CR Blog

Meet Monika

Graphic Design, Magazine / Newspaper

Posted by Mark Sinclair, 9 July 2009, 9:13    Permalink    Comments (11)

Launched at the RCA's recent Show 2, Monika is an anonymously produced magazine that aims to free its content from preconceived notions of authorship. "Anonymity in the arts isn't anything new," explains Monika's editor, "but it's due a return"...

Monika is an arts journal featuring essays, short stories and photography that "invites readers to decode identities, unravel mysteries and embrace the unfamilar", according to the first issue's editorial.

"The magazine idea grew out of the dissertation research I did at the RCA and the designer was on board at an early stage," says Monika's editor, whose work on the magazine was completed as part of the Communication Art & Design course.

Fellow RCA graduate Povilas Utovka is the one name we do know that worked on the magazine: he designed it and created the typography, which was on display at the CA&D show.

"The exciting thing is to have created a structured canvas that is moulded by our collaboration with contributors as well as through reader speculation and interpretation," says the editor.

"Part of what intrigues us about the idea of anonymity is how very fragile and difficult it is to maintain, how we live in a contradictory society that is both sprawling and faceless – the metropolis, the internet – and identity-obsessed – ID cards, CCTV, celebrity."

“Monika isn't about eliminating identities, it's about creating a delay in the reader's discovery of them," says the editor. "By familiarising themselves with patterns and styles within the magazine, through word of mouth, and through piecing together clues, readers can discover the contributor's identities for themselves." 

"The non-disclosure of names means that the content must hold its own without being supported or justified by a known contributor's back catalogue, which presents a challenge for both editor and participant. Equally, the feedback that contributors receive for their input is unbiased and the lack of self-publicity means the content is work for works sake, so it does require guts to contribute to Monika.

"Monika believes that works should be judged on merit rather than name, and that celebrity culture within the arts (and elsewhere) sometimes misses the point: that quite often we fail to acknowledge the extent that collaboration has to play in the creation of works, and that people's motivation to write or make images isn't often to become the 'next big thing', but rather the desire to record and make sense of the world.

"But playfulness also comes into it, I guess a fair bit of what Monika is about comes from a desire to tease."

Monika is published biannually and issue two will be released before Christmas this year.

Orders can be placed via monikamagazine.com and copies, which retail at £4.95, can also be bought at YCN, 72 Rivington Street, London EC2A 3AY.

A full list of stockists will be available on the Monika website soon. If you run a bookshop, library, or gallery and would like to stock the magazine, please get in touch with the editor on monika@monikamagazine.com or via the website

 

11 Comments

blahhhhh
dadif
2009-07-09 11:45:06


@dadif
Care to expand on that reasoned analysis?
CR PatrickBurgoyne
2009-07-09 11:52:00


I bought Monika at the RCA show, it's refreshing and thought provoking. It's not pretentious and not "blahhhhh". I like the type face too.
hummus
2009-07-09 13:31:24


its a shame it's only biannual.

i like how it is all set, really nice work for "works sake"
alex
2009-07-09 18:54:27


The flip side of anonymity is lack of accountability.
Charles Édouard Jeanneret
2009-07-09 22:52:36


Is there any way of banning Dadif from commenting? His (your) comments are never valid, never have much depth or reason and offend alot of people.
Ashley
2009-07-10 13:41:26


Ashley,

dadif has a right to his opinion just as you do, so long as it's civil, which is is. (Constructive, no. But civil, yes.)

And judging from the conventional, basic but tasteful spreads pictured here, I think I can see where dadif was coming from with his "blahhhhh" comment.

And even though the anonymousness of Monkia is a forward thinking idea worthy of mention on the CR blog, the designs shown here are stuck in the past.

I think that's what dadif meant, anyway.
Reality Check
2009-07-10 23:12:57


Looks great. Is it available in Cape Town, S.A.
Peter Southworth
2009-07-11 10:51:13


We can mail Monika to Cape Town (and anywhere else!) if you buy through our online store: http://www.monika.bigcartel.com
Monika
2009-07-11 12:57:59


My comment was based on several comments left by Dadif actually. Its so easy to criticize. Why do none of you people expose yourselves by having click-through URL's attached to your names and then you can be judged. Do you really think that Dadif's comment was constructive? Come on...REALITY CHECK.
Ashley
2009-07-12 20:06:53


@ ashley

you wrote: 'Do you really think that Dadif's comment was constructive?'

realitycheck wrote: dadif has a right to his opinion just as you do, so long as it's civil, which is is. (Constructive, no. But civil, yes.)
lndrs
2009-07-13 12:46:35


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