“ATMOSPHERES OF VIOLENCE”

Volume Three, Issue One, 2025

Cover illustration by Annie Turner

 

VOLUME #3, ISSUE #1 “Atmospheres of Violence”

Created in collaboration with Toby Wu of Harvard University, Department of Visual Studies and with our poetry editors Carmine Marrow and Nuno Marques

This special issue raises questions such as: What perceptual, critical, and creative modes are required to not only apprehend atmospheric violence but to address it? Which practices might help to stall or stop its reproduction and repetition? How does one temporally order the emergence of an Atmosphere of Violence, and how can we think, feel, write, and make, as we perceive these atmospheres to be un-subsiding?

table of contents


 

(1)

Wind

Jenna Wendler

Preface

(2)

the fracture of the sea (vent mestral)

Helena Fornells Nadal

Poetry

(3)

The Drum and Silk:

The Experience of Imitating Wind as Sound 

Fiona Keenan

essay

(4)

Collages

Alexandra Chiou

visual art

(5)

The Breath of Life:

Wind and Living Matter in Hayao Miyazaki’s The Wind Rises

David A. Schwartz

essay

(6)

Paintings

Inês Miguel Oliveira

visual art

(7)

A Soft, Sympathetic Touch:

Walt Whitman and the Eroticism of Wind

Wesley Cornwell

essay

(8)

Paper Sculptures

Antonin Anzil

visual art

(9)

doa angin / wind prayer

Khairani Barokka

poetry

(10)

Character-Endowing Cosmic Forces:

A Vision of the Wind in Traditional Chinese Literature

Dylan Wang

essay

(11)

 'seeing air'

Carolyn Delzoppo

visual art

(12)

Wind as Style:

A Chinese Aesthetics Perspective

Li Xu, Panpan Yang

essay

(13)

Designing with Wind:

Architecture’s Model Environments

Lisa Moffitt

essay

(14)

Mixed Media

Ruth Lizbeth Poor

mixed media

(15)

Tornado

Douglas Macleod

essay

(16)

Tāwhiri traces the stars:

“seeing” the wind as cosmic mediator

Kaitlin Moore

photo essay

(17)

Found-Word Collages

J. I. Kleinberg

visual poetry

(18)

Wind Playlist

The Editors

appendix

 

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.