Zines
The Teen Refugees Starting Their Own Zine From a Squat in Greece
The Plaza Girls describe themselves as "anti-fascist and anti-patriarchy."
'Cave Homo,' the Zine Celebrating Your Favorite Queer Skateboarders
The second issue features Lacey Baker and work from 17 queer artists.
How Feminist Zine Culture Has Evolved
From Riot Grrrl to a more inclusive and high aesthetic present, a new exhibition shows the changing faces of a century of independent print.
3 Zines Celebrating the Complexity of Being Latinx
“Zines are a form of therapy—a therapeutic way to share our struggles associated with racism, sexism, abuse, culture, and colonialism."
'I Should Not Be Here' Is a Zine About the Lives of London Skateboarders
Now on its second edition, this visual brainchild of two London skaters is an homage to the DIY ethics of punk and hardcore.
The True Spirit of 'The Simpsons' Lives On in These Bootleg Zines
"There's so much Springfield-related creativity happening right now—it's just that none of it is coming from the show's creators."
What the Failures of a Feminist Bookstore Can Teach Us About Intersectionality
Brooklyn's now defunct Troll Hole was a zine and sex shop located in the corner of a busy laundromat. But it rarely attracted the women washing their clothes on the other side of its glittery, purple curtain.
This Calming Zine Is Helping My Social Media Overstimulation
Heterotopias examines virtual architecture through essays and images that make you stop and think.
The New York Art Book Fair Is Still a Sweaty Sauna
I've covered Printed Matter's New York Art Book Fair since 2012. Each year it's grown and changed—except for this year, when it didn't.
For Indonesian Women, Feminist Zines Are a Powerful Rebellion
"[It's] a medium where the person or community you want to know about is usually communicating directly. It's their voice."
'There Are No Rules!': How Zines Open Doors for Women in Indonesia
"Zines are a medium where the person or community you want to know about is usually communicating directly. It's their voice."