“Senses”
Volume Two, Issue Two, Winter 2022
Cover illustration by Charlotte Bravin Lee
VOLUME #2, ISSUE #2 “Senses” Overview
We know the world through our senses. As the world changes, however, what can be sensed, and what can be thought and known, changes as well. The aim of this issue is to expand readings of the body as a site of sensory appreciation to consider the air as a carrier of sensations. If sensing precedes knowing, then air, the body’s environment, must certainly precede sensing. Considering atmosphere as a milieu for sensation, how, then, does the air construct sensation and the senses as relational to each other, our social settings, and our own processes of feeling and reflection?
table of contents
(1)
Senses in the Air
Charles Keiffer
Preface
(2)
Flux
Aurélien Barrau
Poetry
(3)
In the Air: Atmospheric Thinking
Giuliana Bruno
essay
(4)
Woodlands
Sarah Anne Johnson
visual art
(5)
The Quality of Air: Sensing the Environment in James Turrell’s Early Installations
Emily Leifer
essay
(6)
Mixed Media Works
Cary Hulbert
visual art
(7)
Sensing with Trees: Explorations in the Reciprocity of Perception
Raffaelle Rufo
essay
(8)
Mixed Media Works
Ava Roth
visual art
(9)
Lay People
S. Romi Mukherjee
poetry
(10)
Atmospheric Sensing:
On the Aesthetic of Interrelations with Environments
Desiree Foerster
essay
(11)
Foreign Gardens
Lia Porto
visual art
(12)
The Stylistics of Olfactory Art
Madalina Diaconu
essay
(13)
air, mirrorworld
Megan Gette
musical environment
(14)
Paintings
Anne Rothenstein
visual art
(15)
Colonial and Anti-Black Legacies of Deodorization and Fragrance
Hsuan Hsu
essay
(16)
Mixed Media Works
Linda Maennel
visual art
(17)
Navigating by Smell
Erika Wicky
essay
(18)
Mixed Media Works
Dorry Spikes
visual art
(19)
The Miasmic Theft of Modernity
Andrew Kettler
essay
(20)
Sniff, Bite, Taste, Swallow:
The Erotics of the Black Throat
M. Nicole Horsley
essay
(21)
Two Poems
Michael Wasson
poetry
(22)
Negative Pressure
Ainslie Murray
essay
(23)
Mixed Media
Alexis Soul-Gray
visual art
(24)
“The Air Smells Rotten”:
Caste and Senses in and around a Tannery
Shivani Kapoor
essay
(25)
Photographs
Anastasia Kolesnichenko
visual art
(26)
Shimmering Cloud:
Psychoanalytic Notes on the Perfumer’s Note List
Matt Morris
essay
(27)
Paintings
Mientje Smeyers
visual art
Dedication
2020 has been host to multiple crises in the air. They are all too familiar by now: amidst global climate catastrophe, a virus that targets our lungs has affected lives, economies, and sharply refigured our social and political atmospheres. Simultaneously, the death of a Black man at the hands of the police has laid bare the conditions of austerity and violence that the United States’ racialized poor must endure.
Though having inspired many who believe in a future where people might one day be allowed to breathe easy, these tragedies continue to stifle the air of thousands across the globe. We take this moment to thank medical workers for their tireless efforts to heal us from a devastating pandemic; we thank those who continue to do the work and speak out, holding us all in bated breath for the change we know is yet to come. We also take a moment of silence to recognize and remember all those who have lost their breath in 2020.
It is to these people, and to those who love and continue to fight for them — for all of us — that Venti is humbly dedicated.
We recognize these events could neither be fully spoken to nor accounted for by a dedication. At its best, intellectual dialogue supplements and informs action. Venti, in its simple bid to think about the air, might be just one tool among many for weathering this tragic, tempestuous, yet hopeful moment.
As we continue to move through the topic of air, we believe it is our duty not only to mourn but to also derive inspiration.