Tag Archives: Nest Magazine

Publication Studio at 177 Livingston

I have so many things to announce. My first announcement is that Publication Studio a print-on-demand publishing laboratory in Portland, Oregon is in Brooklyn for the weekend at 177 Livingston, the new home of Triple Canopy, Light Industry, and The Public School New York. Tonight I stopped by to check out their books and listen to a conversation about publishing, publications, and bookstores. During the day tomorrow (Saturday April 10th) you can stop by for some good conversation and good book browsing, and shopping. Israel Lund (who has a great blog recommended to me by my friend Mabel Cordero who also has a great blog) has a beautiful book for sale called Some, But Not All, of My Clothes. Let’s take a virtual tour – artmag’s first embedded video!

A wonderful little editioned hand-painted book by Chris Johanson and Joanna Jackson is also for sale, among other gems.

Tomorrow night Publication Studio is also hosting a party with live music by Dragging an Ox Through Water; paintings by Dana Dart-McLean; prints by Israel Lund; projected photos by Ari Marcopoulos; new video by M Blash; very short readings by my friend Christine Hou, as well as Pravin JainMatthew Stadler, and What We Are Learning. New video selections curated by Cleopatra’s. 8–11 pm, $5 at the door.

More info about Publication Studio from their website:

Publication Studio is an experiment in sustainable publication. We print and bind books on demand, creating original work with artists and writers we admire, books that both respond to the conversation of the moment and can endure. We attend to the social life of the book, cultivating a public that cares and is engaged. Publication Studio is a laboratory for publication in its fullest sense — not just the production of books, but the production of a public. This public, which is more than a market, is created through deliberate acts: the circulation of texts; discussions and gatherings in physical space; and the maintenance of a digital commons. Together these construct a space of conversation, a public space, which beckons a public into being.

I also wanted to mention that Matthew Stadler who runs Publication Studio out of his home in Portland, Oregon used to be the literary editor for Nest Magazine!

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Moving on…

ArtMag has been on hiatus due to my recent move.  As I find new places for my belongings and begin to decorate my apartment, I am reminded of one of my very favorite magazines: Nest.

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Nest was a quarterly magazine of interiors, published from 1997 to the winter of 2003/2004.  Each issue of Nest is a feat of creativity and design.  Just glancing at the covers, with their yellow spines, gives you a glimpse of the amazing design choices made by editor Joseph Holtzman and his staff.  One issue has holes punched through it, another issue is inside of a clear zipper bag, one has scalloped edges, one is bound with red string, and others have embossed paper and glitter.  No shortcuts were taken in producing Nest, and each cover is just as elaborate as the interiors and lifestyles contained within.  Some of my favorite covers include issue no.4(1999:spring) which is a photograph of cats inside of a bedroom, their litter boxes sprinkled with copper glitter and issue no.21(2003:summer) which has a colorful collaged image on the front and scalloped edges.

But now to get to the interior of Nest.  Besides the wonderful covers, excellent design decisions, and fancy paper, Nest is unique because it isn’t just a magazine about the spaces of the rich and famous.  The articles span a wide variety of people and places.  In issue no.4 there is an article with photographs of Cy Twombly‘s mansion alongside an article about a man who lives in a junkyard near the MetroNorth tracks in Harlem.

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One of my favorite articles, in the summer 2001 issue, shows the interior of Ft. Thunder‘s space in Providence, R.I.  The photographs of their space show walls completely plastered with trash, grafitti, stickers, posters, photographs, etc.  It’s like a treehouse junkyard.  One photograph shows their screen-printing setup and in the same spread is a photograph of two members of Ft. Thunder dressed head to toe in knitted outfits: stockings, tunics, and masks.  The rehearsal space where bands like Lightning Bolt practiced is also shown, as well as a room with hundreds of stuffed animals hanging down from the ceiling.  At some point in 2001 the warehouse space was destroyed by developers, but the funky feel of their space lives on in the pages of this issue of Nest.

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In the winter of 2003/2004, editor Joseph Holtzman wrote at the beginning of Nest that he was in a psychiatric hospital and that this issue would be his last.  When The New York Times reported on the demise of the magazine, they wrote that Mr. Holtzman had spent somewhere between 4-6 million dollars on Nest.  Although he had hoped it would be profitable, it never was.  And, although he was wealthy enough to keep the magazine afloat, he claimed he had run out of ideas and energy.  You have to have respect for someone who quits when they are on top and every issue of Nest is a testament to that.

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If you miss the excitement of reading the latest issue of Nest, Apartamento is a great contemporary.  It doesn’t have all the bells and whistles of Nest, but is refreshingly simple in it’s design and just the right size for reading in transit. In an earlier issue of my blog I wrote a review of Apartamento, which published it’s first issue last summer.  In a similar fashion to Nest, Apartamento is “an everyday life interiors magazine.”   Unfortunately the most recent issue, no.3(2009:spring) is already sold out!  And it’s hard to find in the United States.  So if you have purchased Apartamento in the U.S., leave a comment and let us know where we might be able to find it.  I bought my copy of issue no.2 at Motto Berlin.

Another fun place to look at interiors in on the webstie: The Selby.  Created by fashion photographer Todd Selby, The Selby is all pictures, with barely any content.  It is an engrossing glimpse at the interiors of the rich and famous.  (The photograph below taken by Todd Selby is of Melia Mardern and Frank Sisti Jr.aka Kid America‘s bookshelf in their Manhattan apartment)

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While I’m on the topic of interior spaces and homes, I wanted to mention some new venues for looking at art that are popping up in New York City.  Hosting exhibitions in apartments is becoming more and more popular, especially as galleries close down and museums lay off employees.  Apartmentshow NY and Melanie Flood Projects are two ongoing curatorial projects to keep an eye out for.  They each represent the opposite ends of this trend.  Apartmentshow NY is curated by artists Joshua Smith and Denise Kupferschmidt.  For each show the two find an apartment, usually one that has been emptied out due to a move, and fill it with artwork for one night only.  They have hosted performances, installations, video art, paintings, and sculpture, and have showed a wide variety of artists from Peter Coffin to Alicia Gibson.  Melanie Flood Projects, on the other hand, is held in the Clinton Hill brownstone apartment of Melanie Flood.   I have only been to one event in the space: March Madness.  It was a low key gathering, mostly with artists selling small objects, magazines, zines, photographs, and other ephemera around the island counter in her kitchen.  Events like these seem warmer, no doubt because they are in a home, whether inhabited or not.

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