTR]], Ari Marcopoulos, Mark Morrisroe, Raymond Pettibon, Brontez Purnell, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Kandis Williams. It includes contributions by: Gwen Allen, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tavia Nyong’o, Alexis Salas, and [[Mimi Thi Nguyen]], and cover photo by [[Jena von Brucker]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]<br />
[[Category:Exhibition]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Copy_Machine_Manifesto&diff=218198Copy Machine Manifesto2024-03-16T02:43:36Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Copy Machine Manifesto''' was an exhibition of zines by artists at the Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
The exhibition ran from November 17, 2023, till March 31, 2024, and featured hundreds of zines that have been made by artists. The exhibition travels next to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancounver, BC, Canada from May 12 till September 20th, 2024. <br />
<br />
The Vancouver Art Gallery website describes the exhbition in this way: "Artists have harnessed the medium’s essential role in communication and community building and used it to transform material and conceptual approaches to art making across all media. This canon-expanding exhibition documents zines’ relationship to various subcultures and avant-garde practices, from punk and street culture to conceptual, queer and feminist art. It also examines zines’ intersections with other mediums, including collage, craft, film, drawing, painting, performance, photography, sculpture and video. Featuring nearly one thousand zines and artworks by nearly one hundred artists, Copy Machine Manifestos demonstrates the importance of zines to artistic production and its reception across North America."<br />
<br />
Some of the many publications featured included: <br />
<br />
*[[Artaud-Mania]]<br />
*[[Beehive]]<br />
*[[Bikini Girl]]<br />
*[[Bikini Kill]]<br />
*[[Brains]]<br />
*[[Chica Loca]]<br />
*[[Chop Suey Spex]]<br />
*[[Dirt (Morrisroe and White)]]<br />
*[[Egozine]]<br />
*[[Evolution of a Race Riot]]<br />
*[[Fag School]]<br />
*[[Farm]]<br />
*[[Fertile LaToyah Jackson]]<br />
*[[The Gentlewomen of California]]<br />
*[[Gunk]]<br />
*[[Homocore]]<br />
*[[I Heart Amy Carter]]<br />
*[[International Graffiti Times]]<br />
*[[J.D.s]]<br />
*[[Joanie4Jackie]]<br />
*[[LTTR]]<br />
*[[Mudflap]]<br />
*[[Poser]]<br />
*[[Snarla]]<br />
*[[Thing]]<br />
*[[This Is The Salivation Army]]<br />
*[[Vile]]<br />
*[[Yes, Ms. Davis]]<br />
<br />
The Brooklyn Museum also produced a 448 page catalog documenting the exhibition, Fully illustrated with hundreds of zine covers and interiors, alongside work in other media, such as painting, photography, film, video, and performance, the book also features brief biographies for more than 100 zine-makers including Beverly Buchanan, Mark Gonzales, [[G.B. Jones]], Miranda July, Terence Koh, [[LTTR]], Ari Marcopoulos, Mark Morrisroe, Raymond Pettibon, Brontez Purnell, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Kandis Williams. It includes contributions by: Gwen Allen, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tavia Nyong’o, Alexis Salas, and [[Mimi Thi Nguyen]], and cover photo by [[Jena von Brucker]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]<br />
[[Category:Exhibition]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Copy_Machine_Manifesto&diff=218197Copy Machine Manifesto2024-03-16T02:42:14Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Copy Machine Manifesto''' was an exhibition of zines by artists at the Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
The exhibition ran from November 17, 2023, till March 31, 2024, and featured hundreds of zines that have been made by artists. The exhibition travels next to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancounver, BC, Canada from May 12 till September 20th, 2024. <br />
<br />
The Vancouver Art Gallery website describes the exhbition in this way: "Artists have harnessed the medium’s essential role in communication and community building and used it to transform material and conceptual approaches to art making across all media. This canon-expanding exhibition documents zines’ relationship to various subcultures and avant-garde practices, from punk and street culture to conceptual, queer and feminist art. It also examines zines’ intersections with other mediums, including collage, craft, film, drawing, painting, performance, photography, sculpture and video. Featuring nearly one thousand zines and artworks by nearly one hundred artists, Copy Machine Manifestos demonstrates the importance of zines to artistic production and its reception across North America."<br />
<br />
Some of the many publications featured included: <br />
<br />
*[[Beehive]]<br />
*[[Bikini Girl]]<br />
*[[Bikini Kill]]<br />
*[[Brains]]<br />
*[[Chica Loca]]<br />
*[[Chop Suey Spex]]<br />
*[[Dirt (Morrisroe and White)]]<br />
*[[Egozine]]<br />
*[[Evolution of a Race Riot]]<br />
*[[Fag School]]<br />
*[[Farm]]<br />
*[[Fertile LaToyah Jackson]]<br />
*[[The Gentlewomen of California]]<br />
*[[Gunk]]<br />
*[[Homocore]]<br />
*[[I Heart Amy Carter]]<br />
*[[International Graffiti Times]]<br />
*[[J.D.s]]<br />
*[[Joanie4Jackie]]<br />
*[[LTTR]]<br />
*[[Mudflap]]<br />
*[[Poser]]<br />
*[[Thing]]<br />
*[[This Is The Salivation Army]]<br />
*[[Vile]]<br />
*[[Yes, Ms. Davis]]<br />
<br />
The Brooklyn Museum also produced a 448 page catalog documenting the exhibition, Fully illustrated with hundreds of zine covers and interiors, alongside work in other media, such as painting, photography, film, video, and performance, the book also features brief biographies for more than 100 zine-makers including Beverly Buchanan, Mark Gonzales, [[G.B. Jones]], Miranda July, Terence Koh, [[LTTR]], Ari Marcopoulos, Mark Morrisroe, Raymond Pettibon, Brontez Purnell, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Kandis Williams. It includes contributions by: Gwen Allen, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tavia Nyong’o, Alexis Salas, and [[Mimi Thi Nguyen]], and cover photo by [[Jena von Brucker]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]<br />
[[Category:Exhibition]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=This_Is_The_Salivation_Army&diff=218196This Is The Salivation Army2024-03-16T02:36:54Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:The_Salivation_Army_cover_resized.JPG|frame|'''This Is The Salivation Army''' - Issue X]]<br />
<br />
'''This Is The Salivation Army''' is a [[zine]] from Toronto, Ontario, Canada, created by [[Scott Treleaven]].<br />
<br />
The first issue of this black and white, [[Cut and Paste|cut and pasted]], photocopied zine was released in 1996. Eight issues were published until the end of the zine in 1999. During this time editor Treleaven was interviewed in zines such as [[Broken Pencil]] and [[Fanorama]] (in which he was featured as a pin-up boy). The zine incorporated a vivid mixture of [[punk]], goth, the occult and industrial music aesthetics. Articles about filmmakers Derek Jarman and Kenneth Anger were featured. Contributors included REB from [[Fanorama]], [[G.B. Jones]], and Paul Zevenhuizen of [[Infantile]], among others.<br />
<br />
In 1997, Scott Treleaven appeared in the documentary film ''[[Zined!]]'' by [[Marc Moscato]], talking about his publication. <br />
<br />
In 2002, Treleaven presented an overview of his zine experience in a film entitled ''[[The Salivation Army]]'' which quickly became a cult hit, playing at film festivals across North America and Europe and counting as issue 9 of the zine. In 2004, 'Issue X' of the zine was released. This issue featured a number of writers and artists that Treleaven had come to know, or who had contacted him, since the zine's official end. These included [[Jason Louv]], AA Bronson, Paul P. , [[Genesis P-Orridge]], G. B. Jones, [[Kim Kinakin]] of [[Faggo]], Rufus Poser of [[Poser]], Julie Voyce, Black Sun Productions, [[Ango Visone]], and others. In 2006, on the tenth anniversary of the zine, all the issues were gathered together and issued in book form as ''The Salivation Army Black Book''.<br />
<br />
'''This Is The Salivation Army''' is filled with editor Treleaven's distinctive collages, which he now exhibits in galleries around the world. His work has also appeared on CD covers and t-shirts, and in books and periodicals. <br />
<br />
<blockquote><br />
"... Once And For All: There Is No Scene: There is no membership activity. We’ve all done our time with the punks, the Goths, the crusties, club scenes, art scenes. Galleries, grebos & factories. You name it. We’ve done the tattoos, the hairdos, the scars, and the steel till we all looked alike. Communist meetings, Anarchist rallies, potlucks, back rooms, witch circles; all the underground credentials you could want....Having now safely returned to the helm we can report: there wasn’t really anybody there. Despite genial perversions, bright markings and self-avowed mutilations, we were still starved for the compassionate ones. (he cums in my mouth, calls me a “good citizen” and then tells me a story about a junky). We were looking for the ones who wanted to begin.<br />
This circus is as far flung and varied as any cabaret. Infiltrating all areas. Infuriating people with a total inability to wear one disguise, to believe in one idea, or to take anybody’s word for anything. We truly cum & go as we please from one circle to the next, taking only what we need. Scavengers from a school far larger than any small-minded cult of primitivism, theory, dogma, decadence, or sham. We are ageless jacks-of-all-trades; dilettantes, masters, and examples. Please don’t be afraid: you will know each other by scent alone.<br />
We are the new circus.<br />
We are the envy of the fucking World."<br />
<br />(exerpt from Open Letter to the New Queer Radicals by Scott Treleaven. From ''This Is The Salivation Army'', 1997)<br />
</blockquote><br />
<br />
''This Is The Salivation Army'' was one of the featured titles in the 2023-2024 Brooklyn Museum exhibition devoted to artist-made zines, [[Copy Machine Manifesto]].<br />
<br />
<br />
==External links==<br />
<br />
<br />
*[http://www.brokenpencil.com/features/feature.php?featureid=65 Scott Treleaven] interviewed by [[Broken Pencil]]<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]]<br />
[[Category:Queer]]<br />
[[Category:Zines from Canada]]<br />
[[Category:Ontario Zines]]<br />
[[Category:Toronto Zines]]<br />
[[Category:1990's publications]]<br />
[[Category:2000's publications]]<br />
[[Category:Industrial]]<br />
[[Category:Goth]]<br />
[[Category:Punk]]<br />
[[Category:Occult]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Copy_Machine_Manifesto&diff=218195Copy Machine Manifesto2024-03-16T02:36:17Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Copy Machine Manifesto''' was an exhibition of zines by artists at the Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
The exhibition ran from November 17, 2023, till March 31, 2024, and featured hundreds of zines that have been made by artists. The exhibition travels next to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancounver, BC, Canada from May 12 till September 20th, 2024. <br />
<br />
The Vancouver Art Gallery website describes the exhbition in this way: "Artists have harnessed the medium’s essential role in communication and community building and used it to transform material and conceptual approaches to art making across all media. This canon-expanding exhibition documents zines’ relationship to various subcultures and avant-garde practices, from punk and street culture to conceptual, queer and feminist art. It also examines zines’ intersections with other mediums, including collage, craft, film, drawing, painting, performance, photography, sculpture and video. Featuring nearly one thousand zines and artworks by nearly one hundred artists, Copy Machine Manifestos demonstrates the importance of zines to artistic production and its reception across North America."<br />
<br />
Some of the many publications featured included: <br />
<br />
*[[Beehive]]<br />
*[[Bikini Girl]]<br />
*[[Bikini Kill]]<br />
*[[Brains]]<br />
*[[Dirt (Morrisroe and White)]]<br />
*[[Egozine]]<br />
*[[Evolution of a Race Riot]]<br />
*[[Fag School]]<br />
*[[Farm]]<br />
*[[Fertile LaToyah Jackson]]<br />
*[[The Gentlewomen of California]]<br />
*[[Gunk]]<br />
*[[Homocore]]<br />
*[[I Heart Amy Carter]]<br />
*[[International Graffiti Times]]<br />
*[[J.D.s]]<br />
*[[Joanie4Jackie]]<br />
*[[LTTR]]<br />
*[[Mudflap]]<br />
*[[Poser]]<br />
*[[Thing]]<br />
*[[This Is The Salivation Army]]<br />
*[[Vile]]<br />
*[[Yes, Ms. Davis]]<br />
<br />
The Brooklyn Museum also produced a 448 page catalog documenting the exhibition, Fully illustrated with hundreds of zine covers and interiors, alongside work in other media, such as painting, photography, film, video, and performance, the book also features brief biographies for more than 100 zine-makers including Beverly Buchanan, Mark Gonzales, [[G.B. Jones]], Miranda July, Terence Koh, [[LTTR]], Ari Marcopoulos, Mark Morrisroe, Raymond Pettibon, Brontez Purnell, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Kandis Williams. It includes contributions by: Gwen Allen, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tavia Nyong’o, Alexis Salas, and [[Mimi Thi Nguyen]], and cover photo by [[Jena von Brucker]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]<br />
[[Category:Exhibition]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Copy_Machine_Manifesto&diff=218194Copy Machine Manifesto2024-03-16T02:33:50Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Copy Machine Manifesto''' was an exhibition of zines by artists at the Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
The exhibition ran from November 17, 2023, till March 31, 2024, and featured hundreds of zines that have been made by artists. The exhibition travels next to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancounver, BC, Canada from May 12 till September 20th, 2024. <br />
<br />
The Vancouver Art Gallery website describes the exhbition in this way: "Artists have harnessed the medium’s essential role in communication and community building and used it to transform material and conceptual approaches to art making across all media. This canon-expanding exhibition documents zines’ relationship to various subcultures and avant-garde practices, from punk and street culture to conceptual, queer and feminist art. It also examines zines’ intersections with other mediums, including collage, craft, film, drawing, painting, performance, photography, sculpture and video. Featuring nearly one thousand zines and artworks by nearly one hundred artists, Copy Machine Manifestos demonstrates the importance of zines to artistic production and its reception across North America."<br />
<br />
Some of the many publications featured included: <br />
<br />
*[[Beehive]]<br />
*[[Bikini Girl]]<br />
*[[Bikini Kill]]<br />
*[[Brains]]<br />
*[[Dirt (Morrisroe and White)]]<br />
*[[Egozine]]<br />
*[[Evolution of a Race Riot]]<br />
*[[Fag School]]<br />
*[[Farm]]<br />
*[[Fertile LaToyah Jackson]]<br />
*[[The Gentlewomen of California]]<br />
*[[Gunk]]<br />
*[[Homocore]]<br />
*[[I Heart Amy Carter]]<br />
*[[International Graffiti Times]]<br />
*[[J.D.s]]<br />
*[[Joanie4Jackie]]<br />
*[[LTTR]]<br />
*[[Mudflap]]<br />
*[[Thing]]<br />
*[[Vile]]<br />
*[[Yes, Ms. Davis]]<br />
<br />
The Brooklyn Museum also produced a 448 page catalog documenting the exhibition, Fully illustrated with hundreds of zine covers and interiors, alongside work in other media, such as painting, photography, film, video, and performance, the book also features brief biographies for more than 100 zine-makers including Beverly Buchanan, Mark Gonzales, [[G.B. Jones]], Miranda July, Terence Koh, [[LTTR]], Ari Marcopoulos, Mark Morrisroe, Raymond Pettibon, Brontez Purnell, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Kandis Williams. It includes contributions by: Gwen Allen, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tavia Nyong’o, Alexis Salas, and [[Mimi Thi Nguyen]], and cover photo by [[Jena von Brucker]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]<br />
[[Category:Exhibition]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Brains&diff=218193Brains2024-03-16T02:33:23Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Brains''' is a literary [[zine]] released in the U.S.A.<br />
<br />
Subtitled "The Journal of Egghead Sexuality", the zine was edited by Nayland Blake and D-L Alvarez. <br />
<br />
The first issue appeared in 1990. The cover featured the well-known character 'Mr. Peabody' from the tv series ''Rocky and Bullwinkle'', a glasses-wearing dog known for his intelligence. The cover of issue #1 promises: "Inside: Photos, Personals, One Handed fiction and True Stories for, by and about men who believe a mid is a terrible thing to waste."<br />
<br />
"This is a series of short stories set in a universe where the 'normals' are actually undead and the punx are the only ones living. Much like our world. The project is nothing short of brilliant. Well-written, high concept - the punks will rule when the undead roam the land." -AR, in MRR #270<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]]<br />
[[Category:Literary Zines]] <br />
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]<br />
[[Category:Gay]]<br />
[[Category:1990's publications]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Brains&diff=218192Brains2024-03-16T02:33:05Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Brains''' is a literary [[zine]] released in the U.S.A.<br />
<br />
Subtitled "The Journal of Egghead Sexuality", the zine was edited by Nayland Blake and D-L Alvarez. <br />
<br />
The first issue appeared in 1990. The cover featured the well-known character 'Mr. Peabody' from the tv series "Rocky and Bullwinkle", a glasses-wearing dog known for his intelligence. The cover of issue #1 promises: "Inside: Photos, Personals, One Handed fiction and True Stories for, by and about men who believe a mid is a terrible thing to waste."<br />
<br />
"This is a series of short stories set in a universe where the 'normals' are actually undead and the punx are the only ones living. Much like our world. The project is nothing short of brilliant. Well-written, high concept - the punks will rule when the undead roam the land." -AR, in MRR #270<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]]<br />
[[Category:Literary Zines]] <br />
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]<br />
[[Category:Gay]]<br />
[[Category:1990's publications]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Brains&diff=218191Brains2024-03-16T02:25:50Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Brains''' is a literary [[zine]] released in the U.S.A.<br />
<br />
Subtitled "The Journal of Egghead Sexuality", the zine was edited by Nayland Blake and D-L Alvarez. The first issue appeared in 1990. The cover of issue #1 promises: "Inside: Photos, Personals, One Handed fiction and True Stories for, by and about men who believe a mid is a terrible thing to waste."<br />
<br />
"This is a series of short stories set in a universe where the 'normals' are actually undead and the punx are the only ones living. Much like our world. The project is nothing short of brilliant. Well-written, high concept - the punks will rule when the undead roam the land." -AR, in MRR #270<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]]<br />
[[Category:Literary Zines]] <br />
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]<br />
[[Category:Gay]]<br />
[[Category:1990's publications]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Brains&diff=218190Brains2024-03-16T02:23:15Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Brains''' is a literary [[punk]] zine released in the U.S.A.<br />
<br />
Subtitled "The Journal of Egghead Sexuality", the zine was edited by Nayland Blake and D-L Alvarez. The first issue appeared in 1990.<br />
<br />
"This is a series of short stories set in a universe where the 'normals' are actually undead and the punx are the only ones living. Much like our world. The project is nothing short of brilliant. Well-written, high concept - the punks will rule when the undead roam the land." -AR, in MRR #270<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]]<br />
[[Category:Science Fiction Zines]]<br />
[[Category:Literary Zines]] <br />
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]<br />
[[Category:Punk]]<br />
[[Category:1990's publications]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Brains&diff=218189Brains2024-03-16T02:23:01Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Brains''' is a literary [[punk]] zine released in the U.S.A.<br />
<br />
Subtitled "The Journal of Egghead Sexuality", the zine was edited by Nayland Blake and D-L Alvarez. The first issue appeared in 1990.<br />
<br />
"This is a series of short stories set in a universe where the 'normals' are actually undead and the punx are the only ones living. Much like our world. The project is nothing short of brilliant. Well-written, high concept - the punks will rule when the undead roam the land." -AR, in MRR #270<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]]<br />
[[Category:Science Fiction Zines]]<br />
[[Category:Literary Zines]] <br />
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]<br />
[[Category:Punk]]<br />
[[Caegory:1990's publications]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Copy_Machine_Manifesto&diff=218188Copy Machine Manifesto2024-03-16T02:19:02Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Copy Machine Manifesto''' was an exhibition of zines by artists at the Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
The exhibition ran from November 17, 2023, till March 31, 2024, and featured hundreds of zines that have been made by artists. The exhibition travels next to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancounver, BC, Canada from May 12 till September 20th, 2024. <br />
<br />
The Vancouver Art Gallery website describes the exhbition in this way: "Artists have harnessed the medium’s essential role in communication and community building and used it to transform material and conceptual approaches to art making across all media. This canon-expanding exhibition documents zines’ relationship to various subcultures and avant-garde practices, from punk and street culture to conceptual, queer and feminist art. It also examines zines’ intersections with other mediums, including collage, craft, film, drawing, painting, performance, photography, sculpture and video. Featuring nearly one thousand zines and artworks by nearly one hundred artists, Copy Machine Manifestos demonstrates the importance of zines to artistic production and its reception across North America."<br />
<br />
Some of the many publications featured included: <br />
<br />
*[[Beehive]]<br />
*[[Bikini Girl]]<br />
*[[Bikini Kill]]<br />
*[[Dirt (Morrisroe and White)]]<br />
*[[Egozine]]<br />
*[[Evolution of a Race Riot]]<br />
*[[Fag School]]<br />
*[[Farm]]<br />
*[[Fertile LaToyah Jackson]]<br />
*[[The Gentlewomen of California]]<br />
*[[Gunk]]<br />
*[[Homocore]]<br />
*[[I Heart Amy Carter]]<br />
*[[International Graffiti Times]]<br />
*[[J.D.s]]<br />
*[[Joanie4Jackie]]<br />
*[[LTTR]]<br />
*[[Mudflap]]<br />
*[[Thing]]<br />
*[[Vile]]<br />
*[[Yes, Ms. Davis]]<br />
<br />
The Brooklyn Museum also produced a 448 page catalog documenting the exhibition, Fully illustrated with hundreds of zine covers and interiors, alongside work in other media, such as painting, photography, film, video, and performance, the book also features brief biographies for more than 100 zine-makers including Beverly Buchanan, Mark Gonzales, [[G.B. Jones]], Miranda July, Terence Koh, [[LTTR]], Ari Marcopoulos, Mark Morrisroe, Raymond Pettibon, Brontez Purnell, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Kandis Williams. It includes contributions by: Gwen Allen, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tavia Nyong’o, Alexis Salas, and [[Mimi Thi Nguyen]], and cover photo by [[Jena von Brucker]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]<br />
[[Category:Exhibition]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Mudflap&diff=218187Mudflap2024-03-16T02:16:18Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Mudflap''' was a [[zine]] by San Francisco, California. U.S.A. filmmaker [[Greta Snider]].<br />
<br />
Released in the 1990's, ''Mudflap'' chronicled Greta's adventures. Each issue had themes like travel and transport, or growing things, like sex and food. The emphasis was on fun and free stuff and documents her love of bicycles. <br />
<br />
Filmmaker Sarah Jacobson wrote of Greta Snider, ''"...Her films are like her zines, made up of different stories and patchworked together. Even though they are very experimental, they don't bore me like that self-indulgent avant garde shit I was forced to watch in art school."''<br />
<br />
''Mudflap'' was featured in the [[Factsheet Five Zine Reader]]. As well, the zine, and the artwork of Greta Snider, were featured in the exhibition ''[[The Copyist Conspiracy: An Exhibition of Zine Art]]'', held in San Francisco in 2005.<br />
<br />
''Mudflap'' is included in the Sarah Wood Zine Collection at Duke University.<br />
<br />
''Mudflap'' was one of the featured titles in the 2023-2024 Brooklyn Museum exhibition devoted to artist-made zines, [[Copy Machine Manifesto]].<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
*[http://needles-pens.com/copyconsiracy.html ''The Copyist Conspiracy: An Exhibition of Zine Art'']<br />
<br />
*[http://www.flickr.com/photos/13856843@N08/1576530931/ Greta Snider's cartoon for Mountain Bike pioneer Jacquie Phelan]<br />
<br />
*[http://library.duke.edu/digitalcollections/rbmscl/woodsarah/inv/ Sarah Wood Collection at Duke University]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]]<br />
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]<br />
[[Category:California Zines]]<br />
[[Category:San Francisco Zines]] <br />
[[Category:1990's publications]]<br />
[[Category:Sarah Wood Zine Collection]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Copy_Machine_Manifesto&diff=218186Copy Machine Manifesto2024-03-16T02:15:27Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Copy Machine Manifesto''' was an exhibition of zines by artists at the Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
The exhibition ran from November 17, 2023, till March 31, 2024, and featured hundreds of zines that have been made by artists. The exhibition travels next to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancounver, BC, Canada from May 12 till September 20th, 2024. <br />
<br />
The Vancouver Art Gallery website describes the exhbition in this way: "Artists have harnessed the medium’s essential role in communication and community building and used it to transform material and conceptual approaches to art making across all media. This canon-expanding exhibition documents zines’ relationship to various subcultures and avant-garde practices, from punk and street culture to conceptual, queer and feminist art. It also examines zines’ intersections with other mediums, including collage, craft, film, drawing, painting, performance, photography, sculpture and video. Featuring nearly one thousand zines and artworks by nearly one hundred artists, Copy Machine Manifestos demonstrates the importance of zines to artistic production and its reception across North America."<br />
<br />
Some of the many publications featured included: <br />
<br />
*[[Beehive]]<br />
*[[Bikini Girl]]<br />
*[[Bikini Kill]]<br />
*[[Dirt (Morrisroe and White)]]<br />
*[[Egozine]]<br />
*[[Evolution of a Race Riot]]<br />
*[[Fag School]]<br />
*[[Fertile LaToyah Jackson]]<br />
*[[Gunk]]<br />
*[[Homocore]]<br />
*[[I Heart Amy Carter]]<br />
*[[International Graffiti Times]]<br />
*[[J.D.s]]<br />
*[[Joanie4Jackie]]<br />
*[[LTTR]]<br />
*[[Mudflap]]<br />
*[[Thing]]<br />
*[[Vile]]<br />
*[[Yes, Ms. Davis]]<br />
<br />
The Brooklyn Museum also produced a 448 page catalog documenting the exhibition, Fully illustrated with hundreds of zine covers and interiors, alongside work in other media, such as painting, photography, film, video, and performance, the book also features brief biographies for more than 100 zine-makers including Beverly Buchanan, Mark Gonzales, [[G.B. Jones]], Miranda July, Terence Koh, [[LTTR]], Ari Marcopoulos, Mark Morrisroe, Raymond Pettibon, Brontez Purnell, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Kandis Williams. It includes contributions by: Gwen Allen, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tavia Nyong’o, Alexis Salas, and [[Mimi Thi Nguyen]], and cover photo by [[Jena von Brucker]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]<br />
[[Category:Exhibition]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Copy_Machine_Manifesto&diff=218185Copy Machine Manifesto2024-03-16T02:09:20Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Copy Machine Manifesto''' was an exhibition of zines by artists at the Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
The exhibition ran from November 17, 2023, till March 31, 2024, and featured hundreds of zines that have been made by artists. The exhibition travels next to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancounver, BC, Canada from May 12 till September 20th, 2024. <br />
<br />
The Vancouver Art Gallery website describes the exhbition in this way: "Artists have harnessed the medium’s essential role in communication and community building and used it to transform material and conceptual approaches to art making across all media. This canon-expanding exhibition documents zines’ relationship to various subcultures and avant-garde practices, from punk and street culture to conceptual, queer and feminist art. It also examines zines’ intersections with other mediums, including collage, craft, film, drawing, painting, performance, photography, sculpture and video. Featuring nearly one thousand zines and artworks by nearly one hundred artists, Copy Machine Manifestos demonstrates the importance of zines to artistic production and its reception across North America."<br />
<br />
Some of the many publications featured included: <br />
<br />
*[[Beehive]]<br />
*[[Bikini Girl]]<br />
*[[Bikini Kill]]<br />
*[[Dirt (Morrisroe and White)]]<br />
*[[Egozine]]<br />
*[[Evolution of a Race Riot]]<br />
*[[Fag School]]<br />
*[[Fertile LaToyah Jackson]]<br />
*[[Gunk]]<br />
*[[Homocore]]<br />
*[[I Heart Amy Carter]]<br />
*[[International Graffiti Times]]<br />
*[[J.D.s]]<br />
*[[Joanie4Jackie]]<br />
*[[LTTR]]<br />
*[[Thing]]<br />
*[[Vile]]<br />
*[[Yes, Ms. Davis]]<br />
<br />
The Brooklyn Museum also produced a 448 page catalog documenting the exhibition, Fully illustrated with hundreds of zine covers and interiors, alongside work in other media, such as painting, photography, film, video, and performance, the book also features brief biographies for more than 100 zine-makers including Beverly Buchanan, Mark Gonzales, [[G.B. Jones]], Miranda July, Terence Koh, [[LTTR]], Ari Marcopoulos, Mark Morrisroe, Raymond Pettibon, Brontez Purnell, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Kandis Williams. It includes contributions by: Gwen Allen, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tavia Nyong’o, Alexis Salas, and [[Mimi Thi Nguyen]], and cover photo by [[Jena von Brucker]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]<br />
[[Category:Exhibition]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Copy_Machine_Manifesto&diff=218184Copy Machine Manifesto2024-03-15T07:01:15Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Copy Machine Manifesto''' was an exhibition of zines by artists at the Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
The exhibition ran from November 17, 2023, till March 31, 2024, and featured hundreds of zines that have been made by artists. The exhibition travels next to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancounver, BC, Canada from May 12 till September 20th, 2024. <br />
<br />
The Vancouver Art Gallery website describes the exhbition in this way: "Artists have harnessed the medium’s essential role in communication and community building and used it to transform material and conceptual approaches to art making across all media. This canon-expanding exhibition documents zines’ relationship to various subcultures and avant-garde practices, from punk and street culture to conceptual, queer and feminist art. It also examines zines’ intersections with other mediums, including collage, craft, film, drawing, painting, performance, photography, sculpture and video. Featuring nearly one thousand zines and artworks by nearly one hundred artists, Copy Machine Manifestos demonstrates the importance of zines to artistic production and its reception across North America."<br />
<br />
Some of the many publications featured included: <br />
<br />
*[[Beehive]]<br />
*[[Bikini Girl]]<br />
*[[Bikini Kill]]<br />
*[[Dirt (Morrisroe and White)]]<br />
*[[Egozine]]<br />
*[[Evolution of a Race Riot]]<br />
*[[Fag School]]<br />
*[[Fertile LaToyah Jackson]]<br />
*[[Gunk]]<br />
*[[Homocore]]<br />
*[[I Heart Amy Carter]]<br />
*[[International Graffiti Times]]<br />
*[[J.D.s]]<br />
*[[Joanie4Jackie]]<br />
*[[LTTR]]<br />
*[[Thing]]<br />
*[[Yes, Ms. Davis]]<br />
<br />
The Brooklyn Museum also produced a 448 page catalog documenting the exhibition, Fully illustrated with hundreds of zine covers and interiors, alongside work in other media, such as painting, photography, film, video, and performance, the book also features brief biographies for more than 100 zine-makers including Beverly Buchanan, Mark Gonzales, [[G.B. Jones]], Miranda July, Terence Koh, [[LTTR]], Ari Marcopoulos, Mark Morrisroe, Raymond Pettibon, Brontez Purnell, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Kandis Williams. It includes contributions by: Gwen Allen, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tavia Nyong’o, Alexis Salas, and [[Mimi Thi Nguyen]], and cover photo by [[Jena von Brucker]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]<br />
[[Category:Exhibition]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Egozine&diff=218183Egozine2024-03-15T05:37:49Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:Egozine_01_small.jpg |right|frame|'''Egozine''' Issue 1 1975]]<br />
'''Egozine''' is a [[zine]] published in Hollywood, California, U.S.A. by Robert Lambert.<br />
<br />
The first issue was published in 1975. Contributing editors included The Cultural Camelion, Les Petites Bon-Bons, Art Hoax, The James C. Duncan Memorial Society, Bobby Shaftow Fan Club, and Children For E/ART/H. Cover photography was by Greg Jeresek. Other photographs were by Emerson & Lowe, Frank Ford, Suzan Carson, and Richard Creamer. The editor outlines his art career, beginning in Minneapolis and then moving to Hollywood, California. Much of the first issue included recollections of Lambert's career as Boby BonBon, who, along with Jeri BonBon (Jerry Dreva), made up the performance group Les Petites Bon-Bon. The zine features clippings of their appearances in magazines such as ''People'', ''Newsweek'', and ''Star'', at Rodney Bingenheimer's English Disco, and with Sable Star in 1973. Later articles feature their involvement in mail art, and other artists involved in mail art, and performance art. <br />
<br />
Nicholas Ballet, in the 2021 article, "Jeans as a Fact of Art", writes of the duo, "The American art group Les Petites Bonbons, formed in particular by the artists Jerry Dreva and Robert Lambert, hijacked the visual and behavioral codes of the Hollywood glitter rock scene from the beginning of the 1970s through performance and mail art, in order to explore gender identities and to subvert the starification process of a subculture. By exposing the very construction of celebrity and its myth through public staging, documented by the specialized newspapers of this period, Dreva and Lambert intended to turn the superficiality of mass media back on itself."<br />
<br />
Issue two featured three pages on the famous 1976 COUM Transmissions performance at L.A.I.C.A. with photos and a note from Genesis P-Orridge and Cosey Fanni Tutti; a contribution from avant-garde Chicano conceptual/performance art group Asco; other contributors include John Jack Baylin, Guglielmo Achille Cavellini, and Barbara O'Mary. <br />
<br />
Issue three was released in 1978. <br />
<br />
''Egozine'' is included in the archival collection of MACBA, Museum of Contemporary Art of Barcelona, in Barcelona, Spain, and at the Bibliothèque Kandinsky in Paris, France. <br />
<br />
''Egozine'' was one of the titles featured in the 2023-2024 Brooklyn Museum exhibition of artist-made zines, [[Copy Machine Manifesto]].<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]]<br />
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]<br />
[[Category:California Zines]]<br />
[[Category:1970's publications]]<br />
[[category:Art Zines]]<br />
[[Category:Mail Art]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Egozine&diff=218182Egozine2024-03-15T05:37:27Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:Egozine_01_small.jpg |right|frame|'''Egozine''' Issue 1 1975]]<br />
'''Egozine''' is a [[zine]] published in Hollywood, California, U.S.A. by Robert Lambert.<br />
<br />
The first issue was published in 1975. Contributing editors included The Cultural Camelion, Les Petites Bon-Bons, Art Hoax, The James C. Duncan Memorial Society, Bobby Shaftow Fan Club, and Children For E/ART/H. Cover photography was by Greg Jeresek. Other photographs were by Emerson & Lowe, Frank Ford, Suzan Carson, and Richard Creamer. The editor outlines his art career, beginning in Minneapolis and then moving to Hollywood, California. Much of the first issue included recollections of Lambert's career as Boby BonBon, who, along with Jeri BonBon (Jerry Dreva), made up the performance group Les Petites Bon-Bon. The zine features clippings of their appearances in magazines such as ''People'', ''Newsweek'', and ''Star'', at Rodney Bingenheimer's English Disco, and with Sable Star in 1973. Later articles feature their involvement in mail art, and other artists involved in mail art, and performance art. <br />
<br />
Nicholas Ballet, in the 2021 article, "Jeans as a Fact of Art", writes of the duo, "The American art group Les Petites Bonbons, formed in particular by the artists Jerry Dreva and Robert Lambert, hijacked the visual and behavioral codes of the Hollywood glitter rock scene from the beginning of the 1970s through performance and mail art, in order to explore gender identities and to subvert the starification process of a subculture. By exposing the very construction of celebrity and its myth through public staging, documented by the specialized newspapers of this period, Dreva and Lambert intended to turn the superficiality of mass media back on itself."<br />
<br />
Issue two featured three pages on the famous 1976 COUM Transmissions performance at L.A.I.C.A. with photos and a note from Genesis P-Orridge and Cosey Fanni Tutti; a contribution from avant-garde Chicano conceptual/performance art group Asco; other contributors include John Jack Baylin, Guglielmo Achille Cavellini, and Barbara O'Mary. <br />
<br />
Issue three was released in 1978. <br />
<br />
''Egozine'' is included in the archival collection of MACBA, Museum of Contemporary Art of Barcelona, in Barcelona, Spain, and at the Bibliothèque Kandinsky in Paris, France. <br />
<br />
''Egozine'' was one of the titles featured in the 2023-2024 Brooklyn Museum exhibition of artist-made zines, [[Copy Machine Manifesto]].<br />
<br />
===External Links===<br />
*[https://d1lfxha3ugu3d4.cloudfront.net/article/images/EL213.604_Egozine_FullScan_resize.pdf|Issue #1 of '''Egozine''' online]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]]<br />
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]<br />
[[Category:California Zines]]<br />
[[Category:1970's publications]]<br />
[[category:Art Zines]]<br />
[[Category:Mail Art]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Evolution_of_a_Race_Riot&diff=218181Evolution of a Race Riot2024-03-15T05:32:44Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Evolution of a Race Riot''' were two [[Compzine|compilation zine]]s and a third [[reference zine]] listing projects, zines, and resources for [[people of color]] who were/are involved in [[Punk|punk rock]] and punk culture. '''Race Riot'''s are also considered [[legacy zine]]s.<br />
<br />
Compiled by [[Mimi Nguyen]], these zines were thick and contained writings from a diverse roster of [[activist]]s, [[writer]]s and artists who addressed issues of [[racism]] in punk culture, invisibility, class issues, and the ever popular (and offensive) "I don't see you as (asian/black/latino/etc.)."<br />
<br />
While this is no longer published, it is a crucial and critical document for POC involved in the subcultural terrain of [[DIY]] publishing, music, art, and culture. There has been nothing comparable since this was compiled and published.<br />
<br />
''Evolution of a Race Riot'' was one of the featured titles in [[Copy Machine Manifesto]], the 2023-2024 exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum of artist-made zines.<br />
<br />
==Links==<br />
* [http://issuu.com/poczineproject/docs/evolution-of-a-race-riot-issue-1 Issue 1 from 1997]<br />
* [http://issuu.com/poczineproject/docs/race-riot-2/1?e=0 Issue 2 from 2002]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:POC Zine]] [[Category:Legacy Zine]] [[Category:Reference Zine]] [[Category:Compzine]] [[Category:1990's publications]] [[Category:2000's publications]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Copy_Machine_Manifesto&diff=218180Copy Machine Manifesto2024-03-15T05:30:56Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Copy Machine Manifesto''' was an exhibition of zines by artists at the Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
The exhibition ran from November 17, 2023, till March 31, 2024, and featured hundreds of zines that have been made by artists. The exhibition travels next to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancounver, BC, Canada from May 12 till September 20th, 2024. <br />
<br />
The Vancouver Art Gallery website describes the exhbition in this way: "Artists have harnessed the medium’s essential role in communication and community building and used it to transform material and conceptual approaches to art making across all media. This canon-expanding exhibition documents zines’ relationship to various subcultures and avant-garde practices, from punk and street culture to conceptual, queer and feminist art. It also examines zines’ intersections with other mediums, including collage, craft, film, drawing, painting, performance, photography, sculpture and video. Featuring nearly one thousand zines and artworks by nearly one hundred artists, Copy Machine Manifestos demonstrates the importance of zines to artistic production and its reception across North America."<br />
<br />
Some of the many publications featured included: <br />
<br />
*[[Beehive]]<br />
*[[Bikini Girl]]<br />
*[[Bikini Kill]]<br />
*[[Dirt (Morrisroe and White)]]<br />
*[[Egozine]]<br />
*[[Evolution of a Race Riot]]<br />
*[[Fag School]]<br />
*[[Fertile LaToyah Jackson]]<br />
*[[Gunk]]<br />
*[[Homocore]]<br />
*[[I Heart Amy Carter]]<br />
*[[International Graffiti Times]]<br />
*[[J.D.s]]<br />
*[[Joanie4Jackie]]<br />
*[[LTTR]]<br />
*[[Thing]]<br />
*[[Yes, Ms. Davis]]<br />
<br />
The Brooklyn Museum also produced a 448 page catalog documenting the exhibition, Fully illustrated with hundreds of zine covers and interiors, alongside work in other media, such as painting, photography, film, video, and performance, the book also features brief biographies for more than 100 zine-makers including Beverly Buchanan, Mark Gonzales, [[G.B. Jones]], Miranda July, Terence Koh, [[LTTR]], Ari Marcopoulos, Mark Morrisroe, Raymond Pettibon, Brontez Purnell, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Kandis Williams. It includes contributions by: Gwen Allen, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tavia Nyong’o, Alexis Salas, and [[Mimi Thi Nguyen]], and cover photo by [[Jena von Brucker]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Copy_Machine_Manifesto&diff=218179Copy Machine Manifesto2024-03-15T05:26:01Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Copy Machine Manifesto''' was an exhibition of zines by artists at the Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
The exhibition ran from November 17, 2023, till March 31, 2024, and featured hundreds of zines that have been made by artists. The exhibition travels next to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancounver, BC, Canada from May 12 till September 20th, 2024. <br />
<br />
The Vancouver Art Gallery website describes the exhbition in this way: "Artists have harnessed the medium’s essential role in communication and community building and used it to transform material and conceptual approaches to art making across all media. This canon-expanding exhibition documents zines’ relationship to various subcultures and avant-garde practices, from punk and street culture to conceptual, queer and feminist art. It also examines zines’ intersections with other mediums, including collage, craft, film, drawing, painting, performance, photography, sculpture and video. Featuring nearly one thousand zines and artworks by nearly one hundred artists, Copy Machine Manifestos demonstrates the importance of zines to artistic production and its reception across North America."<br />
<br />
Some of the many publications featured included: <br />
<br />
*[[Beehive]]<br />
*[[Bikini Girl]]<br />
*[[Bikini Kill]]<br />
*[[Dirt (Morrisroe and White)]]<br />
*[[Egozine]]<br />
*[[Fag School]]<br />
*[[Fertile LaToyah Jackson]]<br />
*[[Gunk]]<br />
*[[Homocore]]<br />
*[[I Heart Amy Carter]]<br />
*[[International Graffiti Times]]<br />
*[[J.D.s]]<br />
*[[Joanie4Jackie]]<br />
*[[LTTR]]<br />
*[[Thing]]<br />
*[[Yes, Ms. Davis]]<br />
<br />
The Brooklyn Museum also produced a 448 page catalog documenting the exhibition, Fully illustrated with hundreds of zine covers and interiors, alongside work in other media, such as painting, photography, film, video, and performance, the book also features brief biographies for more than 100 zine-makers including Beverly Buchanan, Mark Gonzales, [[G.B. Jones]], Miranda July, Terence Koh, [[LTTR]], Ari Marcopoulos, Mark Morrisroe, Raymond Pettibon, Brontez Purnell, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Kandis Williams. It includes contributions by: Gwen Allen, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tavia Nyong’o, Alexis Salas, and [[Mimi Thi Nguyen]], and cover photo by [[Jena von Brucker]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=LTTR&diff=218178LTTR2024-03-15T05:20:59Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:LTTR.jpg|thumb|right|'''LTTR''' Issue Five]]<br />
<br />
'''LTTR''' is an independently published art journal/zine by the LTTR collective.<br />
<br />
''LTTR'' seeks contributions from artists in feminist and genderqueer communities. Each issue uses the title ''LTTR'' as an acronym for its subject. Each issue has existed in different shapes, sizes and formats and has allowed artists to include unique editioned posters, objects, and individual artworks with the journal. The collective artists have included [[K8 Hardy]], [[Ulrike Müller]], [[Emily Roysdon]], and [[Ginger Brooks Takahashi]]. Contributors have included Alvin Baltrop, Edie Fake, [[Kate Huh]], Zoe Leonard, Gloria Maximo, Eileen Myles, JD Sampson, and many others.<br />
<br />
''LTTR'' was one of the independent publications included on the [[Mobilivre-Bookmobile]] traveling library in a 1950s Airstream trailer tour of North America.<br />
<br />
''LTTR'' was one of the titles featured in the 2023-2024 Brooklyn Museum exhibition devoted to artist-made zines, [[Copy Machine Manifesto]].<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
* [http://www.lttr.org/ ''LTTR'' Official Website]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Zine]]<br />
[[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]<br />
[[Category:Art Zines]] <br />
[[Category:Queer]] <br />
[[Category:2000's publications]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Copy_Machine_Manifesto&diff=218177Copy Machine Manifesto2024-03-15T05:20:26Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Copy Machine Manifesto''' was an exhibition of zines by artists at the Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
The exhibition ran from November 17, 2023, till March 31, 2024, and featured hundreds of zines that have been made by artists. The exhibition travels next to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancounver, BC, Canada from May 12 till September 20th, 2024. <br />
<br />
The Vancouver Art Gallery website describes the exhbition in this way: "Artists have harnessed the medium’s essential role in communication and community building and used it to transform material and conceptual approaches to art making across all media. This canon-expanding exhibition documents zines’ relationship to various subcultures and avant-garde practices, from punk and street culture to conceptual, queer and feminist art. It also examines zines’ intersections with other mediums, including collage, craft, film, drawing, painting, performance, photography, sculpture and video. Featuring nearly one thousand zines and artworks by nearly one hundred artists, Copy Machine Manifestos demonstrates the importance of zines to artistic production and its reception across North America."<br />
<br />
Some of the many publications featured included: <br />
<br />
*[[Beehive]]<br />
*[[Bikini Girl]]<br />
*[[Bikini Kill]]<br />
*[[Dirt (Morrisroe and White)]]<br />
*[[Egozine]]<br />
*[[Fag School]]<br />
*[[Fertile LaToyah Jackson]]<br />
*[[Gunk]]<br />
*[[Homocore]]<br />
*[[I Heart Amy Carter]]<br />
*[[International Graffiti Times]]<br />
*[[J.D.s]]<br />
*[[Joanie4Jackie]]<br />
*[[LTTR]]<br />
*[[Thing]]<br />
*[[Yes, Ms. Davis]]<br />
<br />
The Brooklyn Museum also produced a 448 page catalog documenting the exhibition, Fully illustrated with hundreds of zine covers and interiors, alongside work in other media, such as painting, photography, film, video, and performance, the book also features brief biographies for more than 100 zine-makers including Beverly Buchanan, Mark Gonzales, [[G.B. Jones]], Miranda July, Terence Koh, [[LTTR]], Ari Marcopoulos, Mark Morrisroe, Raymond Pettibon, Brontez Purnell, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Kandis Williams. It includes contributions by: Gwen Allen, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tavia Nyong’o, Alexis Salas, and [[Mimi Thi Nguyen]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Copy_Machine_Manifesto&diff=218176Copy Machine Manifesto2024-03-15T05:20:12Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Copy Machine Manifesto''' was an exhibition of zines by artists at the Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.<br />
<br />
The exhibition ran from November 17, 2023, till March 31, 2024, and featured hundreds of zines that have been made by artists. The exhibition travels next to the Vancouver Art Gallery in Vancounver, BC, Canada from May 12 till September 20th, 2024. <br />
<br />
The Vancouver Art Gallery website describes the exhbition in this way: "Artists have harnessed the medium’s essential role in communication and community building and used it to transform material and conceptual approaches to art making across all media. This canon-expanding exhibition documents zines’ relationship to various subcultures and avant-garde practices, from punk and street culture to conceptual, queer and feminist art. It also examines zines’ intersections with other mediums, including collage, craft, film, drawing, painting, performance, photography, sculpture and video. Featuring nearly one thousand zines and artworks by nearly one hundred artists, Copy Machine Manifestos demonstrates the importance of zines to artistic production and its reception across North America."<br />
<br />
Some of the many publications featured included: <br />
<br />
*[[Beehive]]<br />
*[[Bikini Girl]]<br />
*[[Bikini Kill]]<br />
*[[Dirt (Morrisroe and White)]]<br />
*[[Egozine]]<br />
*[[Fag School]]<br />
*[[Fertile LaToyah Jackson]]<br />
*[[Gunk]]<br />
*[[Homocore]]<br />
*[[I Heart Amy Carter]]<br />
*[[International Graffiti Times]]<br />
*[[J.D.s]]<br />
*[[Joanie4Jackie]]<br />
*[[LTTR]]<br />
*[[Thing]]<br />
*[[Yes, Ms. Davis]]<br />
<br />
The Brooklyn Museum also produced a 448 page catalog documenting the exhibition, Fully illustrated with hundreds of zine covers and interiors, alongside work in other media, such as painting, photography, film, video, and performance, the book also features brief biographies for more than 100 zine-makers including Beverly Buchanan, Mark Gonzales, [[G.B. Jones]], Miranda July, Terence Koh, LTTR, Ari Marcopoulos, Mark Morrisroe, Raymond Pettibon, Brontez Purnell, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Kandis Williams. It includes contributions by: Gwen Allen, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tavia Nyong’o, Alexis Salas, and [[Mimi Thi Nguyen]].<br />
<br />
[[Category:Event]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Joanie4Jackie&diff=218175Joanie4Jackie2024-03-15T05:18:48Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:Joanie4jackie.jpg|frame|Joanie4Jackie on VHS]]<br />
'''Joanie4Jackie''' is a zine on film created by [[Miranda July]].<br />
<br />
"You always suspected it and now you know its true: Girls and women are making movies everyday", proclaims '''Joanie4Jackie'''. Each issue consists of ten short films sent in to '''Joanie4Jackie''' by women across North America, Europe and Australia. The films are made utilizing a wide variety of mediums, such as video, Super 8, pixelvision and others, since all women are invited to participate, regardless of technical skills, using whatever medium is available to them. The types of films range from narrative to animation to documentary to diaristic. These films are compiled onto a video cassette, which was then sent to participants and subscribers, as well as being for sale. The compilations are also screened at film festivals and [[DIY]] movie screenings. Notable DIY filmmakers who have contributed to the project include [[Mary Billyou]], [[Tammy Rae Carland]], [[Lisa Hammer]], [[K8 Hardy]], [[Sarah Jacobson]], [[G.B. Jones]], [[Tara Mateik]] and Miranda July herself. Begun in 1996, each issue is a "Chainletter":<br />
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===Issues===<br />
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* "Velvet Chainletter" (1996)<br />
* "Underwater Chainletter" (1996)<br />
* "U-Matic Chanletter" (1997)<br />
* "Silver Chainletter" (1998)<br />
* "CherryCherry Chainletter" (1998)<br />
* "MIA Chainletter" (1998)<br />
* "Break My Chainletter" (1999)<br />
* "Banana Cremeletter" (2000)<br />
* "Ball And Chainletter" (2000)<br />
* "Perfect 10 Chainletter" (2000)<br />
* "2001: A Chainletter" (2001)<br />
* "Who Stole My Chainletter?" (2002)<br />
* "Me & My Chainletter" (2002)<br />
* "The Frozen Chainletter" (2005)<br />
* "Girafferator Chainletter" (2006)<br />
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The project was originally titled "[[Big Miss Movieola]]", but legal threats from the owners of the word 'Movieola' forced July to change the name of her project to '''Joanie4Jackie'''. The project was envisioned as a way to encourage women to make films and as a vehicle to have their films seen by others. The Chainletter series contributed to the explosion of the DIY filmmaking scene of the '90's that continues today and has enabled female film directors to collaborate in creating their own culture. '''Joanie 4Jackie''' says; "You are the Lady Glitterati of the New Movie Uprising".<br />
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Miranda July is also the co-editor of the zine [[Snarla]] (with [[Johanna Fateman]]) and the director of the feature film ''You And Me And Everyone We Know''.<br />
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''Joanie4Jackie'' was one of the featured titles in the 2023-2024 Brooklyn Museum exhibition devoted to artist-made zines, [[Copy Machine Manifesto]].<br />
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==Link==<br />
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[http://www.joanie4jackie.com/index.html Joanie4Jackie]<br />
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[[Category:Zine]] [[category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:Film]] [[Category:Compzine]] [[Category:DIY Culture]] [[Category:Feminism]] [[Category:Multi Media]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=J.D.s&diff=218174J.D.s2024-03-15T05:18:12Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
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<div>[[Image:J.D.s.jpg|175px|thumb|right|'''J.D.s''' - Issue One]]<br />
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'''J.D.s''' was a [[queer]] [[punk]] [[zine]] founded in [[Toronto]] by [[G.B. Jones]] and co-published with [[Bruce LaBruce]].<br />
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" J.D.s is seen by many to be the catalyst that pushed the queercore scene into existence", writes [[Amy Spencer]] in ''[[DIY: The Rise Of Lo-Fi Culture]]''. '''J.D.s''' ran from 1985 to 1991, during which time eight issues were released. A [[Cut and Paste|cut and paste]], photocopied zine, it proved influential.<br />
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After the release of the first few issues, the editors wrote a manifesto entitled "Don't Be Gay", which was featured in ''[[Maximum Rock 'N' Roll]]''. According to Amy Spencer, "The article appeared in February 1989 and simultaneously attacked both punk and gay subcultures. Following their article, a queer punk culture did begin to emerge."<br />
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'''J.D.s''' stood for 'Juvenile Delinquents'. The editors originally called their movement "homocore" but later replaced the word 'homo' with 'queer', to disassociate themselves completely from the confines of the gay and lesbian communities' orthodoxy. G.B. Jones, interviewed in ''DIY: The Rise Of Lo-Fi Culture'', says, "...we were just as eager to provoke the gays and lesbians as we were the punks."<br />
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The zine featured the photos and the "Tom Girl" drawings of G.B. Jones, fiction by [[Bruce LaBruce]], and the "J.D.s Top Ten Homocore Hits", a list of queer themed songs such as "Off-Duty Sailor" by The Dicks, "Only Loved At Night" by The Raincoats, "The Anal Staircase" by Coil, "I, Bloodbrothers Be" by Shockheaded Peters, ""Homophobia" by Victims Family, "(Gimme Gimme Gimme) My Man After Midnight" by The Leather Nun, and many others. Groups such as Anti-Scrunti Faction were featured in the zine. Contributors included comic artist and zine editor [[Anonymous Boy]], author [[Dennis Cooper]], performer and zine editor [[Vaginal Davis]], [[Donny The Punk]], artist and zine editor [[Carrie McNinch]], punk artist Regi Mentle, Tab Twain, and zine editors Klaus and [[Jena von Brucker]]. <br />
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In 1990, '''J.D.s''' released the first compilation of queercore songs, a cassette tape entitled ''J.D.s Top Ten Tape'' which featured songs by The Apostles, Academy 23, and No Brain Cells from the UK, Fifth Column from Canada, Bomb and Nicki Parasite (of The Parasites) from the U.S., and Gorse (whose members included John, the editor of [[PMt]]) from New Zealand.<br />
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Also in 1990, G.B. Jones and Bruce LaBruce began presenting '''J.D.s''' movie nights in London, San Francisco, Montreal and Toronto, with the editors and various contributors showing their low budget films made on Super 8 film.<br />
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In 1991 G.B. Jones and associates began a new fanzine called [[Double Bill]].<br />
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''J.D.s'' was one of the featured titles in the 2023-2024 Brooklyn Museum exhibition devoted to artist-made zines, [[Copy Machine Manifesto]].<br />
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==Library holdings==<br />
Complete runs of JDs are held by the [[GLBT Historical Society]] in San Francisco and the [[Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives]] in Toronto.<br />
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==External Links==<br />
*[http://www.monkeychicken.com/AdamBlock/1988_10_10zines.pdf Adam Block: In Search of the Homo-Core Underground, The Advocate, October 10, 1988]<br />
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[[Category:Multi Media]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=I_Heart_Amy_Carter&diff=218173I Heart Amy Carter2024-03-15T05:17:35Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
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<div>[[Image:IloveAmyCarter.jpg|200px|thumb|right| Issue #1<br/>1992]]<br />
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'''I [Heart] Amy Carter''' was a [[zine]] written by Tammy Rae Carland. It is an early example of the [[Riot Grrrl]] and queercore zine scene.<br />
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The zine followed the breakup of "Amy Carter," a punk band consisting of Tammy Rae, Kathleen Hanna, and Heidi Arbogast, who had together founded an independent art gallery in Olympia, Washington, U.S.A. After Tammy Rae moved to Long Beach, California, to attend art school, she started ''I [Heart] Amy Carter.'' Tammy Rae wrote in [[A Girl's Guide to Taking over the World: Writings from the Girl Zine Revolution]] that she began the zine as a safe place to examine her identity as a queer woman and as a survivor of abuse.<br />
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Frequent topics included Tammy Rae's admiration for former first daughter Amy Carter and sociological observations about class and sexuality. Excerpts from tabloids and magazines highlighting pop culture's views of women were often accompanied by discussion of stereotypes. Also discussed were filmmakers such as Sadie Benning, and punk groups such as Fifth Column and Team Dresch.<br />
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Contributors included [[Kathleen Hanna]] and [[Donna Dresch]]. <br />
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Five issues were published between December 1992 and 1995.<br />
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Selections from ''I (Heart) Amy Carter'' were reprinted in the 2013 book ''[[The Riot Grrrl Collection]]'', compiled by Lisa Darms from The Fales Library of NYU Riot Grrrl Archives, and published by The Feminist Press. <br />
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''I Heart Amy Carter'' was one of the featured titles in the 2023-2024 Brooklyn Museum exhibition devoted to artist-made zines, [[Copy Machine Manifesto]]. <br />
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==External link==<br />
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* [http://qzap.org/v5/index.php?option=com_gallery2&Itemid=28&g2_itemId=682&g2_imageViewsIndex=1 Online copy of issue 1] from [[Queer Zine Archive Project]]<br />
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[[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:California Zines]] [[Category:1990's publications]] [[Category:Riot Grrrl]] [[Category:Queer]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Homocore&diff=218172Homocore2024-03-15T05:17:13Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
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<div>[[Image:Homocore_150_dpi.JPG|frame|'''Homocore''' <br/>Issue Five<Br/> Deke Nihilson (right) and friend (left) on the cover]]<br />
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'''Homocore''' was a queercore [[zine]] edited by [[Deke Nihilson]] and [[Tom Jennings]].<br />
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The first issue was released in San Francisco, California, U.S.A. in 1988. The name 'Homocore' came from the pages of [[J.D.s]], as [[Amy Spencer]] explains in ''[[DIY: The Rise Of Lo-Fi Culture]]''; "J.D.s reached Tom Jennings and Deke Nihilson in San Francisco who took the apparent merging of the hardcore punk and queer identities as their title - Homocore." From 1988 to 1991, seven issues were produced. Contributors included musicians and writers such as The Apostles, Steve Abbott, [[Donna Dresch]], [[G.B. Jones]], [[Larry Livermore]] and Ray Reich. <br />
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'''Homocore''' was one of the earliest queercore zines, published just a few years after ''J.D.s'' first came out and was an integral part of the creation of a queer [[punk]] scene. Amy Spencer writes: "Although they were based in the apparently queer-friendly city of San Francisco, they felt that their involvement in the punk and hardcore scenes made them outsiders. They explained their attitude in the introduction to the first issue...'We're outlaws if we don't follow the usual rules and don't want to be part of mass culture. We're mutants if we try new things, things that are honest and human, like making our own cultures...' " <br />
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The readership of '''Homocore''' was international and it regularly published many of the letters it received from readers in North America, South America and Europe. Nihilson and Jennings also set up '''Homocore''' shows in San Francisco where bands like Fugazi, Beat Happening and MDC played, along with Deke Nihilson's own queercore band Comrades In Arms. By the time it ceased publication, a thriving queercore scene on the west coast was in existence.<br />
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''Homocore'' was one of the titles featured in the 2023-2024 Brooklyn Museum exhibition devoted to artist-made zines, [[Copy Machine Manifesto]].<br />
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==External Link==<br />
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[http://worldpowersystems.com/HOMOCORE/ Homocore Online]<br />
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[[Category:1980's publications]]<br />
[[Category:1990's publications]] <br />
[[Category:Anarchist]]</div>InvisibleFriendhttps://zinewiki.com/zinewiki/index.php?title=Gunk&diff=218171Gunk2024-03-15T05:16:29Z<p>InvisibleFriend: </p>
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<div>[[Image:Gunk_copy.jpg|right]]<br />
'''Gunk''' was a [[Riot Grrrl]] zine by Ramdasha Bikceem.<br />
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''Gunk'' was published in New Jersey, U.S.A. Ramdasha Bikceem started ''Gunk'' in 1990, when she was 15 years old. It was focused on her skater girl gang and band of the same name. Ramdasha completed five issues of her zine, which focused on topics of race, feminism and general youth angst. Particularly in the last few issues of Gunk, Ramdasha wrote about the lack of diversity within the scene, and expressed her opinions around racial dilemmas and class conflicts within the Riot Grrrl movement.<br />
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In her zine, Ramdasha wrote about starting to skateboard; <br />
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"When I got my first skateboard I was probably around 12 years old. It didn't really occur to me at the moment that what I was doing was considered out of the ordinary for a lot of girls. But as I got older and started getting more into skateboarding, I realized what role most girls played when it came to skateboarding. Their role was to sit on the sidewalk while the rest of the boys were having a rippin' time. At first I tried to ignore and I even looked down upon these girls for not trying. I felt like nothing was stopping me, so why couldn't they give it a try? When I turned 14 years old my two best girlfriends also started to skate also. We were truly an awesome anarchic girl skate gang..."<br />
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She travelled to Olympia, Washington, and later her band performed at the first Riot Grrrrl convention in 1992 in Washington D.C.<br />
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Excerpts from ''Gunk'' were reprinted in the anthology ''[[The Riot Grrrl Collection]]'', compiled by Lisa Darms from the Riot Grrrl Archives at Fales Library at NYU, and published by The Feminist Press in 2013.<br />
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''Gunk'' was one of the titles featured at the 2023-2024 Brooklyn Museum exhibition devoted to artist-made zines, [[Copy Machine Manifesto]].<br />
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==External Links==<br />
*[http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/fales/bikceem/bioghist.html The Ramdasha Bikceem Riot Grrrl Collection at Fales Library, NYU]<br />
*[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=khe_RX0XVts Gunk playing live at the 1992 Riot Grrrl Convention]<br />
*[http://www.collapseboard.com/features/interviews/dasha-bikceem-a-k-a-designer-imposter-the-collapse-board-interview/ Interview with Ramdasha Bikceen]<br />
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[[Category:Zine]]<br />
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[[Category:1990's publications]]<br />
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[[Category:Skateboarding]]</div>InvisibleFriend