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Kevin Brazil
Kevin Brazil is a writer and critic who lives in London. His writing has appeared in Granta, The White Review, the London Review of Books, the Times Literary Supplement, Art Review, art-agenda, Studio International, and elsewhere. He is writing a book about queer happiness.

Articles Available Online


Alvaro Barrington, Garvey: Sex Love Nurturing Famalay

Art Review

October 2019

Kevin Brazil

Art Review

October 2019

The unofficial anthem of this year’s London Carnival was ‘Famalay’, a bouyon-influenced soca song that won the Road March in Trinidad & Tobago’s Carnival...

Essay

October 2018

The Uses of Queer Art

Kevin Brazil

Essay

October 2018

In June 2018 a crowd assembled in Tate Britain to ask: ‘What does a queer museum look like?’ Surrounded...

Patrick Keiller, an architect ‘diverted’ into making films, is principally known for his Robinson series, which began with  London (1994) and has continued with Robinson in Space (1997) and, most recently, Robinson in Ruins (2010) In the meantime, he has also been a consistently productive essayist, and a collection of his written work, entitled The View from the Train: Cities and Other Landscapes, has recently been released by Verso Spanning more than twenty years of creative and incisive engagements with English landscape, the book marks a timely intervention, both as a luminous companion to the cinematic work and a remarkable body of scholarship in its own right   Steeped in continental influences, Keiller has recently been described as the ‘most theoretically rigorous inheritor of the Situationist legacy’ by none other than Will Self  And yet a uniquely sideways and melancholic gaze renders his work resistant to easy absorption within the glut of contemporary ‘psychogeography’ The influence of Surrealism is palpable, with the scholar Ian Walker having gone so far as to name his book on English Surrealist photography So Exotic, So Homemade – a phrase lifted directly from Keiller’s London Having curated a recent series of screenings at the ICA, which drew on the success of the 2012 Tate Britain Commission The Robinson Institute, it seems clear that Keiller’s star is on the rise He and Robinson, the ‘fictional, wandering scholar’ of his creation, are entering the limelight as never before, despite the ‘increasing insubstantiality’ of Robinson himself – a fact which itself draws our attention to the rich vein of meditations on decay, dilapidation and ruin in Keiller’s work Narratives of displacement and decline, as well as the heritage of the English journey, also figure prominently in both the films and the new essay collection, which often reveal the theatres of everyday life to be quite different from how they might appear to the habituated glance; to be part of the great multiplicity where a fluctuation on the stock market and the growth of lichen on street-signs take place in curious correspondence From the collapse of civic identity under Thatcher to the banking crisis

Contributor

July 2018

Kevin Brazil

Contributor

July 2018

Kevin Brazil is a writer and critic who lives in London. His writing has appeared in Granta, The White Review, the London...

Nora Ikstena's ‘Soviet Milk’

Book Review

August 2018

Kevin Brazil

Book Review

August 2018

Soviet Milk by Nora Ikstena opens with two women who cannot remember. ‘I don’t remember 15 October 1969,’ says the first. ‘I don’t remember...

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poetry

March 2017

Two Poems

Uljana Wolf

TR. Sophie Seita

poetry

March 2017

Mittens   winter came, stretched its frames, wove misty threads into the damp   wood. fogged windows, we didn’t...

fiction

May 2017

Gloria

Aaron Peck

fiction

May 2017

Bernard, whenever he thought of Geoffrey, would remember his gait on the afternoon of their first meeting. Geoffrey walked...

Interview

February 2013

Interview with Wayne Koestenbaum

Charlie Fox

Interview

February 2013

Perhaps what’s gathered here is not an interview at all. Precisely what it is, we’ll think about in a...

 

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