Guts Magazine

Guts Magazine An award-winning magazine of confessional writing and illustration based in Dublin. Available online All our issues are available online, go to our website.

An award-winning print magazine of confessional writing and illustration.
8 issues, over 65 contributors, and over two and a half years of festivals, readings, and parties. Now a podcast about art and anger called Twelve Angry Minutes too.

New Twelve Angry Minutes episode is here! On the podcast this week MASER ART talks to Roisin Agnew about the early days ...
21/08/2017

New Twelve Angry Minutes episode is here!
On the podcast this week MASER ART talks to Roisin Agnew about the early days of Dublin graffiti, finding politics, and the importance of travel. For his 12 minutes he takes on Dublin's dehumanising of its homeless people and opens up about his own struggles with mental health. He's a dote.
SUBSCRIBE ON ITUNES, REVIEW US, RECOMMEND US TO A FRIEND WHO MIGHT BE INTO ASMR
http://www.thisisguts.com/twelve-angry-minutes-episode-3-maser/

21/08/2017

Roisin is joined by one of Ireland's foremost street artists, Maser. He discusses the dehumanising of the homeless and his struggles with mental health.

The 2nd episode of Twelve Angry Minutes is go!Una Mullally is in talking to Roisin about lucky breaks, learning to not c...
20/07/2017

The 2nd episode of Twelve Angry Minutes is go!

Una Mullally is in talking to Roisin about lucky breaks, learning to not care, and for her 12 minutes she tackles the problem of vanishing q***r spaces. Listen in and review us on iTunes as it's the done thing apparently. No seriously. If you haven't heard our interview with artist Jesse Jones you can listen back now

http://www.thisisguts.com/twelve-angry-minutes-episode-2-una-mullally/

"I could not be a new me if I’d come here with someone else, I could not reconfigure and figure things out if this were ...
17/07/2017

"I could not be a new me if I’d come here with someone else, I could not reconfigure and figure things out if this were a city I was familiar with."
We were happy to collaborate with Junior Press on a piece on aloneness and cities by Roisin Agnew in response to photos by Ellius Grace. Pick up a copy of their second issue out now!

Making It New: Aloneness And The City A collaboration between Guts Magazine & Junior Press

Our editor Roisin Agnew was on the The Ryan Tubridy Show this morning talking about burnout syndrome but managed to sque...
28/06/2017

Our editor Roisin Agnew was on the The Ryan Tubridy Show this morning talking about burnout syndrome but managed to squeeze in a mention of our podcast Twelve Angry Minutes yeehaw!!! Here's the piece about burnout. New episode lands tomorrow!

Productivity has become a cultural obsession, and it’s making us sick. Portugal has saved me

Thank you to The Irish Times for mentioning Twelve Angry Minutes as a What's Hot this week 🔥🔥🔥🔥We're back with the secon...
18/06/2017

Thank you to The Irish Times for mentioning Twelve Angry Minutes as a What's Hot this week 🔥🔥🔥🔥We're back with the second episode this week, with Una Mullally talking about vanishing q***r spaces 💪🏼

The first episode of Twelve Angry Minutes is here!Artist Jesse Jones is on the show talking about her Venice Biennale pi...
09/06/2017

The first episode of Twelve Angry Minutes is here!
Artist Jesse Jones is on the show talking about her Venice Biennale piece Tremble Tremble, the politics in her art, and as a modern day witch trial! She was woke before the word existed, an amazing woman.
Out every couple of weeks. Subscribe to us on iTunes it really helps us! Ty x

A new podcast about anger as a source of creative inspiration from Guts Magazine and HeadStuff

08/06/2017

We made a podcast!!!!!!!
We're super excited to be announcing Twelve Angry Minutes, our podcast in collaboration with HeadStuff that launches tomorrow at 9am!
We're taking a look at anger as a source of creative inspiration through personal interviews and 12 minute rants from guests including Tara Flynn, Anna Cosgrave, Una Mullally, Seamas O'Reilly, Mark O'Connell, Maser, Hugh Cooney, Wasted Rita, Paddy Agnew, and many more. First up is Jesse Jones, the artist representing Ireland at the Venice Biennale!
Big ups to Aran Quinn for our beautiful artwork and to KOJAQUE for our music. Big love to Alan Bennett and Brian for their patience.
PLEASE SHARE AND LISTEN IN TOMORROW! It comes out every two weeks. And here are my dulcet tones for our trailer *vom

RG our editor  today in The Journal:"Happy to have a piece in The Journal today about something that’s close to my heart...
17/05/2017

RG our editor today in The Journal:
"Happy to have a piece in The Journal today about something that’s close to my heart. I love Dublin and I’ve spent much of my time over the past ten years participating in its cultural life. But as “the recovery” has gotten underway I’ve been increasingly upset at how no safeguards have been put in place to preserve and protect Dublin’s artistic community while we enter nightmarish scenarios reminiscent of boom times.
It’s become an entirely unaffordable place for me and my friends and at the same time the things we love the most seem to keep vanishing - our clubs, our art spaces, our free spaces, our houses. We’re over-policed and under-protected. It is not a civic-minded society that allows the value we place on art and culture to be predicated by market forces, as we know already that just means we’ll be squeezed out.
I’m tired of seeing the people who contribute most to making Dublin great also be its most vulnerable citizens. It's not all bad I know, but it's worth demanding more. Going to ignore the Comments section and stay in exile for now. Thank you for the interview ✊🏼✊🏼✊🏼✊🏼" link in bio

05/04/2017

“With protest and design, rhetoric or linguistics around movements can be alienating so you need to make it accessible.” The role of design and creativity in the Repeal movement.

"Twenty-eight years ago, in 1989 I was taken to court by a group called SPUC (Society for the Protection of the Unborn C...
27/03/2017

"Twenty-eight years ago, in 1989 I was taken to court by a group called SPUC (Society for the Protection of the Unborn Child). I was President of Trinity College Dublin Students’ Union, and SPUC had threatened me and the other three Trinity officers with prison because we were fulfilling union policy by providing information on abortion to women with crisis pregnancies." Read Senator Ivana Bacik's piece about fighting for for almost 30 years! Issue on sale online now! Artwork by Fuchsia MacAree

IVANA BACIK IF YOU BILL(D) IT, THEY WILL REPEAL

Address

Dublin

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Guts Magazine posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Guts Magazine:

Share