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Spike Art #84 - Vulgarity
For Summer 2025, Spike Art Magazine is getting freaky with the truest image of our time: Vulgarity.
In a moment when moral offense refers less to the ass-scratching of uncultured commoners than the rulelessness of our ruling classes â whether auctioning off public office via shitcoin or bombing all of Gazaâs hospitals â what possibilities are open to art to disclose new aesthetics, new sensations, new truths?
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Featuring essays by critic Dean Kissick on AI images as the new folk art and historian Quinn Slobodian on the roots of political shamelessness; definitions of âvulgarityâ from Jack Self, Bruce LaBruce, Donna Schons, Cem A., Maxwell Foley, and Daniel Baumann; Alison Gingeras & Alissa Bennett asking âWhere Is All the Vulgar Art?â; Artistâs Favorites by political dominatrix Reba Maybury; Francesco Tenaglia taking a whiff of Rob Pruittâs 1998 installation Cocaine Buffet; Hans-JuÌrgen Hafner re-situating âMuÌlheimer Freiheit â Neue wilde Bilderâ at Galerie Paul Maenz, Cologne, 1985; Alex Hochuli querying âWhy Are Politicians So Bad Today?â; a conversation between R.I.P. Germain & Hannah Black; portraits of Hamishi Farah, Christelle Oyiri, and Philipp Timischl by Aodhan Madden, Camille KinguĂ©, and Maximilian GeymuÌller; Philippa Snow on the Cinema of Transgressionâs piss-off nihilism; Biz Sherbert entertaining âWhatâs Vulgar in Fashion?â; speculation on the bleeding edge of shitcoins by artist-writer-gallerist Jared Madere; Spike editor Isabella Zamboni feeling the obscenity of 90s Benetton billboards all over again; British chef Jago Rackham eating funnel cake at a NASCAR track; Amanda Fortini walking the real Las Vegas; & Tea HaÄiÄ-VlahoviÄ on what separates being a hot girl from wanting to fuck one.
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For Summer 2025, Spike Art Magazine is getting freaky with the truest image of our time: Vulgarity.
In a moment when moral offense refers less to the ass-scratching of uncultured commoners than the rulelessness of our ruling classes â whether auctioning off public office via shitcoin or bombing all of Gazaâs hospitals â what possibilities are open to art to disclose new aesthetics, new sensations, new truths?
Â
Featuring essays by critic Dean Kissick on AI images as the new folk art and historian Quinn Slobodian on the roots of political shamelessness; definitions of âvulgarityâ from Jack Self, Bruce LaBruce, Donna Schons, Cem A., Maxwell Foley, and Daniel Baumann; Alison Gingeras & Alissa Bennett asking âWhere Is All the Vulgar Art?â; Artistâs Favorites by political dominatrix Reba Maybury; Francesco Tenaglia taking a whiff of Rob Pruittâs 1998 installation Cocaine Buffet; Hans-JuÌrgen Hafner re-situating âMuÌlheimer Freiheit â Neue wilde Bilderâ at Galerie Paul Maenz, Cologne, 1985; Alex Hochuli querying âWhy Are Politicians So Bad Today?â; a conversation between R.I.P. Germain & Hannah Black; portraits of Hamishi Farah, Christelle Oyiri, and Philipp Timischl by Aodhan Madden, Camille KinguĂ©, and Maximilian GeymuÌller; Philippa Snow on the Cinema of Transgressionâs piss-off nihilism; Biz Sherbert entertaining âWhatâs Vulgar in Fashion?â; speculation on the bleeding edge of shitcoins by artist-writer-gallerist Jared Madere; Spike editor Isabella Zamboni feeling the obscenity of 90s Benetton billboards all over again; British chef Jago Rackham eating funnel cake at a NASCAR track; Amanda Fortini walking the real Las Vegas; & Tea HaÄiÄ-VlahoviÄ on what separates being a hot girl from wanting to fuck one.
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