
Friendship creates security, protection, care and togetherness where institutions fail to provide queer people with adequate support structures, or even worse, incite discrimination. Especially in the art sector, queers represent stakeholders with multiple precarious backgrounds exposed to increased economic and health pressures. This is where queer relations and networks can serve as safety nets, strategies of emotional and economic support as well as survival.
This zine is about friendship in a double sense. It is based on a long and deep communion between the editors. In addition, nine artists and collectives discuss the topic in many different ways: often overtly addressing intimacy, like-mindedness, closeness, and often vaguely, along the lines of technology, networks, and dependence.
Intended to be a space for queer artists, queer art and queer themes, Rosé puts the works at its center. It features photography, performance, design, installation, happening, painting, social media art, sculpture and drag. In this sense, Rosé can be seen as an exhibition that can be touched, picked up, taken away and shared. This is Rosé, meant to be in motion.

Il est si difficile de trouver le commencement - Helen Thorington
Une idéologie pour survivre – Débats féministes sur violence et genre au Japon - Ueno Chizuko
Replacement Artwork - Alexandre Barré
From red to red - Jean-Pierre Bertrand, Patrick Javault
Le singe et le bijoux - Roxane Lumeret
Oblikvaj 4 - Last minute Shodo - Thomas Perrodin, Ensemble Batida
Cruiser l'utopie – L'après et ailleurs de l'advenir queer - José Esteban Muñoz
Bambi # 4 - Collectif
Assembly - Sam Porritt
Holy Mountain - Maia Matches, Knuckles & Notch 







