05.03.2025

ingénu/e magazine Taking a stand against the uglification of the world.

Posted by Jazmine Saunders on 5th March, 2025

ingénu/e magazine Taking a stand against the uglification of the world.

What is it?

ingénu/e is a quarterly, free arts & culture magazine covering West and East Sussex and West Kent, following the geography of the South Downs and High Weald areas. It is B5 size, which means it has room for plenty of great content but will still fit comfortably in a handbag or pocket.

  • ... Artist Hattie Lockhart Smith and Gill, ingénu_e magazine editor, at the Botanical Art Fair 2024, Sussex Prairie Gardens

    Chichester Art Trail

    What’s in it?

    ingénu/e

    All fields of creativity, eg: painting, photography, illustration, printmaking,
    sculpture, glass art and ceramics; contemporary crafts; theatre, film, music and dance; poetry and prose; creative lifestyle items such as furniture design; creative courses & workshops; festivals and art events.

    Photographic Credit: ingénu/e Magazine

  • Chichester Art Trail

    How can I get it?

    ingénu/e

    ingénu/e is free to pick up at outlets across the region such as cafés, art centres, libraries, theatres, art galleries, hotels, tourist info and visitor centres, music and book shops, museums and other venues favoured by culturally aware people.
    Readers can also subscribe and have copies mailed to their door.

    Photographic Credit: ingénu/e Magazine

  • Chichester Art Trail

    Why ‘ingénu/e’?

    ingénu/e

    In modern parlance the word ingénue tends to have a feminine slant in its usage, referring usually to a young creative girl or woman who is endearingly innocent and wholesome or very new to an artistic genre.  The masculine equivalent is ingénu, so for the sake of balance we have coined the name ingénu/e.
    The word originates from ‘L’Ingénu’, a novella by the French writer Voltaire, published in 1767. The main character’s literal understanding of society and it values serves as both comic and satirical comment as the story unfolds. The female form of ingénue is first recorded in English in Thackeray’s ‘Vanity Fair’ in 1848

    Photographic Credit: ingénu/e Magazine

  • Chichester Art Trail

    Uglification? Is that even a word?

    ingénu/e

    We have borrowed, for our mission statement, a phrase from the brilliant 1988 movie The Unbearable Lightness of Being, directed by Philip Kaufman and based on the novel of the same name by Milan Kundera, featuring Daniel Day Lewis, Juliette Binoche and Lena Olin.

    The scene – Sabina (Lena Olin) in restaurant with piped music:
    “Everywhere music’s turning into noise. Look. These plastic flowers… they even put them in water! And look out there, those buildings – the uglification of the world. The only place we can find beauty is if its persecutors have overlooked it.
    It’s a planetary process… and I can’t stand it.”
    Visit www.ingenuemagazine.co.uk for further information.

    Photographic Credit: ingénu/e Magazine

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