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Moon City explores the silent dialogue and underlying tension between two forces at play — the ancient pull of the Moon and the restless ambition of London's financial skyline — a quiet meditation on nature, capitalism, and the spaces in between.
Moon City is driven by a deep sense of urgency — the same urgency that shadows our lives today. Climate change, political upheaval, social unrest, and collective traumas that, instead of bringing us closer, often push us further apart, isolating each of us in our own fragile bubble. Through this work, Mollica seeks to offer a space to pause, to look up, and to reflect — a quiet reminder of forces greater than ourselves, and of the perspectives we risk losing in the noise of modern life. The book includes texts by Iain Sinclair and Brad Feuerhelm.
“the best way to get rid of pain is to laugh at it"
Maya Golyshkina creates fantastical and dissonant self-portraits in which she embodies anthropomorphic versions of everyday objects blurring the line between object and self, following in the lineage of Claude Cahun, Cindy Sherman, and Gillian Wearing.
As one of the pioneering and influential figures during the 1960s and 70s creative scene of Japan, Yosuke Onishi represents an old school mindset, dedicating ones time to the meticulous pursuit of craftsmanship.
Possibility explores Fetishism and the erotic, themes that are attractive to the mind of Onishi.
“This slim volume is Peter’s sexiest self-portrait. Read it and weep if you didn’t know him. Or read it and weep if you did that we lost him.”
— Nan Goldin
Should art be determined by political ideals?
Rosanna McLaughlin invites us to rethink the connection between political values and art-and to ask whether a relationship between them should exist at all. In arguing against morality in the arts, McLaughlin lays the groundwork for a more expansive concept of difference in twenty-first-century art making.
More 18 Ballads After James Joyce’s Ulysses – Volume II is both a tribute and a transformation: a celebration of Joyce’s Dublin, retold through voice, rhythm and performance.
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Launch 4 September 2024
Running 4-27 September 2024 at The Library Project
At The Library Project until 29th June
at The Library Project
6pm Thursday 5th June








