10 YEARS is the first comprehensive book on the artist Eric Yahnker, capturing a decade of art and exhibitions. From early graphite drawings in 2008, through to a solo exhibition in New York at the end of 2018. The subject of Yahnker’s work has always been closely tied to the cultural and political upheavals in America, these ten years (2008-2018) also reveal the seismic shift in American culture itself during that decade. Three hundred and twelve pages of high quality reproductions of his virtuosic draftsmanship skills in graphite, charcoal and pastel are emphasized, as are his installation and sculptural works. Approaching a catalogue raisonné, this handmade, limited edition monograph is a critical look at an important period in the artist’s career as well as a shoulder-check on a decade of American culture.

ISBN: 978-1-926968-43-8
Size: 8” x 10” / 20.25 cm x 25.5 cm
Pages: 312 (color)
Cover: Debossed blind and gold foil stamp with photo tip-in
Limited Edition of 400 copies
Language: English

Slow Scrape is, in the words of Layli Long Soldier, “an expansive and undulating meditation on time, relations, origin and colonization.» Lukin Linklater draws upon documentary poetics, concrete-based installations, event scores, and other texts composed in relation to performances written between 2011 and 2018. The book cites memory, Cree and Alutiiq languages, and embodiment as modes of relational being and knowledge. The book unfolds a poetics of relation and action to counter the settler colonial violences of erasure, extraction, and dispossession. Slow Scrape can be read alongside Lukin Linklater’s practice as a visual artist and choreographer.

Slow Scrape includes an introduction by Layli Long Soldier, as well as a dialogue between Lukin Linklater and editor Michael Nardone.

– 6.5” x 9.25”
– 108 pg
– Interior Printed 1 Colour Risograph (Blue)
– Edition of 250

Tanya Lukin Linklater’s performances, videos, installations, and writings work through orality and embodiment – investigating histories of Indigenous peoples’ lives, lands, and structures of sustenance. She has studied at Stanford University, the University of Alberta, and, presently, at Queen’s University, where she is a doctoral candidate in Cultural Studies. While Lukin Linklater’s Alutiiq homelands are in southern Alaska (Native Villages of Afognak and Port Lions), she has lived and worked in Nbisiing Anishnabek territory in northern Ontario, Canada for more than a decade. Slow Scrape is her first collection of poetry.

Series Editors Nathan Brown and Michael Nardone, Design & Layout by LOKI

Published by The Centre for Expanded Poetics & Anteism

Été 2020

Les œuvres de ce dossier abordent des dimensions de l’activité humaine qui ont une portée significative dans notre société mondialisée, eu égard au rôle de la technologie, de l’usage des ressources énergétiques et du respect des droits de la personne. Œuvres complexes qui conjuguent de multiples voix pour refléter les enjeux éthiques et l’impact sur les vies individuelles et les communautés de leurs enjeux.

ÉDITORIAL

Vertige pandémique — Jacques Doyon

PORTFOLIOS

Benoit Aquin, La dimension éthérique du réseau par Anton Bequii — Alexis Desgagnés
William Kentridge, More Sweetly Play The Dance — Érika Nimis
Mary Kavanagh, Daughters of Uranium — Blake Fitzpatrick

FOCUS

Momenta 2019, Biennale de l’image — Charles Guilbert
Zoom Photo Festival Saguenay — Sophie Bertrand
Biennale des Photographes du Monde Arabe Contemporain — Claudia Polledri

EXPOSITIONS

Isaac Julien, Frederick Douglass: Lessons of the Hour — Ariane Noël de Tilly
Hito Steyerl, This is the future — Jill Glessing
Monique Moumblow, Compositions | Pale Shadows — Charles Guilbert
Normand Rajotte, Sur les lieux — Mona Hakim
Jocelyn Philibert, Dimension Lumière — Sylvain Campeau
Szilasi & Szilasi — Fanny Bieth et Clément Willer
Rencontres photographiques de Guyane | 6e édition — Sophie Bertrand
Sarah Wendt et Pascal Dufaux | Alexis Bellavance — Nathalie Bachand

LECTURES

David McMillan, Croissance et Dégradation — Pierre Dessureault
Ouvrages à souligner — Fanny Bieth
Arles, Les Rencontres de la photographie — Bruno Chalifour

PAROLES

Robert Walker — Entrevue réalisée par James D. Campbell