Special thanks to The Desktop Issue’s contributors: A. While reading, you can also listen to our Spotify playlist curated for this edition!Īlong with the zine, we are releasing the Adobe Illustrator file used to create the front and back cover elements, which includes a wood texture, sticky notes, a phone, an open book, lined paper, notebooks, highlighters, an eraser, a pencil, and a pen! EratoZine1-DeskElements.ai is licensed by Erato under CC BY-NC. A desk is also a reflection of current experiences, littered with objects indicating beginnings and endings, a surface of subtle intimacies ripe for examination.Ĭlick here to read The Desktop Issue. On each desk is a student’s identity, spread across the tabletop. Some might keep their desk simple and organized, while others might have a system that works only inside their mind. Over the years the Erato label has grown to include acclaimed artists such as Daniel Barenboim, Pierre Boulez, Philippe Jaroussky, Joyce DiDonato, Diana Damrau and Alexandre Tharaud. Papers are written on and put away, drawings made and scrapped, laptops opened and closed, candy wrappers set aside to be discarded later. Established in Paris in 1953, Erato focuses on recording French composers and artists with a particular emphasis on Renaissance and Baroque repertoire. The limited horizontal real estate in a student’s room results in a student’s desk being in constant flux. Erato is excited to share our first online-exclusive zine! The Desktop Issue focuses on a student’s desk as a microcosm of identity:
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |