rile*books
rile*books is a Brussels based bookshop and project space for performance and publication. Open Wednesday to Sunday, 11-18h.
events
[Launch] THEY LIED TO YOU ABOUT THE EUNUCHS by Odete
Join us for the launch of đŻïž THEY LIED TO YOU ABOUT THE EUNUCHS đŻïž, a book project by Odete, published by OUTLINE (2025). The book introduces the history of eunuchism through auto-theory, historiography, historical fiction and poetry, exploring this identity in the ancient world and what kind of echoes can be heard in the present day. After a reading by Odete, she will be joined in conversation with our dear Ire.
read moreabout [Launch] THEY LIED TO YOU ABOUT THE EUNUCHS by Odete[Launch] Insula with Théo Casciani, Gabriel René Franjou and Megan Bruinen
Join us for the launch of Insula, a new speculative fiction novel by Théo Casciani blending autofiction, intimate confessions, queer aesthetics, video games, and a formidable apocalyptic vision of the contemporary world. Théo will be accompanied by musician and artist friend Megan Bruinen who is working on the sound design for the theatrical adaptation of the book. After the reading, Théo will be joined in conversation by our dear Gabriel René Franjou about the book and Théo's work. Welcome!
read moreabout [Launch] Insula with Théo Casciani, Gabriel René Franjou and Megan Bruinenrecent arrivals
Calendar 2026
Jos de Gruyter & Harald Thys' 2026 artist's calendar.
"For years now, the Die Vier von der Tankstelle (Four from the Gas Station) have been roaming across an area stretching out to the south of the Baltic Sea.
From Bremerhaven in the west to Kaliningrad in the east.
They prowl their way through sparsely populated areas, frightening and wantonly terrorizing isolated communities in small villages.
They yell at passersby, molest the elderly and children, smash windows, and set fires all over the place.
Once the villagers have barricaded themselves in their homes and are anxiously waiting to see what is going to happen, the Die Vier von der Tankstelle move on.
Roaring with laughter, they continue their journey, doing so purely for their own enjoyment. Their actions are completely pointless and are likely to be repeated, as they may well return time and again.
And no one knows when."
Jos de Gruyter & Harald Thys have been working together as an artist duo since the end of the 1980s. Their photographs, drawings, objects, and videosâsteeped in black humor, critical (self)-reflection and overlapping reality, fiction and suppressed historyâplay with notions of the superficial and banal.
inner GLOw' replica
An immersion in the flow of language, words, and images within David Douard's work.
A jumble of workshop views, recent productions, and reassembled fanzines, inner GLOw' replica delves into the roots of David Douard's practice. The "zines," which he has been compulsively producing for years, interact with his works, contaminating them. Pages of collages, drawings, photocopies, scraps of tape, torn magazines, slogans picked up on social media, and photos taken with smartphones reveal the density and formation process of the artist's language. This flow insinuates itself and transmutes within his sculptures and installations, whose teeming and polymorphous materiality is revealed in an exhaustive set of objective photographs.
Three texts are added to this iconographic corpus: a phantasmagorical fiction by Charlie Fox, an essay by Ingrid Luquet-Gad, and a poetic enumeration by Nina Kennel.
inner GLOw' replicaâthe first book published by Zzzâis the result of a long collaboration between David Douard and designers Thomas Bizzarri and Alain Rodriguez.
Born 1983 in Perpignan, David Douard lives and works in Aubervilliers (France). Language is the very basis of his work. The texts and poems he collects on the Internet are manipulated, transformed in order to become a vital flow, feeding into his sculptures. Through language as an ingredient, David Douard redefines space as hybrid and collective by injecting anonymous, chaotic, deviant, ill and frustrating poems in it. As he recreates an infected environment where the real world used to be, the fantasy brought by new digital technologies expands.
Texts by Charlie Fox, Ingrid Luquet-Gad, Nina Kennel.
Tehran North
Published on the occasion of her exhibition at the Palais de l'AthĂ©nĂ©e, Geneva (September 18âOctober 18, 2025) following her Prix de la SociĂ©tĂ© des Arts de GenĂšve award in 2025, this new artist's book by Shirana Shahbazi is fully dedicated to her "Displacement" series (2023â2025). To describe it, she states: "I use multiple exposure and overlapping to create an independent experience of time and space. The simultaneity of different realities is relevant to many of us. I think a lot about how to depict these complex realities."
Designed by Norm, Zurich, this publication is itself an inquiry into space and time, and our relationship to them. Each alternate page is trimmed short, creating new perceptions. The artist adds: "I enjoy deconstructing rooms, creating new ways of experiencing them. Sharpening the awareness while you see the works." The latest book in a series of acclaimed photography publications, this volume is characteristic of Shahbazi's distinctive and conceptually rigorous approach to photography in which light, vibrant color field, and layering play key roles. Flipping through the pages of An Exciting Opportunity Lies Ahead of You is a dream-like journey through architecture and senses.
Born in Tehran in 1974, Shirana Shahbazi moved to Germany at the age of 11. She studied photography in Dortmund and Zurich, where she lives and works today. Her practice has been dedicated to generating a hybrid visual language that defies simple categorization and can be experienced on multiple levels. It challenges the translation and the transcultural construction of meaning. The physical presence of her work is just as important as its semantic underpinnings.
Mousse #94
Petrit Halilaj and Danh Vo in conversation; Forensic Architecture (Eyal Weizman, Nour Abuzaid, and Elizabeth Breiner); Gabrielle Goliath; Edward W. Said; Shumon Basar; Dani Blanga Gubbay; Yvonne Rainer; Thomas Eggerer and Jochen Klein; Tobias Pils; Travis Jeppesen...
Collective intelligence (along with its wildly popular counterpart, brain rot) is a recurring subject of late. This issue is woven together through reflections on methodologies of the collective, larger-than-ourselves dynamics and "what goes unuttered (of, perhaps, what is painfully unutterable)," as ZoĂ© Samudzi writes about Gabrielle Goliathâwhose project for the South African pavilion at the upcoming Venice Biennale has been cancelled by the Arts and Culture Minister of her country for being "divisive." We stand in solidarity with the artist. Forensic Architecture's Eyal Weizman speaks of new ways of detecting "hyper-relations" as strategies to confront systemic violence. Edward W. Said, in his crucial 1993 essay "Speaking Truth to Power" (reprinted here), argues that "the intellectual's voice is lonely, but it has resonance because it associates itself freely with [. . .] the common pursuit of a shared ideal." And in our Curators section, Shumon Basar memetically reaffirms that now more than ever, "Comment is king."
Let's not shy away from commenting.
This issue comes with different covers, randomly distributed.
Subduing Demons in America: Selected Poems 1962-2007
Associated with key 1960s avant garde figures such as Ginsberg, Burroughs, Rauschenberg, and Johns, John Giorno was an early pioneer of multimedia poetry through Giorno Poetry Systems, which also distributed a whoâs who of the American underground from Patti Smith to Sonic Youth. Giornoâs use of transgressive material and in-your-face, amplified delivery was also a key influence on punk/new wave pioneers such as Suicide, Throbbing Gristle, and Black Flag. Not just a poet but a sexual, spiritual, and political radical, Giorno helped pioneer the open celebration of queer sexuality in poetry in the 1960s.
Subduing Demons in America offers the best of Giornoâs revolutionary poetry, from his striking Pop Artâinfluenced poems of the 1960s to the psychedelic, echo-laden, multitracked cut-ups of the 1970s with their explosive configurations of queer sex, spiritual practice, and the bohemian Good Life. Also here are the pared-down punk/hip-hop performance poems that Giorno performed in the 1980s.
Plastic: A Poem
Set during a single twelve-hour night shift in an injection molding factory, plastic is a book-length poem exploring the life of the industrial worker turned poet.
Bringing together memoir, ekphrasis, and satire, plastic is based on Matthew Riceâs experience working in a plastic molding factory for ten years. Illustrating alienated twenty-first-century Irish labor in poetic form, plastic engages with the inflictions and implications of a âpost-industrial,â âpost-Troublesâ society, all while weaving in depictions of factory work from literature, film, and the visual arts.
Time-stamped to highlight the claustrophobia of the workerâs experience, Rice meditates on masculinity, sectarianism, and intergenerational trauma. But at its core is a poem about feeling a calling while being submerged in the world of menial laborâmaking plastic airplane parts by night, making poetry by day.
Invoking the brevity of Seamus Heaney, plastic is an expansive and imaginative poem that offers the working class a grace, dignity, and truth not often found in contemporary literature.
MATTHEW RICE was born in Belfast. He holds an MA in poetry from Queenâs University Belfast and is currently undertaking a PhD at the Seamus Heaney Centre at Queenâs. His debut collection, The Last Weather Observer, was published in 2021 to critical acclaim, highly commended for the Forward Prize for Best First Collection, and included in the Arts Council of Northern Irelandâs top ten books of the year.
The Slicks: On Sylvia Plath and Taylor Swift
In The Slicks, Maggie Nelson positions culture-dominating pop superstar Taylor Swift and feminist cult icon Sylvia Plath as twin hosts of the female urge toward wanting hard, working hard, and pouring forthâand as twinned targets of patriarchyâs ancient urge to disparage, trivialize, and discipline creative work by women rooted in autobiography and abundance.
A buoyant melding of popular culture and literary criticism, The Slicks is a captivating and unexpected assessment of two iconic female artists by one of the most revered and influential critics of her generation.
The Collected Writings (1991â2024) of a Mortal to Death
No Place Press is collaborating with Jalal Toufic on an ambitious publishing project: The Collected Writings (1991â2024) of a Mortal to Death: Jalal Toufic. Spanning three volumes of more than six hundred pages each, the series gathers re-edited versions of his earlier works alongside two newly written books, arranged and organized by the author himself. For new readers, the volumes provide an introduction to Touficâs central conceptsâincluding the withdrawal of tradition past a surpassing disaster, radical closure, silence-over, the 180-degree over-turn, and the dancerâs two bodiesâwhile for longtime readers they offer a comprehensive view of more than three decades of thought, presented in their most rigorous and fully articulated form. Yet, in keeping with Touficâs practiceâwhich participates in untimely collaboration (including with future filmmakers, thinkers, and artists) and abides in the suspension of the avenir of messianism/Mahdismâsome of these works remain forthcoming even after their inclusion in the Collected Writings.
Volume 1 (2025) includes newly revised editions of Touficâs first three booksâDistracted (1991/2003); (Vampires): An Uneasy Essay on the Undead in Film (1993/2003); and Over-Sensitivity (1996/2009)âtogether with the script Jouissance in Postwar Beirut (2014) and, new, The Unreviewed Writings of a Peerless Thinker (2024).
Spike #86 â Salad Days!
Spike #86 is turning to the wild season of youth â lifeâs Salad Days.
Forget all the Boomer panic about a generational crisis; the kids are alright, living out our hyperconnected present to its strangest limits. New kinds of aesthetics, of activism, of entrepreneurship; new images as much as new perspectives on what images are; and, above all, a new, very quantum attitude towards fact and fiction, history and the future: young people are modeling how to be in our very confused times â and producing some of the most interesting forms of culture weâve ever seen.
Featuring a Zoomerâs guide to the Slopgeneration; an essay of on being young at art in the Instagram age; a rundown of contemporary artâs nepo babies; reality checks on cultureâs obsessions with youth and dying young; portraits of couture-sculptor Tenant of Culture, Turner Prize-nominated photographer Rene MatiÄ, e-waste sculptor Brian Oakes, and Austrian painter Lukas Posch; send-ups of teenage fictionâs ecstatic weirdness and youth-quakersâ political promise; a critique from Silicon Valley of the industrialization of young risk-taking; artâs perfect Los Angeles metaphor; and a splash of back-page advice: âYou shouldnât be fun at twenty-one. You should be tortured.â
Routes/Worlds
Elizabeth Povinelli's anthropology of the otherwise locates itself within forms of life that run counter to dominant modes of being under late settler liberalism. In these essays, she considers the emergence of new worlds and the extinguishment of old ones, seeking to develop a social imaginary that can sustain radical potentiality without turning a blind eye to our deep interdependence.
Black Ark
The point of departure for the book «Black Ark» with Lee âScratchâ Perry (1936â2021), a Jamaican musical and visual artist who was based in Switzerland, is a detailed inventory of photographs and writings (Spring 2021) from the Black Ark Studios in Kingston, Jamaica, where Lee produced his music from 1973 on. He was a seminal pioneer of dub, an electronic subgenre of reggae that uses sampling, looping, remixing, reverb and echoes to create new songs as well as rework and appropriate pre-recorded songs and tracks.
Black Ark Studios was one of the cradles of dub. Itâs also where Lee âScratchâ Perryâs musical approach found an enduring visual counterpart in the form of continuously evolving mural paintings and drawings as well as shape-shifting assemblages of records, instruments, found objects, posters, newspaper and magazine clippings, and appropriated books. The artworks form actual layers upon layers that are rhizomatically intertwined with the studio building itself as well as with the furniture insideâand with Perryâs biography and persona.
Perry created his very own, dense and eclectic worldâa world that is documented in «Black Ark», before it disappears for good: the premises have recently been sold. The photographic documentation of the studio was supplemented by efforts to secure and preserve Perryâs cultural objects as part of a joint project with various cultural institutions.
«Black Ark» which reflects the rhythm and layering effects of collage both in its content and the materials used to craft the book. Perry was involved in the conception of the book in its early stages. It also interweaves various media and chronologies. The new photographs of the Black Ark Studios will be juxtaposed with stills from old documentaries and archival photos.
The idea of a âhouseâ serves as both a working hypothesis and a metaphor. It will be the starting point and endpoint of various thematic strands, both visual and textual: for example, the book will explore the Black Ark as a âspiritual yardâ in the context of African diaspora, as well as looking into archeomusicological aspects. Furthermore, extended captions by Perryâs biographer will provide the backdrop for a kaleidoscopic panorama of Perryâs eclectic and ingenious work.
DĂ©sapprendre en traduisant â Une pratique critique et collective
The act of translation as a pedagogical tool, a political act, and ultimately a gesture of care in these tense cultural times.
Virginie Bobin operates across research, curatorial and editorial practices, writing, pedagogy and translation, with a particular interest in performance, experimental forms of artistic research, the role of art, artists and art institutions in the public sphere, and formats that exceed that of the exhibition. Between 2009 and 2018, she has worked for various art centers and residency programs (Villa Vassilieff, BĂ©tonsalon, Witte de With, Les Laboratoires d'Aubervilliers, Performa). She is a Doctor in Artistic Research (PhD-in-Practice, Academy of Fines Arts, Vienna, 2023), a professor in Art and Social Practices at Ă©sadhar (Rouen, since 2024), and a co-founding member of the editorial and curatorial platform Qalqalah ÙÙÙÙŰ©. In addition to her contributions to various international journals, she has edited the collective publications Composing Differences (Les presses du rĂ©el, 2015), Republications (with Mathilde Villeneuve, Archive Books, 2015), and Bestiario de LengĂŒitas (with Mercedes Azpilicueta, k.verlag, 2024).