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Kevin Brazil
Kevin Brazil is a writer and critic who lives in London. His writing has appeared in Granta, The White Review, the London Review of Books, the Times Literary Supplement, Art Review, art-agenda, Studio International, and elsewhere. He is writing a book about queer happiness.

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Interview with Sianne Ngai

Interview

October 2020

Kevin Brazil

Interview

October 2020

Over the past fifteen years, Sianne Ngai has created a taxonomy of the aesthetic features of contemporary capitalism: the emotions it provokes, the judgements...

Essay

Issue No. 28

Fear of a Gay Planet

Kevin Brazil

Essay

Issue No. 28

In Robert Ferro’s 1988 novel Second Son, Mark Valerian suffers from an unnamed illness afflicting gay men, spread by...

Caves, sleep, absence of light     1 Oh what is this light that holds us fast? Frank O’Hara [1]   I was about to move house and the move was happening very quickly My new home was just four miles east but I was leaving the part of London where I’d been born and had lived for most of my life Although the reasons for moving were happy ones, I hadn’t anticipated the level of unsettlement it would bring about One day, feeling overwhelmed by the detail of it all, I decided that what I really needed was to live alone in a cave I was walking past a cinema and went into whatever was showing just to be able to sit in the dark It was a film about a cave[2]   The Chauvet Cave was discovered in 1994 It had long ago been sealed off by rockfall, leaving its 32,000-year-old paintings perfectly preserved  The pale walls are covered in bison, horses, rhinoceroses, lions and bears They are strikingly fluid – a lion’s profile is given in a single six-foot-long stroke – but the artist has done even more to bring them alive The cave is full of outcrops and recesses, the walls ripple and dip, and the animals have been drawn accordingly  One bison has been given eight legs and a rhinoceros a series of six horns to indicate, like a series of frames, that they are moving  I was in a cave that was a cinema watching a film about a cave that was a cinema   The archaeologists and historians mapping and researching the cave had the open mind, and open imagination, that perhaps comes from operating so far beyond the human scale One said that he dreamt of lions ‘Real lions or painted lions?’  ‘Both’ He sounded surprised to be asked to make the distinction Another tried to explain how the world might have been perceived 32,000 years ago, describing an everyday condition of metamorphosis: ‘A tree can speak … a wall can talk to us, refuse or accept us’   In the cinema – a place of talking

Contributor

March 2018

Kevin Brazil

Contributor

March 2018

Kevin Brazil is a writer and critic who lives in London. His writing has appeared in Granta, The White Review, the London...

Interview with Terre Thaemlitz

Interview

March 2018

Kevin Brazil

Interview

March 2018

In the first room of Terre Thaemlitz’s 2017 exhibition ‘INTERSTICES’, at Auto Italia in London, columns of white text ran across one wall. Thaemlitz...

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Interview

Issue No. 8

Interview with Deborah Levy

Jacques Testard

Interview

Issue No. 8

‘TO BECOME A WRITER, I had to learn to interrupt, to speak up, to speak a little louder, and...

poetry

February 2016

[from] What It Means to Be Avant-Garde

Anna Moschovakis

poetry

February 2016

This is an excerpt from the middle of a longer poem. The full poem is in Moschovakis’s forthcoming book,...

Interview

April 2017

Interview with Mark Greif

Daniel Cohen

Interview

April 2017

Since 2004, when his work started to appear in n+1, the magazine he co-founded, Mark Greif has taken contemporary...

 

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