To Be Seen Otherwise traces Kali Spitzer’s practice as an act of care, kinship, and reclamation—where photography becomes less about image-making and more about relationships. Rooted in Indigenous, queer, and diasporic lineages, her work resists colonial visual histories while creating space for
We will all be soil again. Rot and decay are part of the natural cycle. Anyone who composts knows this, is intimately familiar with the process of breaking down to return anew. In the midst of grief, Maggie Owsley found comfort in creating the Church of Compost, home of the Worm Choir, a communa
Love is complicated and perhaps even more so when we are faced with the death of someone we love. Grief has a way of reshaping our understanding of the world, leaving us to search for meaning in places we may have once overlooked. In this memoir, Priyanka Singh Parihar shares a deeply personal refl
In their poetry collection You Are Here, Edie Popper challenges key assumptions underpinning the capitalist and anthropocentric systems by which we live—assumptions that encourage unchecked growth, extraction at the expense of the Earth, and false dichotomies between "humans" and "animals", "manma
The narratives we hear about the climate crisis ultimately change our perception and action. Marta García Larriu, founder and director of Another Way Film Festival, advocates for cinema that moves beyond dystopia and lone-hero narratives, placing community, collective intelligence, and what she cal
We, too, are water. For writer Sandra Bustamante, like for many people and cultures around the world, water is deeply tied to memory and to sense of self. There are three main water settings from her worldly travels that have shaped the person she is today: The Amazon River; the coastal city of Sa
Aesthetics is not just sensorial but spiritual The world in colours is unique to each eye. Two eyes never see the world in the same hues; even between the left and right eyes, the photoreceptors read the light in variation. It's a language learned from instinct, from watching an apple turn from gr
