Hybrid plants, animals, minerals, fungi, and other specimens

Equally inspired by medieval bestiaries and observations of our damaged planet, A Bestiary of the Anthropocene is a compilation of hybrid creatures of our time. Designed as a field handbook, it aims at helping us observe, navigate, and orientate into the increasingly artificial fabric of the world.
Plastiglomerates, surveillance robot dogs, fordite, artificial grass, antenna trees, Sars-Covid-2, decapitated mountains, drone-fighting eagles, standardised bananas… each of these specimens are symptomatic of the rapidly transforming “post-natural” era we live in. Often without us even noticing them, these creatures exponentially spread and co-exist with us.
A Bestiary of the Anthropocene seeks to capture this precise moment when the biosphere and technosphere merge and mesh into one new hybrid body. What happens when technologies and their unintended consequences become so ubiquitous that it is difficult to define what is “natural” or not? What does it mean to live in a hybrid environment made of organic and synthetic matter? What new specimens are currently populating our planet at the beginning of the 21st century?
Edited and introduced by Nicolas Nova & DISNOVATION.ORG, with texts by Geoffrey C. Bowker, Alexandre Monnin, Pauline Briand, Benjamin Bratton, Michel Lussault, Pierre-Olivier Dittmar, The Center for Genomic Gastronomy, Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing, Matthieu Duperrex, and Aliens in Green. Featuring illustrations by Maria Roszkowska (DISNOVATION.ORG).

52 vendredis — Léonore Emond, Damien Duparc, Yaïr Barelli et Charlotte York
Shanghai Cosmetic - Leslie Moquin
Saint Julien l'hospitalier Tome 3 - Claire Pedot
La France de tête #04
Pectus Excavatum - Quentin Yvelin
À partir de n°1 - Coll.
Aurore Colbert - Marie Mons
WREK The Algorithm! - Aarnoud Rommens, Olivier Deprez
The Book Fight - Chihoi
La nuit, tu mens - Ambre Husson
Rasclose - Geoffroy Mathieu
Revue Brute #6 Jacques Lennep - OR BOR
twen [1959–1971]
Entrez sans sonnet - Julie Redon
Graphic Design Is (…) Not Innocent - Ingo Offermanns
Screen Printing Basics - ottoGraphics
Sights - Henry McCausland 











