Andrew Walsh‐Lister
Andrew Walsh‐Lister

BRICKS FROM THE KILN #5
Andrew Walsh‐Lister, Matthew Stuart
Bricks from the Kiln is a semi-yearly journal and multifarious publishing platform established in mid-2015 to support critically minded and explorative writing on and around art, design and literature. Edited by Matthew Stuart and Andrew Walsh-Lister, the forthcoming issue, number five, begins with a single sentence:
blankets topologies in glistening snow and blood — produces instructional spattering, again and again — coughs up clotted network diagram hairballs of illegibility — parasitically draws on / from Thomas Browne’s quincunx — meets for The Big ROAR tomorrow, yesterday — lifts loud cows off the page, aloud — flips the coin of language, heads or tails? — politely speaks on writing heard yet seen — twists tongues, transliterates and teases — makes contact with ancestral spirits — traverses the foothills of La Marquesa, past and present — is the Spectre at the feast — (re)traces polymorphous concrete poems — dashes, gestures, speaks, breathes, moves, joyness — is, as ever, tentative, incomplete and inconsistent.
Contributions by Helen Marten, Rebecca May Johnson, Johanna Drucker, Louis Lüthi, Daisy Lafarge, Holly Pester, Ursula K. Le Guin, Quinn Latimer, Stefan Themerson, Slavs and Tatars, Ashanti Harris, Catalina Barroso-Luque, Kevin Lotery, Bronac Ferran with Greg Thomas and Astrid Seme with Alex Balgiu.

BFTK #6: Tentative — Incomplete — Inconsistent
Andrew Walsh‐Lister, Matthew Stuart
This instalment of Bricks from the Kiln doubles as issue #6 of the journal and as an exhibition catalogue for the thematic show ‘BFTK#6: Tentative — Incomplete — Inconsistent: A Catalogue of the Disappeared, Destroyed, Lost or Otherwise Inaccessible’. Presenting objects, artworks, artefacts, models, events and animals that no-longer — or never did — exist in physical form, the exhibition explores themes of death, destruction and reincarnation, examining persisting interests in notions of ephemerality and permanence, memory and record, preservation and erasure, creation and reconstruction.
How do we remember and memorialise? How is space given to the unrecorded? How do we experience the out of reach, concealed, unseen, undiscovered? How can the dematerialised be materialised again, through the mediation of writing, image and sound?
THE ALMOST HORSE
Helen Marten
(inside front / back cover)
‘STILL IN ALL HEARTS, IN ALL BELLIES, IN ALL TOES’:
A BELATED REVIEW OF FESTIVAL DE FORT BOYARD
Matthew Stuart & Andrew Walsh-Lister
(pp.6–8)
EDDYSTONE
Rachael Allen
(pp.11–18)
TO MAKE THE STONE STONY
Emily LaBarge
(pp.21–26)
WHEREFORE AM I NOW?
Lucy Mercer
(pp.29–40)
WESTON: THE TOWN THAT WAS, AND THEN WASN’T
Crystal Bennes
(pp.43–52)
NOTES TO ACCOMPANY VIOLENT INNOCENCE (2019)
Will Harris
(pp.55–64)
GHOST, POCKETS, TRACES, NECESSARY CLOUDS
Matthew Stuart
(pp.66–69)
CONNECTIVITY OF TOUCHING
Ali Na & Mindy Seu in conversation
(pp.71–76)
PEARL
Rose Higham-Stainton
(pp.79–84)
NOTES FROM NEW MEXICO
Jennifer Hodgson
(pp.87–98)
THE MOOG OF AHMEDABAD
Paul Purgas
(pp.101–108)
IN WHICH DECIBELLA ESCAPES AUDITION
Sarah Hayden
(pp.111–122)
D.C.B.: A PARTIAL RETROSPECTIVE
Juliet Jacques
(pp.125–136)
PINBALL REMAINS: ON THE PINBALL ISSUE OF THE SITUATIONIST TIMES
Ellef Prestsæter
(pp.139–150)
TOMB III – CADMIUM (2021)
Gilbert Again
(pp.152–154)
NON-DESCRIPT ANIMAL
David Hering
(pp.157–161)
Cover & Bookmark artwork by Helen Marten

Bricks from the Kiln — Issue 4: On Translation, Transmission & Transposition
Andrew Walsh‐Lister, Matthew Stuart and 2 more
Bricks from the Kiln is an irregular journal edited by Andrew Lister and Matthew Stuart, sometimes with guest editors, that presents graphic design and typography as disciplines activated by and through other disciplines and lenses such as language, archives, collage, and more. It borrows its title from the glossary notes of Ret Marut’s "Der Ziegelbrenner," which was the ‘size, shape and colour of a brick’, and ran for 13 issues between 1917 and 1921.
The latest installment, "#4: On Translation, Transmission & Transposition," was published as an event (and now) a publication, with events at London College of Communication, Burley Fisher Books & Pig Rock bothy, Socttish National Gallery of Modern Art, and Inga (in November, 2019).
GREENING
Helen Marten
(front / back flaps)
JOY & HAPPINESS, FIDELITY
& INTIMACY IN TRANSLATION
Sophie Collins
(pp.4–13)
PLANETARY TRANSLATION
Don Mee Choi
(pp.15–19)
TRANSLATION AND A LIPOGRAM:
OR, ON FORMS OF AGAIN-WRITING
AND NO- (OR NOT THAT-) WRITING
Kate Briggs
(pp.23–33)
UNHOMING (1 of 4):
FOLLOWING HÖLDERLIN’S ‘HEIMAT’
Phil Baber
(pp.35–47)
SNOW WHITE AND THE WHITE
OF THE HUMAN EYEBALLS
Joyce Dixon
(pp.51–62)
ALTAMIRALTAMIRALTAMIRA
Florian Roithmayr
(pp.65–116)
LEVEL UP, LEVEL DOWN
Jen Calleja
(pp.119–124)
TRANS.MISSION [A.DIALOGUE]:
A JAVASCRIPT FOR THREE VOICES
J.R. Carpenter
(pp.127–134)
THE MECHANISATION OF ART
Edgar Wind
(glosses / annotations / insertions by
Natalie Ferris & Bryony Quinn)
(pp.137–144)
UNHOMING (2 of 4)
Phil Baber
(p.147)
COMMISSION FOR A NOIR MOVIE
B IN THE BAY OF BISCAY
Rebecca Collins
(pp.151–157)
UNHOMING (3 of 4)
Phil Baber
(pp.150–162)
EVERY CONTACT LEAVES A TRACE;
TRANSCRIBING OSTEON
Naomi Pearce
(pp.165–170)
HOW DOES A WORK END?
Karen Di Franco
(pp.173–193)
METONYMY Op.1 & Op.2
James Bulley
(pp.197–201)
AFRIKAN ALPHABETS EXTENDED
Saki Mafundikwa
(pp.204–207)
SUSAN HILLER: 1983
Natalie Ferris
(pp.209–217)
EVERY TELLING HAS A TALING /
EVERY STORY HAS AN ENDING
Matthew Stuart
(pp.220–233)
GRAPHIC PROPRIOCEPTION
James Langdon
(pp.235–254)
UNHOMING (4 of 4)
Phil Baber
(pp.257–263)
TUNNELLING AND AGGREGATING
FOR DESIGN RESEARCH
Bryony Quinn (text) &
Peter Nencini (images)
(pp.265–272)
LET IT PERCOLATE:
A MANIFESTO FOR READING
Sophie Seita
(pp.275–280)
288 pgs, 22.4 × 17 cm, Softcover, 2020