IFS, Ltd. Futures Newsletter
IFS, Ltd. Futures Newsletter, Opportunity Amidst Uncertainty
Softcover, 28 pp., offset 4/4, 110 x 175 mm
Edition of 6000
Published by IFS, Ltd. / Graphic Magazine
free* ·
*free copy with each order
Investment Futures Strategy, Ltd. (United States) in partnership with GRAPHIC magazine (Korea) is pleased to introduce Futures, a semi-official newsletter published as a stand-alone supplement to GRAPHIC #17 (”When Design Becomes Attitude”). In lieu of a traditional contribution, IFS, Ltd. has chosen to use the GRAPHIC platform to continue its experiments in trade and publishing.
The Book Trust Prospectus examined new possibilities for funding, trade value, and distribution by attaching a different kind of significance to the object, thus short-circuiting the expected monetary transaction. Production of the Prospectus, however, relied on labor-intensive methods that required hours of input for a relatively small output. With the Futures newsletter, IFS, Ltd. has hybridized the positive aspects of large-scale corporate publishing — economies of scale or large print-runs, distribution of labor, and maximum efficiency — with the dictatorial authorship afforded by self-publishing. This new model maximizes potential as authors and designers while minimizing the opportunity cost of production and distribution.
Within the logic of IFS, Ltd. Futures will also act as a form of currency: readers can use their copy of the newsletter to trade for a copy of the Book Trust Prospectus. These recirculated copies of Futures will then be re-made available as a way to generate revenue for a future, freely distributed, as-yet-undefined project thus continuing the self-sustaining eco-system of publishing and distribution, one in which readers and producers collaborate to generate and circulate content outside of the cost-prohibitive channels of traditional publishing.
Art, Benjamin Critton, Brendan Griffiths, David Horvitz, Design, Distribution, Futures Newsletter, Graphic Magazine, Harry Gassel, IFS Ltd., Interview, Jonathan Maghen, Lauren Francescone, Lim Kyung Yong, Mylinh Nguyen, Na Kim, Nanette Sullano, Phil Chang, Rafael Rozendaal, Sean Dockray, Textfield, The Book Prospectus, Zak Klauck
IFS, Ltd. Futures Newsletter
The Book Trust Prospectus examined new possibilities for funding, trade value, and distribution by attaching a different kind of significance to the object, thus short-circuiting the expected monetary transaction. Production of the Prospectus, however, relied on labor-intensive methods that required hours of input for a relatively small output. With the Futures newsletter, IFS, Ltd. has hybridized the positive aspects of large-scale corporate publishing — economies of scale or large print-runs, distribution of labor, and maximum efficiency — with the dictatorial authorship afforded by self-publishing. This new model maximizes potential as authors and designers while minimizing the opportunity cost of production and distribution.
Within the logic of IFS, Ltd. Futures will also act as a form of currency: readers can use their copy of the newsletter to trade for a copy of the Book Trust Prospectus (see: the Prospectus, left). These recirculated copies of Futures will then be re-made available as a way to generate revenue for a future, freely distributed, as-yet-undefined project thus continuing the self-sustaining eco-system of publishing and distribution, one in which readers and producers collaborate to generate and circulate content outside of the cost-prohibitive channels of traditional publishing.
The IFS, Ltd. Futures Newsletter is, in non-equal parts: a corporate bulletin, a speculative trading instrument, an experiment in memetic and symbiotic publishing, an internal-external analysis of company performance (B. Critton, H. Gassel, B. Griffiths, Z. Klauck, M. Nguyen), a proposal for an allegorical Escape Act (S. Dockray), a bid for a series of six activities (D. Horvitz), an abridged catalogue of semi-fictional gemstones (L. Francescone), a profile of independent art book distributor (Textfield, Inc.), and a self-reflexive / -reflective cartoon caption contest (R. Rozendaal).
Benjamin Critton, Brendan Griffiths, David Horvitz, Design, Futures Newsletter, Graphic Magazine, Harry Gassel, IFS Ltd., Interview, Jonathan Maghen, Lauren Francescone, Lim Kyung Yong, Mylinh Nguyen, Na Kim, Nanette Sullano, Phil Chang, Rafael Rozendaal, Sean Dockray, Textfield, The Book Prospectus, Zak Klauck
Textfield V
Textfield V
Softcover, 128 pp., offset 4/1, 6.5 x 9.5 inches
Edition of 2500
ISSN 1934-2446
Published by Textfield
$20.00 ·
Contributors; Darren Bader, Stuart Bailey, Nina Jan Beier, Chris Bolton, Rainer Borgemeister, Binna Choi, Ryan Conder, Chris Cullens, Jason DeLeón, Thomas Eberwein, Marco Fiedler, Steve Hanson, Danielle Kays, Robin Kinross, Marc Kremers, Marie Jan Lund, Yukinori Maeda, Miltos Manetas, Emily Mast, Slobodan Milosevic, Angelos Plessas, Manuel Raeder, Achim Reichert, Rafaël Rozendaal, Eduardo Sarabia, Artur Schmal, Nanette Sullano, Gerard Unger, Amy Yao, and Cosmic Wonder.
Achim Reichert, Amy Yao, Angelo Plessas, Angelos Plessas, Art, Artur Schmal, Binna Choi, Chris Bolton, Chris Cullens, Cosmic Wonder, Criticism, Danielle Kays, Darren Bader, Distribution, Eduardo Sarabia, Emily Mast, Fashion, Fiction, Gerard Unger, Jason DeLeón, Jonathan Maghen, Manuel Raeder, Marc Kremers, Marco Fiedler, Marie Jan Lund, Miltos Manetas, Nanette Sullano, Nina Jan Beier, Photography, Rafael Rozendaal, Rainer Borgemeister, Robin Kinross, Ryan Conder, Slobodan Milosevic, Steve Hanson, Stuart Bailey, Textfield, Theory, Thomas Eberwein, Typography, Yukinori Maeda