Synchron Magazine Issue One

Synchron Magazine Issue One was released in February 2022 by Dyer Press and is now available at the Slanted Shop!

Mysticism, magic, as well as individual interpretations and abstractions of spirituality and cultural rituals are the binding links between the contributions in this volume.

Synchron is an independent magazine dedicated to showcasing a broad spectrum of niche contemporary art, literature, and subcultural practices. Synchron provides its readers with an opportunity to discover ambitious, emerging artists beyond online platforms; and gives its contributors a versatile option to present their work.

Articles in the Magazine:

Kay YoonTaste and Destruction: An intimate Conversation between visual artist Kay Yoon and Jonas M. Mölzer about Korean shamanism, taste, magic, and Yukio Mishima. The contribution contains imagery from a shoot directed by Synchron with the artist focussing on her Fulu work.

Charles Spano—Grim Expectations: A fictional squatter punk ghost story in which the spirit of a teenager from London suburbs exists in liminal spaces across time.

Sal SalandraSuper World, Enjoy Super Sex: This exclusive interview by Harrison Sayed with Thread Artist Sal Salandra took place in the artists wooden Shack in Long Island, NY. It is a heart warming conversation about fetishes, love, nature, and religious symbolism accompanied by photographs taken that same day by Emilio Subia.

Jonathan Lyon–Plot Summary for a Biopic of God: A story about a boy who one day turns into a mosquito, and then, through a cycle of unbearable resurrection, discovers he is being prepared for much crueller destiny …

Alicia Gladston–Even Night herself is here: The complex text provides fragmented notes of the background about her metallic arrangement, which explores the theme of hermeticism inspired by the Rosicrucian gardens of Bohemian royals.

Bastian Kussin–The Beatus Manuscripts. A Cult Classic of Doomsday Art: The writer takes a closer look at the medieval Beatus Manuscripts. This group of works contains numerous illustrations based on Beatus of Liébanas Commentary on the Apocalypse, in which the 8th-century monk warns his contemporaries about the imminent Satanic dangers described in the biblical Book of Revelations. In their unique art style, reflecting the religious and cultural diversity of medieval Spain, the Beatus Manuscripts present a mesmerizing array of colorful beasts, demons, angels and saints fighting out the apocalyptic battle between Good and Evil.

Ringo Lukas–Make-Believe and Mass Possessions: Writer, researcher and artist Ringo Lukas provides an essay exploring the lives of narratives beyond the reach of human interference. As the text drags us deeper into the abyssal lair of unbound, demonic narratives, his drawings, and sculptures deliver glimpses of yet another world.

Contributors are: 011668, Apex, Áron Lőrincz, Adam Varab, Adrienne Kammerer, Alicia Gladston, Bastian Kussin, Beatus of Liébana, Ben Sang, Calissa Teiniker, Charles Spano, Chiu Laozhi, Claire Barrow, Christian Fjorks Thomsen, Elliot Fry, Emma Dudlyke, Emilio Subia, Eneas Bohatsch, Fitnesss, Gaspard Hers, Gaëlle Botta, Gia Söder, Hooz, Harrison Sayed, Ilana Blumberg, Jean-Baptiste Normand, Johannes Farfsing, Johannes Seluga, Jonas M. Mölzer, Jonathan Lyon, Juraj Cernak, Karl-William Klenk, Kasia Postaremczak, Katya Zhitkovskaya, Kay Yoon, Nassim L’Ghoul, Riccardo D’avola-Corte, Richard Müller, Ringo Lukas, Ruby Gaskell, Sal Salandra, Tony Cox, Ulli, Varias, Vincent Georgios Courtpozanis, Wang Zi Won, Willi Jeschar, William Potrykus, and Xavier Dartayre

Synchron Magazine Issue One

Publisher: Dyer Press
Editor: Lea Kloepel
Copy Editor: Harry Wick
Creative Direction: Lea Kloepel
Curation: Johannes Farfsing
Art Direction: Daniel Bornmann
Release: February 2022
Bookbinding: Swiss brochure with open stitch binding
Printing: Offset
Language: English
Price: € 20.–
ISSN: 2701-4630
BUY

Text: Lea Kloepel

Re: Re:

Re: Re: is a project in which the two graphic designers Yunus Ak and Umut Altıntaş send each other letters using their typographic vocabulary, text, word, and writing that becomes completely abstract, marked, complicated, simplified, and meaningless.

The letters sometimes refer to certain reference points in the world of art or design. These references can be deciphered for those who know this world well or they can find new meanings in their own way for those who are not familiar with this universe. This act of correspondence opens to endless possibilities of meaning. The dialog can seem more obvious when read in chronological order as in the book, but at the same time, countless different pairings can be made.

The project consists of letters between Yunus Ak and Umut Altıntaş. These 206 letters, in which different ways of correspondence are sought and turned into a typographic dialog between two designers, come together in the book carefully printed by Ofset Yapımevi.

Re: Re:

Publisher: Yunus Ak and Umut Altıntaş
Release: 2021
Printing: Ofset Yapımevi
Papers: UPM Sol Plus 90 gm Munken Lynx 200 gm
Language: English
Volume: 416 p.
Format: 16.5 × 23.5 cm

Growing Poster

Poster for the works exhibited by graduate students of graphic design, who studied under Koichi Sato of Tama Art University. Research works along with works made after developing as a graphic designer were exhibited. A spring being a flexible object, was used in typography to represent the diversity and flexibility of graphic expressions.

Our font that you and I made together, ‘Tiqui-Taca ’

We envision fonts as more than just tools for reading and writing. We are changing the definition of fonts into ‘digital communication media in the new normal era where anyone can create and use their own to create new communication’. For us, what was more important than simply making a readable font was to capture the value and personality of the user in the font.
So, in the fall of 2021, I took part in the youth artist training project conducted by Korean Disability Arts & Culture Center, and made a departure from the existing fonts. Together with young disabled artists, we designed our own letters from each point of view, and made the designed letters into a font file to promote digital

RSTR Type

This is an ongoing project that explores how rasterization, dithering, and overlays affect the shapes and counterforms of type and written words, and how those features create a visible mechanical pattern across all permutations that help create new alphabets, letters and symbols.

alphaomat

This typeface is designed to not be read. It is designed to have fun with the shapes of the letters. You can see letters but you can also puzzle them together to get special new forms and shapes. The letters are designed in a 5×8 grid so that they fit to each other. Have fun with creating something out of this typeface.

Tomaga

Poster for the concert by instrumental duo Tomaga (England / Italy), featuring pieces inspired by minimalist and industrial music, free improvisation and krautrock. The textual information is set in a giant monospaced typography mixed with a circular black and white pattern, altering the original letters shapes. The same information appears minutely positioned at intervals proportional to the circles of the halftone.
Client: Alavanca
Year: 2019

Glyph to Font

The main goal of this project was generation of a whole font from a single glyph. Enabling the type designer to get an approximate idea how the final font would look like. This was a test to study the behavior of AI in transforming letters. More than 3000 fonts were used for the machine learning process. In only 24 hours, the whole system based on CycleGAN (Generative Adversarial Network) was able to trace and transfer style between glyphs.

Letterfusion

The idea is to combine two letters in one.You can do it with two colors or with two shapes. The topic of color is exhausted pretty quickly. Shape on the other hand is a huge field. I tried slicing two letters with a diagonal cut and put together opposite halves. I combined a thin letter with a thick one. I used a massive and a hatched letter – a single-color reinterpretation of the two-color method. I also went into 3D. I let two letters rotate in two opposite directions and put them together. In another concept I moved one letter behind the other and looked at the scene with an isometric view. Although using the third dimension as helper, I wanted the letters to work in 2D.

Éclate – Ausbrechende Variable Font

Innerhalb meines BA Projektes “Éclate – Recherchebuch über Dekolonial(isierend)es Design”,eine studentische Annäherung an das Thema Dekolonialismus und Design durch
das inhaltliche, wie gestalterische Konzept des Ausbruchs in Form eines Buchgestaltungsprojektes, ist eine Variable Font entstanden namens Éclate, welche aus einer eurozentrischen Groteskschrift (Neue Haas Grotesk Text) “eklatant” herausbricht.

Full Blast

Poster for the concert of Full Blast – trio by legendary free jazz saxophonist Peter Brötzmann – at Sesc 24 de Maio and Ribeirão Preto, São Paulo. The trio name is written in a modular typography camouflaged by several overlaps that make it a heterogeneous pattern.
The repetition of a cartesian element generates a chaotic composition that refers to the freedom present in the artist’s music.

Filtered

The filtered typeface is the output of the computational operation. When the typeface is processed in intersect filter, this operation only remains overlapped space from the previous typeface. Repeating this process, a series of filtered outputs appears.
This typeface presents how essential the pieces are to become the specific alphabet. For example, just the existence of a crossbar makes this shape is ‘t’, no matter how thick it is. Sometimes you can see the disconnection between the pieces in one alphabet, like ‘K’. But you can still recognise what this type indicates.
When you look around the various typeface, you might find the ‘Filtered typeface’ in them.

Erebus

Erebus is part of a type system designed for my graduation project. The system was inspired by the mystery, horror and suspence genre, but grew to be used in versatile environments. The Display styles are variable, and while losing weight, they also lose the serifs. The Black weight pays homage to the aesthetic of the 70s-era horror and mystery genre with low contrast and small (but not insignificant) serifs, at the same time adding liveliness with italic shapes. Smooth animation between Sans and Serif was important, and so the little serifs turn to chunky stems in the Bold weight, giving it a chiseled appearance, taking many cues from my stone carving lessons.

Pedro Sá

Typographic poster for Quintavant programming at Audio Rebel. The project features artists linked to collective improvisation and experimentation. The piece tries to reflect the variety and freedom present in the artists songs, always from the typographic experimentation, restricted to a palette of 3 colors and a monospaced text font.

what do you feel?

what do you feel?

The study of the paradox using braille type. Making the invisible visible and the intangible tangible by asking „what do you feel?“

The experiment resulted in two photo series of five pictures each.
Part 1, glove (vinyl, with the
question written on the fingers)
Part 2, Latex bandages („what do you feel“-strips casted from natural rubber latex, oxidized) – analogue photography