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Aesthetica Magazine Issue 109 (Digital Version)

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October / November 2022

Where Do Ideas Come From

It gives me great pleasure to bring you this issue as we approach the 12th annual Aesthetica Film Festival. I am continuously inspired and invigorated by all the talented people that come our way, from the Aesthetica Art Prize and Film Festival to the Creative Writing Award and this publication. I am so grateful that I am able to engage with so much creativity. It gives me both strength and reams of motivation.  

I have to ask: where do ideas come from? How is that sometimes we have that eureka moment, when the stars align, and we think about something in a completely new way. I don’t know how we can utilise this, but the best way to spark ideas is to immerse yourself in as many varied things as possible. I always talk about stepping outside of my comfort zone. How can we encourage ourselves to do that more? 

Inside this issue we foreground the Turner Prize-winning Forensic Architecture, who harness design to investigate human rights violations, from terror attacks to ecocide. Meanwhile, we speak with Jason Bruges Studio about the rise of experiential art, interactivity and interdisciplinarity. Mónica de Miranda opens a new show at Autograph ABP, London, which looks at the complexity of the Afrodiasporic experience. The Island, a 37-minute film, addresses concepts of race, representation, social justice and human rights. It’s a powerful piece that questions the construction of identity through a post-colonial lens.  

In photography, we welcome Omar Torres, Andoni Beristain, Anastasia Samoylova, Reuben Wu and Neal Grundy, who each play with landscapes in new and innovative ways: from illuminating remote locations with drone lighting to creating paper tableaux that mimic the ways we experience nature online. Our innovative cover photographers are Anna Devís and Daniel Rueda, who play with form and design, redefining the conventions of structural photography by using the city as a performative canvas. The Last Words go to MoMA’s Roxana Marcoci, who highlights a seminal Wolfgang Tillmans exhibition.