Humanize Magazine

[Bilingual] indie & alternative culture magazine // music, film, art, photography, literature // Revista de cultura indie y alternativa
We’re magazine addicts.

We’re magazine addicts.

Humanize co-founder and editor, Karla D. Romero, and Gara the dog in Santa Cruz de Tenerife (Canary Islands) / photo taken by Humanize co-founder and art director Belma H-F Leon with a Lomo LC-A+

Humanize co-founder and editor, Karla D. Romero, and Gara the dog in Santa Cruz de Tenerife (Canary Islands) / photo taken by Humanize co-founder and art director Belma H-F Leon with a Lomo LC-A+

Beautiful photo by Anna-Sophie Berger, featured in #Issue15 

Beautiful photo by Anna-Sophie Berger, featured in #Issue15 

newyorker:

Lost & Found: Salvaging Snapshots in Japan

Sunday marked the one-year anniversary of last year’s disasters in Japan, and last week on Photo Booth we posted a slide show of images of the aftermath. One of the most powerful visual representations of this recovery, though, came not from professional photographers but from ordinary citizens. The Lost & Found Project is an exhibition that grew out of the Salvage Memory Project, a volunteer effort from across the country which has recovered some three quarters of a million photographs that had been lost in the town of Yamamoto during the earthquake and tsunami. According to the artist Munemasa Takahashi, who leads the project, they’re “mostly snapshots of special family occasions and holidays that anyone would take.” Each photograph was washed, digitized, and numbered according to where it was found, and twenty thousand have been returned to their original owners.

- For more selection of photographs from the project: http://nyr.kr/GDwYyf

(via davidmillerphotoworks)

This is fucking cool.

theatlantic:

the-overlook-hotel:

Stanley Kubrick’s personal copy of Stephen King’s novel, The Shining. This well-worn book, now housed in the Stanley Kubrick Archive in London, is filled with Kubrick’s notes and comments. Many passages are highlighted, and Kubrick has filled the margins with hand-written notes that run the gamut from notating passages that inspire him, to crossing out sections he found silly.

(click images to enlarge)

Today, in found objects.

10 Great Reads About the Senses

theatlantic:

tetw:

A Tetw reading list

The Blind Man Who Learned To See by Michael Finkel - A fascinating profile of a man who is helping other blind people to see using echolocation.

Mixed Feelings by Sunny Bains - How researchers can tap the plasticity of the brain to hack our 5 senses, and build new ones.

Sense and Sensitivity by Andrea Bartz - Is it possible that some people are wired to take in more sensory information than others, and that are our attitudes towards sensitivity are misguided?

Double Vision by Lawrence Weschler - A classic article about a pair of twins whose art unlocks the secrets of perception.

The Sniff of Legend by Karen Wright - “Human pheromones? Chemical sex attractants? And a sixth sense organ in the nose? What are we, animals?”

The Taste Makers by Raffi Khatchadourian - This trip to the heart of the flavour industry is essential reading for anyone who wants to know how modern food gets its taste.

You’ve Got Smell by Charles Platt - DigiScent is here. Will it take off, and if it does, will it be a fad or a technological revolution?

Seeing by Annie Dillard - An excellent essayist takes a personal, often abstract look inside the world of vision.

Master of Illusion by Ed Yong - How a neuroscientist from Stockholm can use mannequins, rubber arms and virtual reality to transport you outside your own body.

The Smelliest Block in New York by Molly Young - Deep in the Lower East Side, a terrible odor lurks. Where is it coming from?

Great selection.

Today we get to see and interview #Indy & #Btown band Hotfox at #sxsw! We’re very excited and we can’t wait to finally meet them. They’ll be at J. Black’s at 6:20pm!

@Bel_5 working hard in the #sxsw press suite! #HumanizeSXSW

@Bel_5 working hard in the #sxsw press suite! #HumanizeSXSW