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s1gnal · 2 years
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This page will be shutting down at some point soon!
Longer content is available at justseeds.org and social medias now on instagram
We’ve been paying for this domain but no longer
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s1gnal · 5 years
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Signal is an ongoing book series dedicated to documenting and sharing compelling graphics, art projects, and cultural movements of international resistance and liberation struggles. It is edited by Josh MacPhee and Alec Dunn and published by PM Press. It is always available for sale at PM Press and Justseeds.
Signal:01 The Taller Tupac Amaru * Dutch Red Rat Comic * Graffiti Writer IMPEACH * Radical Imprint Logos * The Graphics from Mexico 1968 * Adventure Playgrounds: A Photo Essay * Anarchist Designer Rufus Segar Signal:02 Japanese Anarchist Manga * Freedom: Anarchist Broadsheets * Oaxacan Street Art * Røde Mor: Danish Collective * Revolutionary Murals of Portugal * Malangatana: Revolutionary Mozambican Painter * Gestetner Printing Signal:03 South Africa’s Medu Arts Ensemble * Paredon Records n Deltor: Anarchist-Communist Collages of the 1930s * Graphics from the 2012 Québec Student Strike * Spanish Anarchist Newspapers Mastheads * Yugoslav Partisan Memorials Signal:04 Palestinian Affairs Magazine * Street Art Concerning the Juárez Femicides * Antimilitarist Peace Navy * Toronto’s Punchclock Press * New Zealand Political Posters * Kommune 1: Berlin’s 1960s Counterculture * Three Continents Press Signal:05 Emerging Print Collectives * Displacement and Design in Barcelona * Political Prints from 1970s Uruguay * NYC’s Come!Unity Press * Italian Political Records * The Pyramid as Symbol of Capitalism Signal:06 Stickers from the German Antifa, 1970s Portugal, and the IWW * Appalachian Movement Press * Mexican Collective ECPM68 * 1970s Asian American Resistance in NYC * Lebanese Collective Jamaa Al-Yad * Incite! Bay Area 1980s Anti-Imperialist Collage
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s1gnal · 6 years
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Wir haben mal wieder eine Auflage Neon-Sticker gedruckt – dieses mal in pink! Sehen ziemlich cool aus, wie wir finden :) Gedruckt sind sie im Siebdruck auf PVC Folie, also ziemlich robust, kratz- und wetterbeständig. Alle 12 Motive findet ihr hier: https://black-mosquito.org/aufkleber/neon.html
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s1gnal · 6 years
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Signal:06 Editors’ Round Up
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Fresh from the printers is the sixth and latest issue of Signal: A Journal of International Political Graphics & Culture. Signal is edited by Josh MacPhee and I and it is our attempt to document and share compelling and innovative historical and current political artwork and graphics. We primarily (though not exclusively) focus on art and movements happening outside of the United States, in the hopes of enriching and broadening the conversation around political art and graphics production.
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The first article is a brief history of the Escuela de Cultura Popular de los Mártires del 68, a Mexican art collective and social space founded in 1988 in Mexico City. Compiled by Yobany Mendoza, a member of M68 (and also a member of Justseeds), this article explores the ways in which M68 has strengthened Mexican social movements and has helped seed other political art collectives in Mexico (including active groups such as Sublevarte Colectivo, the Convergencia Gráfica Malla, and Mujeres Grabando Resistencias). M68 acts as a space that hosts workshops, meetings, a library and a space for art production- thousands of stunning political graphics, posters, portfolios, murals, and images have come into existence because of the work M68. It is well deserved that this is our fourth feature on political art from Mexico in Signal, a country that has fostered some of the best political graphics in the last century!  
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Next up Ryan Lee Wong provides a documentary history of the Basement Workshop, a 1970’s era Asian American cultural organization in New York City. The Basement Workshop was a platform for young Asian Americans to produce art events, theatre, and publications, and it provided a physical and psychic space for Asian Americans to organize politically and build solidarity networks with other local, national, and international struggles.  
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Following this is an interview by Josh MacPhee with Daniel Drennan ElAwar, one of he founders of the Jamaa Al-Yad art collective. Jamaa Al-Yad (JAY) began as collective with roots in the students and faculty of the art department of the American University in Beirut, Lebanon. JAY has produced many absolutely stunning black and white images relating to struggles in the region. JAY draws upon the rich modern graphic history of the Arab world and has produced a bevy of sharp and vital images. In this feature Daniel and Josh discuss the founding of the group, the ways in which images are developed, and the potential for graphics to be used for liberation struggles. Definitely worth checking out!  
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We have three mini features on political stickers. The first gives a look at the mass production of stickers by the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW). This article sheds light on an under appreciated part of the IWW’s history and organizing efforts and shows how mass production runs of subversive sticker helped the IWW to educate, agitate, and organize on a broad scale.  
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For our second sticker feature, Josh explores stickers produced during the Carnation Revolution in Portugal in the 1970s. These are really lovely designs using a variety of approaches towards producing some powerful images. Looking through these images makes me think of what it takes to make a good sticker, one must produce a small and simple image stripped down to its barest essentials, that the best stickers convey a lot with very little. This is definitely a challenge for designers! Josh contextualizes which organizations made the stickers and as such this article also provides a snapshot into the complexity of revolutionary movements which comprised the Carnation Revolution.  
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Our final piece on stickers is by Joel Morton, who writes about antifascist stickers in Berlin. These stickers pull heavily from pop culture and add a good dose of humor and excitement in the fight against fascism in Germany.  
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Next up is a third piece by Josh (as I write this sentence I am feeling a renewed need to step up my own content production for Signal- it’s hard to keep with Josh!). This article is about a group of early 1980s collage artists and propagandists from the Bay Area that were called Incite! They produced striking and confrontational collages that were designed to be posted and pasted publicly. This article was originally slated for Signal:01 but was shelved for several years due to some disagreements within the original collective members. We decided to resurrect this piece and updated it by inserting an acknowledgment of the old contested history. Very cool stuff- super punk! 
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And finally, by Justseeds’ Shaun Slifer, we have a history of the Appalachian Movement Press- a prolific small press based out of West Virginia in the 1960’s and 70’s that explored current and historical issue affecting the Appalachian region through an anti-capitalist framework. This group, like the Weathermen or the Young Patriots, was focused on tying the struggles of the white poor and working class to black and other anti-imperialist liberation struggles. It was also one of the rare groups of the New Left that integrated  one of the key figures of the Old Left, Don West- an Appalachian writer, teacher, poet, abolitionist, organizer, and old-school radical. The Appalachian Movement Press had something of an anti-aesthetic, their typography and design were decidedly minimal and workmanlike and, as a whole, produce something quite blunt and moving.
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This issue of Signal took Josh and I a little bit longer than normal. Our aspiration is for Signal to be an annual publication, and it takes us about a year to do from start to finish. It is a labor of love, neither of are paid to do this, and we both produce Signal on top of work, life, love, and several other projects. We often just get done with a new issue of Signal, and while we are trying to figure out new ways to promote it and get it out there, we are also trying to line up interviews or secure new writing for the next issue. After Signal:05 we wanted some time to think about what we were doing and to think about some areas and new ground we wanted to cover. This is the end result of that and one of the strongest issues we’ve had overall. We are always open to contributions, for more information please drop us a note at [email protected]. And we are always trying to get Signal more exposure, if you can- please help us get Signal into more libraries, bookstores, and reviews. Signal:06 is available for sale from
Justseeds
and
PM Press
.
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s1gnal · 6 years
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Signal:06 is out now!
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s1gnal · 7 years
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s1gnal · 7 years
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Martin Spouse in John Yates’ Punchline.
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s1gnal · 7 years
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s1gnal · 7 years
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From the Kate Sharpley Library
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s1gnal · 7 years
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Who is Pangrok Sulap?
    Pangrok Sulap is an art collective from Sabah, Malaysia, formed by a group of friends who have the same interest in making art. It was founded by Rizo, Gindung, Bam, and Jerome around 2010. We’re all gathered for the same interest. Pangrok means punk rock, while Sulap means a farmer’s resting place/hut.
How did you start?
    Pangrok Sulap established in 2010, starting from the idea to paint cartoon characters about the happy reality folklore in the State of Sabah. From folklore to become an action. Th small communities under the foot of Mount Kinabalu (Ranau) is active in various artistic activities (musical, painting and so on). We fight together in doing art to survive. Here, we believe that every human being is an artist. We would like to invite everyone to do anything related to art as a messenger in our daily lives. Together we fight for the rights of the people, doing charity work in every available space, learning to share knowledge and impetus to all walks of life.
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What does Pangrok Sulap do?
    Most of the time we’re doing block printing. But some of us also know DIY bookmaking, bagmaking, and silk screen printing. We also do charity and volunteer work.
 How does Pangrok Sulap usually work (do you work individually, collectively, both)?
    Both. But collectively most of the time.
Where is Pangrok Sulap based?
    We’re based in Ranau. Most of the members are from Ranau and some are from other places in Sabah, Malaysia.
What are some common reference points for you as a group: artistically, politically, culturally, socially?
    In terms of message delivery in the artwork. We always ensure that the public can understand directly what we tried to convey in the artwork.
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Tell us about the collaborative work that you do as a group?
    Normally we’ll gather together and discuss about the idea project on how and what we should do to make it happen. Basically we do community service, as a group, we will work collectively on doing workshop with communities around us. We do woodcut DIY stuff like book etc often mural and art projects.
Do you have ties with specific social movements and struggles?
    No, but sometimes collaborative with them (NGO, People)
Have you been able to meet your goals with doing political artwork?
    It didn’t actually meet the goals, but we still managed to raise awareness.
How do you navigate the tension between creating functional/utilitarian artwork for political movements and between formal experimentation and expression?
    The art work we normally produced is about the issues happening in the meantime we think the people will know what we expressing.
 What are some future goals for the group?
    We hope what we’re doing will influence or inspire more people to start doing something and aware about their surrounding.
 What would the ideal Pangrok Sulap collective look like?
    An art collective that bring art to their society.
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s1gnal · 7 years
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s1gnal · 7 years
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Vauxhall bridge, London, 2017
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s1gnal · 8 years
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An old postcard from Freedom Press (London) with some beautiful loopy Kropotkin graffiti in the background.
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s1gnal · 8 years
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s1gnal · 8 years
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Stickers !
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s1gnal · 8 years
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‘Humanity, Peace, Freedom’, Afro-American Liberation Army, Los Angeles, 1971.
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s1gnal · 8 years
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