j
apátrida—dismantling
🇵🇸 🕊️
🪨 𝘱𝘳𝘪𝘯𝘵𝘮𝘢𝘬𝘦𝘳
𝑜𝓍𝒻𝑜𝓇𝒹

🌱Please join us to celebrate the launch of a new book on The Waiting Project by Dr JC Niala, Julia Utreras and Sam Skinner, working in collaboration with @greenpeaceuk, which explores urgent issues concerning access to allotments, land justice and food sovereignty.🌱
🎉 Launch: 4-6pm, 09.01.26 The Nest, 33-35, Little Clarendon St, Oxford, OX1 2HU >> All welcome! Please Share! 🎉
The publication includes: new poems by @jcniala; unseen data and documentation; creative reflections on the project by @hannah_davey, @harunishere, @mary.jane.edwards, kaylenealder; photos by @edalziel; and illustrations by @moeritherium.
The original Waiting Project list project was an innovative work of art/activism which transformed data from a nationwide survey on the number of people on allotment waiting lists in the UK - over 170,000 - into a huge allotment-sized artwork made of seed paper. The artwork was first presented at the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities in London in 2023, as a collective demand for more allotments. Enacting en-masse a right enshrined in the 1908 Allotment Act: if 6 or more people from different council tax paying households demand an allotment the local government is duty bound to act.
The artwork then travelled to Liverpool where it was ‘dug-in’ to land owned by supermarket giant Tesco. An area the size of a standard ‘10 pole’ allotment plot was laid with the seed paper sewn with blocks of Clover, Fescue, Mustard, and Sunflower, to support phytoremediation of the land and act as green manure, before being covered in 4 tonnes of compost. The project received nationwide attention and was featured in national newspapers, on radio, TV, and online.
The publication explores the impact and legacy of the project from a multitude of creative perspectives offering readers a unique document of, and insight into, the project. The book was designed by Julia Utreras and includes a seed paper ‘belly-band’ cover wrap.
Edition of 350 // 102 pages // Litho printed on Munken paper at Hollywell Press, Oxford // Soft cover and section sewn binding // £10
Available to purchase online from @antennebooks 09.01.26. Further details: www.fig.studio

🌱Please join us to celebrate the launch of a new book on The Waiting Project by Dr JC Niala, Julia Utreras and Sam Skinner, working in collaboration with @greenpeaceuk, which explores urgent issues concerning access to allotments, land justice and food sovereignty.🌱
🎉 Launch: 4-6pm, 09.01.26 The Nest, 33-35, Little Clarendon St, Oxford, OX1 2HU >> All welcome! Please Share! 🎉
The publication includes: new poems by @jcniala; unseen data and documentation; creative reflections on the project by @hannah_davey, @harunishere, @mary.jane.edwards, kaylenealder; photos by @edalziel; and illustrations by @moeritherium.
The original Waiting Project list project was an innovative work of art/activism which transformed data from a nationwide survey on the number of people on allotment waiting lists in the UK - over 170,000 - into a huge allotment-sized artwork made of seed paper. The artwork was first presented at the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities in London in 2023, as a collective demand for more allotments. Enacting en-masse a right enshrined in the 1908 Allotment Act: if 6 or more people from different council tax paying households demand an allotment the local government is duty bound to act.
The artwork then travelled to Liverpool where it was ‘dug-in’ to land owned by supermarket giant Tesco. An area the size of a standard ‘10 pole’ allotment plot was laid with the seed paper sewn with blocks of Clover, Fescue, Mustard, and Sunflower, to support phytoremediation of the land and act as green manure, before being covered in 4 tonnes of compost. The project received nationwide attention and was featured in national newspapers, on radio, TV, and online.
The publication explores the impact and legacy of the project from a multitude of creative perspectives offering readers a unique document of, and insight into, the project. The book was designed by Julia Utreras and includes a seed paper ‘belly-band’ cover wrap.
Edition of 350 // 102 pages // Litho printed on Munken paper at Hollywell Press, Oxford // Soft cover and section sewn binding // £10
Available to purchase online from @antennebooks 09.01.26. Further details: www.fig.studio

🌱Please join us to celebrate the launch of a new book on The Waiting Project by Dr JC Niala, Julia Utreras and Sam Skinner, working in collaboration with @greenpeaceuk, which explores urgent issues concerning access to allotments, land justice and food sovereignty.🌱
🎉 Launch: 4-6pm, 09.01.26 The Nest, 33-35, Little Clarendon St, Oxford, OX1 2HU >> All welcome! Please Share! 🎉
The publication includes: new poems by @jcniala; unseen data and documentation; creative reflections on the project by @hannah_davey, @harunishere, @mary.jane.edwards, kaylenealder; photos by @edalziel; and illustrations by @moeritherium.
The original Waiting Project list project was an innovative work of art/activism which transformed data from a nationwide survey on the number of people on allotment waiting lists in the UK - over 170,000 - into a huge allotment-sized artwork made of seed paper. The artwork was first presented at the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities in London in 2023, as a collective demand for more allotments. Enacting en-masse a right enshrined in the 1908 Allotment Act: if 6 or more people from different council tax paying households demand an allotment the local government is duty bound to act.
The artwork then travelled to Liverpool where it was ‘dug-in’ to land owned by supermarket giant Tesco. An area the size of a standard ‘10 pole’ allotment plot was laid with the seed paper sewn with blocks of Clover, Fescue, Mustard, and Sunflower, to support phytoremediation of the land and act as green manure, before being covered in 4 tonnes of compost. The project received nationwide attention and was featured in national newspapers, on radio, TV, and online.
The publication explores the impact and legacy of the project from a multitude of creative perspectives offering readers a unique document of, and insight into, the project. The book was designed by Julia Utreras and includes a seed paper ‘belly-band’ cover wrap.
Edition of 350 // 102 pages // Litho printed on Munken paper at Hollywell Press, Oxford // Soft cover and section sewn binding // £10
Available to purchase online from @antennebooks 09.01.26. Further details: www.fig.studio

🌱Please join us to celebrate the launch of a new book on The Waiting Project by Dr JC Niala, Julia Utreras and Sam Skinner, working in collaboration with @greenpeaceuk, which explores urgent issues concerning access to allotments, land justice and food sovereignty.🌱
🎉 Launch: 4-6pm, 09.01.26 The Nest, 33-35, Little Clarendon St, Oxford, OX1 2HU >> All welcome! Please Share! 🎉
The publication includes: new poems by @jcniala; unseen data and documentation; creative reflections on the project by @hannah_davey, @harunishere, @mary.jane.edwards, kaylenealder; photos by @edalziel; and illustrations by @moeritherium.
The original Waiting Project list project was an innovative work of art/activism which transformed data from a nationwide survey on the number of people on allotment waiting lists in the UK - over 170,000 - into a huge allotment-sized artwork made of seed paper. The artwork was first presented at the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities in London in 2023, as a collective demand for more allotments. Enacting en-masse a right enshrined in the 1908 Allotment Act: if 6 or more people from different council tax paying households demand an allotment the local government is duty bound to act.
The artwork then travelled to Liverpool where it was ‘dug-in’ to land owned by supermarket giant Tesco. An area the size of a standard ‘10 pole’ allotment plot was laid with the seed paper sewn with blocks of Clover, Fescue, Mustard, and Sunflower, to support phytoremediation of the land and act as green manure, before being covered in 4 tonnes of compost. The project received nationwide attention and was featured in national newspapers, on radio, TV, and online.
The publication explores the impact and legacy of the project from a multitude of creative perspectives offering readers a unique document of, and insight into, the project. The book was designed by Julia Utreras and includes a seed paper ‘belly-band’ cover wrap.
Edition of 350 // 102 pages // Litho printed on Munken paper at Hollywell Press, Oxford // Soft cover and section sewn binding // £10
Available to purchase online from @antennebooks 09.01.26. Further details: www.fig.studio

🌱Please join us to celebrate the launch of a new book on The Waiting Project by Dr JC Niala, Julia Utreras and Sam Skinner, working in collaboration with @greenpeaceuk, which explores urgent issues concerning access to allotments, land justice and food sovereignty.🌱
🎉 Launch: 4-6pm, 09.01.26 The Nest, 33-35, Little Clarendon St, Oxford, OX1 2HU >> All welcome! Please Share! 🎉
The publication includes: new poems by @jcniala; unseen data and documentation; creative reflections on the project by @hannah_davey, @harunishere, @mary.jane.edwards, kaylenealder; photos by @edalziel; and illustrations by @moeritherium.
The original Waiting Project list project was an innovative work of art/activism which transformed data from a nationwide survey on the number of people on allotment waiting lists in the UK - over 170,000 - into a huge allotment-sized artwork made of seed paper. The artwork was first presented at the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities in London in 2023, as a collective demand for more allotments. Enacting en-masse a right enshrined in the 1908 Allotment Act: if 6 or more people from different council tax paying households demand an allotment the local government is duty bound to act.
The artwork then travelled to Liverpool where it was ‘dug-in’ to land owned by supermarket giant Tesco. An area the size of a standard ‘10 pole’ allotment plot was laid with the seed paper sewn with blocks of Clover, Fescue, Mustard, and Sunflower, to support phytoremediation of the land and act as green manure, before being covered in 4 tonnes of compost. The project received nationwide attention and was featured in national newspapers, on radio, TV, and online.
The publication explores the impact and legacy of the project from a multitude of creative perspectives offering readers a unique document of, and insight into, the project. The book was designed by Julia Utreras and includes a seed paper ‘belly-band’ cover wrap.
Edition of 350 // 102 pages // Litho printed on Munken paper at Hollywell Press, Oxford // Soft cover and section sewn binding // £10
Available to purchase online from @antennebooks 09.01.26. Further details: www.fig.studio

🌱Please join us to celebrate the launch of a new book on The Waiting Project by Dr JC Niala, Julia Utreras and Sam Skinner, working in collaboration with @greenpeaceuk, which explores urgent issues concerning access to allotments, land justice and food sovereignty.🌱
🎉 Launch: 4-6pm, 09.01.26 The Nest, 33-35, Little Clarendon St, Oxford, OX1 2HU >> All welcome! Please Share! 🎉
The publication includes: new poems by @jcniala; unseen data and documentation; creative reflections on the project by @hannah_davey, @harunishere, @mary.jane.edwards, kaylenealder; photos by @edalziel; and illustrations by @moeritherium.
The original Waiting Project list project was an innovative work of art/activism which transformed data from a nationwide survey on the number of people on allotment waiting lists in the UK - over 170,000 - into a huge allotment-sized artwork made of seed paper. The artwork was first presented at the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities in London in 2023, as a collective demand for more allotments. Enacting en-masse a right enshrined in the 1908 Allotment Act: if 6 or more people from different council tax paying households demand an allotment the local government is duty bound to act.
The artwork then travelled to Liverpool where it was ‘dug-in’ to land owned by supermarket giant Tesco. An area the size of a standard ‘10 pole’ allotment plot was laid with the seed paper sewn with blocks of Clover, Fescue, Mustard, and Sunflower, to support phytoremediation of the land and act as green manure, before being covered in 4 tonnes of compost. The project received nationwide attention and was featured in national newspapers, on radio, TV, and online.
The publication explores the impact and legacy of the project from a multitude of creative perspectives offering readers a unique document of, and insight into, the project. The book was designed by Julia Utreras and includes a seed paper ‘belly-band’ cover wrap.
Edition of 350 // 102 pages // Litho printed on Munken paper at Hollywell Press, Oxford // Soft cover and section sewn binding // £10
Available to purchase online from @antennebooks 09.01.26. Further details: www.fig.studio

🌱Please join us to celebrate the launch of a new book on The Waiting Project by Dr JC Niala, Julia Utreras and Sam Skinner, working in collaboration with @greenpeaceuk, which explores urgent issues concerning access to allotments, land justice and food sovereignty.🌱
🎉 Launch: 4-6pm, 09.01.26 The Nest, 33-35, Little Clarendon St, Oxford, OX1 2HU >> All welcome! Please Share! 🎉
The publication includes: new poems by @jcniala; unseen data and documentation; creative reflections on the project by @hannah_davey, @harunishere, @mary.jane.edwards, kaylenealder; photos by @edalziel; and illustrations by @moeritherium.
The original Waiting Project list project was an innovative work of art/activism which transformed data from a nationwide survey on the number of people on allotment waiting lists in the UK - over 170,000 - into a huge allotment-sized artwork made of seed paper. The artwork was first presented at the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities in London in 2023, as a collective demand for more allotments. Enacting en-masse a right enshrined in the 1908 Allotment Act: if 6 or more people from different council tax paying households demand an allotment the local government is duty bound to act.
The artwork then travelled to Liverpool where it was ‘dug-in’ to land owned by supermarket giant Tesco. An area the size of a standard ‘10 pole’ allotment plot was laid with the seed paper sewn with blocks of Clover, Fescue, Mustard, and Sunflower, to support phytoremediation of the land and act as green manure, before being covered in 4 tonnes of compost. The project received nationwide attention and was featured in national newspapers, on radio, TV, and online.
The publication explores the impact and legacy of the project from a multitude of creative perspectives offering readers a unique document of, and insight into, the project. The book was designed by Julia Utreras and includes a seed paper ‘belly-band’ cover wrap.
Edition of 350 // 102 pages // Litho printed on Munken paper at Hollywell Press, Oxford // Soft cover and section sewn binding // £10
Available to purchase online from @antennebooks 09.01.26. Further details: www.fig.studio

🌱Please join us to celebrate the launch of a new book on The Waiting Project by Dr JC Niala, Julia Utreras and Sam Skinner, working in collaboration with @greenpeaceuk, which explores urgent issues concerning access to allotments, land justice and food sovereignty.🌱
🎉 Launch: 4-6pm, 09.01.26 The Nest, 33-35, Little Clarendon St, Oxford, OX1 2HU >> All welcome! Please Share! 🎉
The publication includes: new poems by @jcniala; unseen data and documentation; creative reflections on the project by @hannah_davey, @harunishere, @mary.jane.edwards, kaylenealder; photos by @edalziel; and illustrations by @moeritherium.
The original Waiting Project list project was an innovative work of art/activism which transformed data from a nationwide survey on the number of people on allotment waiting lists in the UK - over 170,000 - into a huge allotment-sized artwork made of seed paper. The artwork was first presented at the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities in London in 2023, as a collective demand for more allotments. Enacting en-masse a right enshrined in the 1908 Allotment Act: if 6 or more people from different council tax paying households demand an allotment the local government is duty bound to act.
The artwork then travelled to Liverpool where it was ‘dug-in’ to land owned by supermarket giant Tesco. An area the size of a standard ‘10 pole’ allotment plot was laid with the seed paper sewn with blocks of Clover, Fescue, Mustard, and Sunflower, to support phytoremediation of the land and act as green manure, before being covered in 4 tonnes of compost. The project received nationwide attention and was featured in national newspapers, on radio, TV, and online.
The publication explores the impact and legacy of the project from a multitude of creative perspectives offering readers a unique document of, and insight into, the project. The book was designed by Julia Utreras and includes a seed paper ‘belly-band’ cover wrap.
Edition of 350 // 102 pages // Litho printed on Munken paper at Hollywell Press, Oxford // Soft cover and section sewn binding // £10
Available to purchase online from @antennebooks 09.01.26. Further details: www.fig.studio

🌱Please join us to celebrate the launch of a new book on The Waiting Project by Dr JC Niala, Julia Utreras and Sam Skinner, working in collaboration with @greenpeaceuk, which explores urgent issues concerning access to allotments, land justice and food sovereignty.🌱
🎉 Launch: 4-6pm, 09.01.26 The Nest, 33-35, Little Clarendon St, Oxford, OX1 2HU >> All welcome! Please Share! 🎉
The publication includes: new poems by @jcniala; unseen data and documentation; creative reflections on the project by @hannah_davey, @harunishere, @mary.jane.edwards, kaylenealder; photos by @edalziel; and illustrations by @moeritherium.
The original Waiting Project list project was an innovative work of art/activism which transformed data from a nationwide survey on the number of people on allotment waiting lists in the UK - over 170,000 - into a huge allotment-sized artwork made of seed paper. The artwork was first presented at the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities in London in 2023, as a collective demand for more allotments. Enacting en-masse a right enshrined in the 1908 Allotment Act: if 6 or more people from different council tax paying households demand an allotment the local government is duty bound to act.
The artwork then travelled to Liverpool where it was ‘dug-in’ to land owned by supermarket giant Tesco. An area the size of a standard ‘10 pole’ allotment plot was laid with the seed paper sewn with blocks of Clover, Fescue, Mustard, and Sunflower, to support phytoremediation of the land and act as green manure, before being covered in 4 tonnes of compost. The project received nationwide attention and was featured in national newspapers, on radio, TV, and online.
The publication explores the impact and legacy of the project from a multitude of creative perspectives offering readers a unique document of, and insight into, the project. The book was designed by Julia Utreras and includes a seed paper ‘belly-band’ cover wrap.
Edition of 350 // 102 pages // Litho printed on Munken paper at Hollywell Press, Oxford // Soft cover and section sewn binding // £10
Available to purchase online from @antennebooks 09.01.26. Further details: www.fig.studio

🌱Please join us to celebrate the launch of a new book on The Waiting Project by Dr JC Niala, Julia Utreras and Sam Skinner, working in collaboration with @greenpeaceuk, which explores urgent issues concerning access to allotments, land justice and food sovereignty.🌱
🎉 Launch: 4-6pm, 09.01.26 The Nest, 33-35, Little Clarendon St, Oxford, OX1 2HU >> All welcome! Please Share! 🎉
The publication includes: new poems by @jcniala; unseen data and documentation; creative reflections on the project by @hannah_davey, @harunishere, @mary.jane.edwards, kaylenealder; photos by @edalziel; and illustrations by @moeritherium.
The original Waiting Project list project was an innovative work of art/activism which transformed data from a nationwide survey on the number of people on allotment waiting lists in the UK - over 170,000 - into a huge allotment-sized artwork made of seed paper. The artwork was first presented at the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities in London in 2023, as a collective demand for more allotments. Enacting en-masse a right enshrined in the 1908 Allotment Act: if 6 or more people from different council tax paying households demand an allotment the local government is duty bound to act.
The artwork then travelled to Liverpool where it was ‘dug-in’ to land owned by supermarket giant Tesco. An area the size of a standard ‘10 pole’ allotment plot was laid with the seed paper sewn with blocks of Clover, Fescue, Mustard, and Sunflower, to support phytoremediation of the land and act as green manure, before being covered in 4 tonnes of compost. The project received nationwide attention and was featured in national newspapers, on radio, TV, and online.
The publication explores the impact and legacy of the project from a multitude of creative perspectives offering readers a unique document of, and insight into, the project. The book was designed by Julia Utreras and includes a seed paper ‘belly-band’ cover wrap.
Edition of 350 // 102 pages // Litho printed on Munken paper at Hollywell Press, Oxford // Soft cover and section sewn binding // £10
Available to purchase online from @antennebooks 09.01.26. Further details: www.fig.studio

cada año lo mismo——every such time of the year I am fooled by the seedlings or their cycles, what other bodies tell us. I don’t have anything left, but everything that is left.
NO SPIRITUAL SURRENDER
FREE PALESTINE
our tools aint blunt, you are just holding the other end

cada año lo mismo——every such time of the year I am fooled by the seedlings or their cycles, what other bodies tell us. I don’t have anything left, but everything that is left.
NO SPIRITUAL SURRENDER
FREE PALESTINE
our tools aint blunt, you are just holding the other end

cada año lo mismo——every such time of the year I am fooled by the seedlings or their cycles, what other bodies tell us. I don’t have anything left, but everything that is left.
NO SPIRITUAL SURRENDER
FREE PALESTINE
our tools aint blunt, you are just holding the other end

cada año lo mismo——every such time of the year I am fooled by the seedlings or their cycles, what other bodies tell us. I don’t have anything left, but everything that is left.
NO SPIRITUAL SURRENDER
FREE PALESTINE
our tools aint blunt, you are just holding the other end

cada año lo mismo——every such time of the year I am fooled by the seedlings or their cycles, what other bodies tell us. I don’t have anything left, but everything that is left.
NO SPIRITUAL SURRENDER
FREE PALESTINE
our tools aint blunt, you are just holding the other end

cada año lo mismo——every such time of the year I am fooled by the seedlings or their cycles, what other bodies tell us. I don’t have anything left, but everything that is left.
NO SPIRITUAL SURRENDER
FREE PALESTINE
our tools aint blunt, you are just holding the other end
cada año lo mismo——every such time of the year I am fooled by the seedlings or their cycles, what other bodies tell us. I don’t have anything left, but everything that is left.
NO SPIRITUAL SURRENDER
FREE PALESTINE
our tools aint blunt, you are just holding the other end

cada año lo mismo——every such time of the year I am fooled by the seedlings or their cycles, what other bodies tell us. I don’t have anything left, but everything that is left.
NO SPIRITUAL SURRENDER
FREE PALESTINE
our tools aint blunt, you are just holding the other end

cada año lo mismo——every such time of the year I am fooled by the seedlings or their cycles, what other bodies tell us. I don’t have anything left, but everything that is left.
NO SPIRITUAL SURRENDER
FREE PALESTINE
our tools aint blunt, you are just holding the other end

yearly reprise, if not merely traces — & & & & & & a warm evening this thursday if anyone here still walks these corners in oxford, good people n company come by shatter the wall — but & & & & & & & & yet n mostly tag yourself I am goals

yearly reprise, if not merely traces — & & & & & & a warm evening this thursday if anyone here still walks these corners in oxford, good people n company come by shatter the wall — but & & & & & & & & yet n mostly tag yourself I am goals

yearly reprise, if not merely traces — & & & & & & a warm evening this thursday if anyone here still walks these corners in oxford, good people n company come by shatter the wall — but & & & & & & & & yet n mostly tag yourself I am goals

yearly reprise, if not merely traces — & & & & & & a warm evening this thursday if anyone here still walks these corners in oxford, good people n company come by shatter the wall — but & & & & & & & & yet n mostly tag yourself I am goals

yearly reprise, if not merely traces — & & & & & & a warm evening this thursday if anyone here still walks these corners in oxford, good people n company come by shatter the wall — but & & & & & & & & yet n mostly tag yourself I am goals

yearly reprise, if not merely traces — & & & & & & a warm evening this thursday if anyone here still walks these corners in oxford, good people n company come by shatter the wall — but & & & & & & & & yet n mostly tag yourself I am goals
The Instagram Story Viewer is an easy tool that lets you secretly watch and save Instagram stories, videos, photos, or IGTV. With this service, you can download content and enjoy it offline whenever you like. If you find something interesting on Instagram that you’d like to check out later or want to view stories while staying anonymous, our Viewer is perfect for you. Anonstories offers an excellent solution for keeping your identity hidden. Instagram first launched the Stories feature in August 2023, which was quickly adopted by other platforms due to its engaging, time-sensitive format. Stories let users share quick updates, whether photos, videos, or selfies, enhanced with text, emojis, or filters, and are visible for only 24 hours. This limited time frame creates high engagement compared to regular posts. In today’s world, Stories are one of the most popular ways to connect and communicate on social media. However, when you view a Story, the creator can see your name in their viewer list, which may be a privacy concern. What if you wish to browse Stories without being noticed? Here’s where Anonstories becomes useful. It allows you to watch public Instagram content without revealing your identity. Simply enter the username of the profile you’re curious about, and the tool will display their latest Stories. Features of Anonstories Viewer: - Anonymous Browsing: Watch Stories without showing up on the viewer list. - No Account Needed: View public content without signing up for an Instagram account. - Content Download: Save any Stories content directly to your device for offline use. - View Highlights: Access Instagram Highlights, even beyond the 24-hour window. - Repost Monitoring: Track the reposts or engagement levels on Stories for personal profiles. Limitations: - This tool works only with public accounts; private accounts remain inaccessible. Benefits: - Privacy-Friendly: Watch any Instagram content without being noticed. - Simple and Easy: No app installation or registration required. - Exclusive Tools: Download and manage content in ways Instagram doesn’t offer.
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