Articles

  • Nov 1, 2024 | highsnobiety.com | Eileen Myles

    For our fall  issue, and on the heels of Paris Fashion Week and Highsnobiety’s Not In Paris activation, we asked a handful of writers and designers to give us a short essay –– or prose poem or something in between –– about something they found in Paris that changed them. Could be an article of clothing. Could be a phrase. Could be a meal. For Eileen Myles, it was language. For Arisa White, it was a dress. Natasha Stagg wrote about a perfect tee shirt. Ryota Iwai told us about a new tea routine.

  • Oct 17, 2024 | documentjournal.com | Chloë Sevigny |Drew Zeiba |Eileen Myles

    The filmmaker and actor joins the writer to talk about performance, Provincetown, and loving the broken and pathetic for Document’s Fall/Winter 2024–25 issue There are indie icons or mainstream luminaries. Local legends or international sensations. Those who remain underground or those who embrace visibility. Then there’s Chloë Sevigny. The critically acclaimed actor and filmmaker has spent a career blurring these, and many other, boundaries.

  • Sep 13, 2024 | theparisreview.org | Eileen Myles |Semiotext this October

    By Eileen Myles September 13, 2024 I’ve been reading Nate Lippens for years. I think this is the third time I’ve read My Dead Book and I’m finally getting a grip on what kind of machine his writing is. I think it’s a poetic instrument and also some kind of natural phenomena. I went to Joshua Tree one night in the aughts with a gang of people to see the Perseids. I’ve been thinking about that.

  • Aug 15, 2024 | interviewmagazine.com | Eileen Myles |Emily Sandstrom

    According to Precious Okoyomon, holes should be embraced—and not just when the 31-year-old artist and writer is “eating ass for breakfast.” Their latest collection of poems, But Did I Die?, suspends readers in linguistic quicksand. The words themselves trickle across the page like faint memories. But those blank spaces—the line breaks and narrative gaps—are where Okoyomon thrives. “I’m lost in a bunch of fragments,” they explained to fellow poet and mentor Eileen Myles.

  • May 23, 2024 | anothermag.com | Eileen Myles |Amelia Abraham |TextAmelia Abraham

    “People are not reading anymore because books are boring. Try to please the customer, at least”: The controversial French author speaks to Amelia Abraham about feminine cruelty, queer art, and her new book PlayboyLead Image Playboy is the kind of book you can imbibe in one sitting. Its sentences are meticulously simple, doing the most with the minimum.

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