Type: image archive with explanatory captions
Summary: We’ve been designing t-shirts from almost the very beginning of this project. It’s fun - or sometimes serious - to see your ideas or words on people.
Filtering by Category: print-ephemera
Greetings, American university student!
Type: mini-zine
Summary: This tiny book-like thing is easy to print, fold, and leave around campus for students to find.
Read MoreThis Cat World Dismantled : 26 things we learned doing The Pinky Show
Type: zine
Format: physical zine and digital e-zine (PDF)
Summary: A small 8-page zine about how Pinky & Bunny met and some of the things they learned as they lived-worked together. Created as our entry for the book Truth is concrete : a handbook for artistic strategies in real politics (Sternberg Press, 2014).
Despite All Appearances, Every Moment Is Unique
Type: image macro
Format: animated GIF
Summary: This is a picture of Pinky standing around in the Nevada
desert. For maximum effect please stare at this picture for at least an
hour. Or a couple of minutes, if an hour seems too long.
Seven Scenes From Work and Life
Type: booklet
Format: PDF file
Summary: Pinky & Bunny are trying to make their work into their life and their life into their work. Created for submission to the Grand Domestic Revolution project.
Figure 1. War Deaths, Traumas, and Other Misc. Injuries (two versions)
Summary: The image that most often comes to mind when someone says "casualty of war" is usually that of a soldier shot by another soldier from an opposing army. In reality, over the past half-century or so, victims of wars and other violent conflicts have become increasingly civilian (and often disproportionately women and children). We present here two different versions of our diagram for your consideration - one visually explicit, one not - for a variety of learning situations and audiences.
Warning: This image contains images that may disturb some viewers.
Read MoreButtons: We Remember
Type: ongoing button series
Summary: We made these buttons for our friends La Lleca,
who work with prisoners in Mexico City. (Our friend Teacup delivered
them for us when she went to visit recently.) Each button has a tiny
picture of Pinky with her giant flag and a place/date that we burn into
our memory.
TV News: SO I HERD U LIEK... (new version)
Type: image macro
Summary: This is Bunny in a spiffy suit (ugly tie though) making believe
she works at Fox News. If you are not into this sort of thing perhaps
you will prefer the old version?
TV News: SO I HERD U LIEK... (old version)
Type: image macro
Summary: Here we have a picture of a very serious-looking Bunny wearing a
replica of one of Walter Cronkite's suits and it looks like she
"borrowed" Edward R. Murrow's favorite microphone too. If you are not
impressed perhaps you will like the new version better?
I Want to Punch Your Face: a picture book by Pinky & Bunny (v2.0)
Type: book
Format: PDF file
Summary: Bunny wants to punch Pinky in the face. What will happen next?
Buttons: Favorite Weapons series
Type: buttons
Summary: When U.S. Americans think of genocide and Native peoples (if
ever) they usually just think of guns. But there were and are many other
favored weapons - here are just three more.
Buttons: For settlers
Type: buttons
Summary: We made these buttons for settlers to wear. Just another tiny
way for people to keep bringing up settler colonialism as an important
thing to talk about.
AAM 2010 MuseumExpo booth, display cases & ephemera
Type: poster, flier, button
Summary: These are some of the ephemera we made as part of our
participation at the 2010 American Association of Museums Annual Meeting
and MuseumExpo in Los Angeles, California. Trivia question for nerds:
How many future-vehicles can you identify in the poster? Recognize any
of the buildings?
Future Museum Report: Some notes on our time-travel expeditions, 2028-2098
Type: report
Format: PDF file
Summary: Q: Why are Pinky & friends so interested in the future of
museums that they'd be willing to risk their lives to time-travel? A: Two reasons! Because... 1) Museums are veeery important for reproducing the dominant
values and narratives of its host society; AND 2) Among the
institutions that shape our understanding of
past, present, & future, museums enjoy the least critical examination from the
general public. That's why!
Photographs from Makua Valley
Photographs from Makua Valley, Waianae Coast, Island of Oahu, Hawaii
Type: photographs with captions
Summary: Pinky and I have never been inside Makua Valley so Daisy was
nice enough to take some photos and write a few words for us. Report filed by Daisy, Pinky Show CR01, November 2009.
The Academic Freedom Debate!
Summary: Do we have enough academic freedom? Should we have more? Who benefits? Who gets to decide?
Read MoreHow To Make 1-Sheet Mini-Zines
Format: video with audio
Running time: approx. 1 min 07 sec.
Summary: Step-by-step instructions for you to make your own 1-sheet mini-zine.
How to Get FREE LAND in 5 easy steps
Summary: A handy guide for imperialists and other reasonable individuals. Print and pass it out to all your friends and enemies.
Read MorePinky-in-a-museum-display-case poster
Type: poster
Format: PDF
Summary: From the mildly unpleasant dead Pinky story, Pinky Gets Stuffed: or, an illustration of how everything in a museum is something like a corpse, in Appendix A of Kim's mini report, The Creation of Value: meditations on the logic of museums and other coercive institutions. (See video: We Love Museums... Do Museums Love Us Back?)
Radical Education Fanzine No.3 (September 2007 Issue)
Type: zine (16 pages)
Summary: This is a zine we made for our friends at Radical Education, an
education collective based in Ljubljana, Slovenia. Most of the
mini-stories in this issue are based on the work of visual artists we
like - for example, Edgar Heap of Birds, Adrian Piper, and Tehching
Hsieh - then adapted to issues of learning and education.