It’s interesting, for instance, how charcoal becomes trendy today in organic and well-being food, even if it’s been fucking up generations of miner’s lungs. Some use it as a natural way to ease stomach pain and bad digestion. I prefer its vomiting effects: it’s used as an emergency treatment for certain kinds of severe poisoning and OD’s. I like that it’s presented here in the shape of a large, family-size bread we could eat of all together, while expelling all the possible mad-driving toxins. The idea of letting go, of fluidity, of opening the valves, a joyful communal diarrhea prompted me to ask the baker how we could form a sort of orifice in the bread. He folded his arm and pushed his elbow far in the middle of the fresh dough. – The Future of Not Working, Aline Bouvy in conversation with Louise Osieka, June 5, 2017

Aline Bouvy. Urine Mate

one message interview #2. Aline Bouvy

Aline Bouvy. Sorry, I Slept With Your Dog

one pic tuesday. Aline Bouvy

Aline Bouvy & John Gillis

wfw weekend #264

one message interview #6. Joachim Coucke

one message interview #16. Martin Kohout

one message interview #15. Victoria Dejaco

one message interview #14. Anouk Kruithof

one message interview #12. Linus Bill & Adrien Horni

one message interview #11. Melanie Bühler

one message interview #10. O Fluxo (Nuno Patrício)

one message interview #9. Joël Riff

one message interview #8. Giovanni Carmine

one message interview #7. Antoine Donzeaud

one message interview #5. Ramaya Tegegne

one message interview #4. Daniel Morgenthaler

one message interview #3. Guy Meldem