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JUXTAPOZ ISSUE 214 — SPRING/SUMMER 2020

JUXTAPOZ ISSUE 214 — SPRING/SUMMER 2020

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Issue 214 arrives in a moment of global pause, and the magazine reflects that mood—introspective, experimental, and full of artists quietly recalibrating their worlds. It opens in Bergamo with Studio Time, where Marco Mazzoni evolves his lush, colored-pencil botanicals into something more mythic and psychological—folklore, flora, and feminine symbolism merging in a new direction.

The Report features Bill Posters, whose subversive digital interventions (“hacking the city”) probe media manipulation, surveillance, and public-space politics. Product reviews keep it playful—blankets, decks, and David Shrigley’s deadpan humour—before the Picture Book travels through Kristine Potter’s stark reinterpretation of the American West, peeling away myth to reveal tension, solitude, and danger beneath the landscape.

Design shifts to the rich material legacy of Heath Ceramics, a California institution of clay, glaze, and mid-century craftsmanship. Fashion digs into denim history with The Jean-eology of an American Style, tracing workwear from utility to icon. Influences checks in with Yu Maeda, who journeys West only to look East again—psychedelic folklore looping back into traditional shapes and cosmic creatures.

A riverboat escape in California anchors Travel Insider, while In Session explores LCAD’s Entertainment Design program—worldbuilding, character design, and visual storytelling training the next generation. On the Outside spotlights 1010, the portal-maker whose optical illusions eat into architecture like voids looking for answers.

Book reviews cover Yoshitomo Nara, Jeff Divine’s surf photography, and POW! WOW!’s global mural culture.

The main features run deep:
Calida Rawles, blending photorealism and water symbolism into powerful portraits of Black identity, dignity, and emotional depth.
José Parlá, layering calligraphy, texture, and city history into vibrant urban abstractions.
Molly Bounds, whose crisp figurative paintings explore interiority, observation, and the physical language of waiting.
Felipe Pantone, bending moiré patterns, glitch color gradients, and high-speed futurism into installation and sculpture.
Anna Weyant, painting stillness, secrets, and dark humour into soft, classical compositions.
Jess Johnson, building psychedelic sci-fi universes—ritual architecture, wormholes, symbols, and worldbuilding gone maximal.
Koichi Sato, with work that sits between surreal stillness and meditative tension.

Events reflect the time: virtual exhibitions, streaming films, and new ways of “seeing” art when physical spaces shut down. Sieben’s column, “55 Cents Goes a Long Way,” delivers low-key wisdom with his usual dry charm, while Pop Life surveys art during uncertainty—Tokyo to New York, screens to streets.

The issue closes on Carlo McCormick’s Perspective, a meditation on the global urban pause—cities stilled, rhythms broken, and the strange clarity that comes with collective quiet.

A reflective, transitional, beautifully atmospheric issue—rich with artists reimagining what worldbuilding looks like during a standstill.


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