~ chasing ephemera ~

u1f60c

U+1F60C is a rhythmic audio zine.

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exquisite corpse, an exploration: ari mejia, erisa apantaku, ariana martinez, and james t green
EC_1.jpg

Illustration by Ariana Martinez.

Inspired by a prompt from Ari Mejia, the three of us (Ari, Erisa Apantaku, and myself) created three pieces under our interpretation of the exquisite corpse method of collage art-making.

Ariana created an accompanied digital zine to view while listening to the pieces, which can be downloaded here as a PDF for your personal archive, or you can view in its entirety below.

Jazmine (JT) Green
atlantic

having a panic attack in a store, trying to calm the anger, it creeping back up until it can no longer be contained and having to leave the store, blaming everyone but myself, realizing the issue, taking a walk to lower my heart rate

u+1f60c is an experimental audio zine.

subscribe in apple podcasts / google play / spotify

Jazmine (JT) Green
a surveillance meditation

How we keep tabs on ourselves and others.

In October of 2019, I noticed the NYPD installed floodlights in my neighborhood. I noticed how the floodlights bled into the windows of neighbors, even as it was nearing bedtime. They had no say in the light and noise pollution of these machines.

I was curious about all the ways that surveillance manifests itself, and the residual effects of it. On a micro-level, I was thinking about how I surveill myself, framing my face in the phone camera and where that information is sent. On a macro-level, I wondered about how “public utilities” such as free WiFi hotspots––like LinkNYC––track and provide demographic data, perhaps leading to the installation of police floodlights.

The essay I read was a meditation on how I surveill and self-edit myself, and I was deeply interested in how that interacts with the frameworks of companies that depend on surveillance economics.

Watch the accompanied film here.

Jazmine (JT) Green