His great journey had begun. Saint Zita the cleaner. INQUE 3 cover. Spreads. Editor @mrdancrowe . Art director @mrwilley . Link in bio. @inquemag . #drawing #pen #pencil #acrylic #ink
The fiction section of issue 3 includes:
Unstreetwise by Jonathan Lethem (@jonathanlethem )
(Part three of a new novel, spread over the 10 issues of INQUE).
Untitled by Maya Binyam
The Contest by Rita Bullwinkel (@ritabullwinkel )
Our Father by Bud Smith (@budsmith )
Explosions by Shuang Xuetao (translated by @jeremy_tiang )
The German Teacher by Amalia Ulman (@amaliaulman )
Love Bandit by Alexander Chee (@cheemobile )
The entire section is illustrated by Pablo Delcan (@pablodelcan )
Gary Shteyngart (@shteyngart ) and Anton Checkhov discuss the nature of our afterlives, becoming more Chekhovian, Leo Tolstoy’s estate, the war in Ukraine, and the need for humour and humanity in literature.
Issue 3 of INQUE.
August Dine talks to Jim Dine.
A conversation that took place over the course of 12 months, and involved a lot eating, between the legendary American artist Jim Dine (@jimdinestudio ) and his grandson August Dine (@augustdine ).
Across 46 pages in issue 3 of INQUE, the interview touches on Dine’s childhood in Ohio, his decades-spanning career, his time among master printers in Europe and artists such as Robert Rauschenberg and Andy Warhol in New York, and what it means to be a ‘smiling workman.’
All photographs of Jim Dine’s studio in Montrouge (slides 13 to 19) by @augustdine