Issue 26
Shortly after the launch of Pidgin 25, we held a panel conversation at the School of Architecture with several of Pidgin’s former editors to celebrate the new issue and take a look back at the publication’s decade-and-a-half history. Well, we’ve returned with the same, once again. Our little journal remains 4 1/2” x 6 1/2”, (almost) fits in your pocket, and excels in its primary use as a paperweight. And yet we’ve assembled an issue that expands the range of formats suited for print publication. What does the print journal become as sites of discourse shift toward digital and event-based formats? Rather than simply presenting knowledge for study, Pidgin 26 aims to open conversations.
Pidgin 26 includes contributions from:
Aynsley Vandenbroucke, Elliott Sturtevant, Spyros Papapetros, Brendan Fernandes and Thomas Kelley, Niloufar Nelly Goodarzi and Nicolas Dagenais-Lussier, Lukasz Stanek, Stefana Parascho, Kaitlin Faherty, Fiona Connor and Kavior Moon, Chibbernoonie, Spinagu Studio, Irene Chin, Intentional Estates Agency, Roberto Boettger, Monica Hutton, Marshall Brown, and Ryan Scavnicky. Pidgin 26 features a selection of illustrations by Will Fu.
Fall 2019
Shortly after the launch of Pidgin 25, we held a panel conversation at the School of Architecture with several of Pidgin’s former editors to celebrate the new issue and take a look back at the publication’s decade-and-a-half history. Well, we’ve returned with the same, once again. Our little journal remains 4 1/2” x 6 1/2”, (almost) fits in your pocket, and excels in its primary use as a paperweight. And yet we’ve assembled an issue that expands the range of formats suited for print publication. What does the print journal become as sites of discourse shift toward digital and event-based formats? Rather than simply presenting knowledge for study, Pidgin 26 aims to open conversations.
Pidgin 26 includes contributions from:
Aynsley Vandenbroucke, Elliott Sturtevant, Spyros Papapetros, Brendan Fernandes and Thomas Kelley, Niloufar Nelly Goodarzi and Nicolas Dagenais-Lussier, Lukasz Stanek, Stefana Parascho, Kaitlin Faherty, Fiona Connor and Kavior Moon, Chibbernoonie, Spinagu Studio, Irene Chin, Intentional Estates Agency, Roberto Boettger, Monica Hutton, Marshall Brown, and Ryan Scavnicky. Pidgin 26 features a selection of illustrations by Will Fu.
Fall 2019
Shortly after the launch of Pidgin 25, we held a panel conversation at the School of Architecture with several of Pidgin’s former editors to celebrate the new issue and take a look back at the publication’s decade-and-a-half history. Well, we’ve returned with the same, once again. Our little journal remains 4 1/2” x 6 1/2”, (almost) fits in your pocket, and excels in its primary use as a paperweight. And yet we’ve assembled an issue that expands the range of formats suited for print publication. What does the print journal become as sites of discourse shift toward digital and event-based formats? Rather than simply presenting knowledge for study, Pidgin 26 aims to open conversations.
Pidgin 26 includes contributions from:
Aynsley Vandenbroucke, Elliott Sturtevant, Spyros Papapetros, Brendan Fernandes and Thomas Kelley, Niloufar Nelly Goodarzi and Nicolas Dagenais-Lussier, Lukasz Stanek, Stefana Parascho, Kaitlin Faherty, Fiona Connor and Kavior Moon, Chibbernoonie, Spinagu Studio, Irene Chin, Intentional Estates Agency, Roberto Boettger, Monica Hutton, Marshall Brown, and Ryan Scavnicky. Pidgin 26 features a selection of illustrations by Will Fu.
Fall 2019