Junk Jet

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Junk Jet
Cover of Junk Jet n°3
Editor in ChiefMona Mahall, Asli Serbest
CategoriesArt, Architecture, New media
Frequencyirregular
Publisherigmade.edition
First issue2007
CountryGermany
Based inStuttgart
LanguageEnglish
WebsiteJunk Jet
ISSN1865-9357

Junk Jet is a non-commercial publication platform, a collaborative format set up to discuss speculative works on topics of art, architecture and electronic media.[1] It is published by independent igmade.edition, edited and designed by Mona Mahall and Asli Serbest (m-a-u-s-e-r).

History[edit]

Self-published Magazine Junk Jet is founded in 2007 by the Berlin-based architects Mona Mahall and Asli Serbest.[2] The magazine is part of the duo's research-based practice in architecture, exhibitions, and installations.[2]

Issues[edit]

Issue Theme Date Description Pages Measurements ISBN
1 Noise and failure November 2007 JJ wants to capture and transfer junk’s ambiguities indicating non- function, or at least bad-function implied in the nature of technology, and various forms of mis-use for aesthetic purposes. What could be the aesthetic (non-) function of junk within clean computational aesthetics of electronic media? Therefore, relevant fields are all sorts of re-use, of wrong- and non-use, and of tinkering (bricoler, basteln) of forms and found objects, of theories and (small) narratives, of fashions and styles, and of course of computers and other electronic devices. 69 25 x 20 x 0.5 cm
2[3] Speculative architecture November 2008 For the second issue, Junk Jet was looking for the Speculative, focusing on works of unpredictable architectures and volatile spaces within real and virtual environments.

The speculative haunts all systems of production, threatens them with the destruction of their order and with collapse. It continues to appear to all orthodoxies as artifice, as a black magic, which is to be unveiled, because it is somehow effective in an illusive, but absorbing way, which is characteristic to an occasion for a game and its stakes. It is not a rational process, but something that contradicts this frame, something that is recognized as irrational, as feverish, and that therefore is suspected to be dysfunctional, inhuman, or even monstrous.

100 24 x 16.5 x 0.7 cm
3 Flux us flux you February 2010 Junk Jet n°3 asked for fluxing architectures, boogie, buildings, rolling rocks, flying architectures, provisory pyramids, and temporary eternities; for all kinds of practical concepts and conceptual practices, for stable happenings and unstable thoughts, for lifted cellars and dugin landmarks, for curtains, mobiles, house boats, bubbles, zeppelins, flying saucers ... 120 18 x 13 x 1 cm ISBN 978-3-00-030127-8
4 Statistics of mystics October 2010 works and theories that make 1 become 2, 2 become 3, 3 …, works that make something out of nothing or nothing out of something, that discover new – even if microscaled – galaxies, that believe in alchemy and maintain a certain kind of apocalyptic thought; works that move from mumbo-jumbo to real magic and back. 88 27 x 19 x 1 cm ISBN 978-3-00-032228-0
5 Net heart 2012 Transfers internet things from their digital space into printed media. Collection of objects, internet blogs, and animations into a magazine of archived bits of the web.
6[4] Here and Where December 2012 About the local in the global culture. 144 14.8 x 10.5 x 0.8 cm ISBN 978-3-9814748-2-4

References[edit]

  1. ^ "The Junk Set". Rhizome. 2008-02-13. Retrieved 2024-02-28.
  2. ^ a b "Asli Serbest and Mona Mahall: The house Alice built - Announcements - e-flux". www.e-flux.com. Retrieved 2024-02-28.
  3. ^ "Get Ready for Take-Off". Rhizome. 2008-12-16. Retrieved 2024-02-24.
  4. ^ Sterling, Bruce. "JunkJet issues number six". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. Retrieved 2024-02-24.

External links[edit]