People of the Mud is a powerful new series by Berlin-based US-Dominican artist Luis Alberto Rodriguez, made collaboratively amongst the communities of County Wexford in Ireland, where ancient tradition and modern life rub shoulders daily.

With a background in professional dance, Rodriguez’s work pays tribute to the metaphorical weight of centuries of physical labour behind cultivating the landscape and maintaining cultural heritage. Images of scarred limbs and hands, weathered faces and choreographed bodies appear as a cartography of this labour, reflecting how culture both shapes and is shaped by individuals. Elsewhere, we see the exaggerated glamour of modern female Irish dancers taken out of the glitzy ballrooms and into the fields, creating a rupture across time and space.
While in Wexford, Rodriguez was struck by the intense physicality of the sport of hurling. Considered to be the fastest sport on grass, while watching slow-motion footage of hurling Rodriguez saw that within seconds the players would go through pushing, shoving, grabbing, hugging, knocking each other down and then lifting one another up. Rodriguez worked with players to reform these gestures: creating sculptures out of bodies, directing and literally layering players upon one another.
At the outset of his project, Rodriguez wanted to create a large family photograph, an idea that was quickly surpassed by other strands of enquiry. However, with a step backwards we can see People of the Mud as just that – a collective community portrait of all the different elements that construct modern, rural Irish identities. Just like any family portrait, it is at times dysfunctional and contradictory; it gathers all the ruptures and continuities between the past and present in modern Ireland, while being held in a landscape and moment in time. This moment is both still – posed and paused – and in perpetual motion, looking towards the future.

WREK The Algorithm! - Aarnoud Rommens, Olivier Deprez - FR
Wayfaring - Patrick Messina, André S. Labarthe
We want to look up at the Sun, but could the Sun be looking down on us? - Rudy Guedj & Olivier Goethals
Ventoline 6 - Coll
Zombie Girls 2.0 - Lucie Lučanská
Mökki n°2
Jean-Jacques a dit - Angèle Douche
Tupera Tupera Postcard Book
Détours - Vincent Chappuis
Victor Papanek - Design pour un monde réel
Amos Gitai et l'enjeu des archives - Jean-Michel Frodon
Pureté et impureté de l’art. Michel Journiac et le sida Antoine Idier
Parallélisme - Nicolas Nadé
The life of Ruben - Bernardo Sousa Santos
Aube - Caroline Bachmann
BEAUTY MEE EYE - Luc Natral
MASKS - Damián Ortega
Rendezvous - Eléonore Pano-Zavaroni
Cheat Sheets - Tiger Tateishi
RÉVÉSZ LÁSZLÓ LÁSZLÓ , Not Secret
Do insects play ? - Johanna Tagada Hoffbeck
Zoom Age - Julien Auregan
Tierra Mágica - Yannick Cormier, Candice Moise
Diario de Plantas (2 volumes) - Gabriel Orozco
Tools #04 – Couper / To Cut
Critique & création - L.L. de Mars
Shanghai Cosmetic - Leslie Moquin 











































