Summary
67
Killjoy
Fall 2009
Special 25th anniversary issue
Rethinking the meaning of celebration, including 14 artist's portfolios
Editorial
Feature
Celebration’s Deception
When the Artist Parties, Is It Still a Celebration?
Let the Festivities Begin: Processions, Parades, and Other Forms of Collective Celebration in Contemporary Art
The Fortuitous Celebration
The Heritage Syndrome and Commemorative Society
BGL
Precarious and Revealing Sites of Memory
The Body of the Image: Anno Dijkstra’s Sculptural and Monumental Reconstruction of Press Photos
Immediate Memorials: The Implicit Celebration of Communal Mourning
Naked Eternity
What the Birthday Says
Portfolios
Columns
Reviews
Current Issue
Abstractions
Spring Summer 2025
Yet what about abstraction today? Long confined to formalist and self-referential imperatives, abstraction has gradually freed itself from the modernism yolk to recapture its evocative power. This issue proposes to turn away from the dogma of Abstraction as a historical genre to consider its various plastic and semantic avenues. In this invitation to explore abstractions, we wish to re-establish a dialogue between content and form, between the political and the poetic, by engaging with works that evoke reality differently. Whether they are qualified as abstract, non-figurative, or non-objective, these works certainly tell us stories.