logo
Miami Zine Fair celebrates the art of indie publishing

Miami Zine Fair celebrates the art of indie publishing

Miami Herald10-04-2025

Philip Lique, an artist and designer based in South Florida, remembers the first time he attended the Miami Zine Fair. Originally from Connecticut, he says the independent publishing convention was 'the first real community event that I got involved in' when he moved to Florida about a decade ago.
'Everyone is there really for the same reason, and it's because they like making zines, and they like alternative publications and alternative publishing and independent publishing and things of that nature,' he says. Lique has volunteered at previous editions of the fair, but at this year's edition on Saturday, April 19, he'll offer zines that include creative deconstructions of Marvel comics and graphic design. The ability to share his artistic expression and learn from others is what draws him back each time.
Zines – the term is derived from magazine and refers to independently or self-published print works – have always held importance for alternative and subcultural movements. Black artists self-published 'little magazines' during the Harlem Renaissance, and many other communities and political groups have used the form to share information, from science fiction fans to feminists, punks, and feminist punks.
'Just by being around and observing what other people are doing, you're learning about either the craft of making these books, or these magazines or zines, or whatever you want to classify them as,' says Lique 'I feel like I'm learning about what the temperature of culture is, among young people and among others, in a space where I'm learning it firsthand. I'm not observing it via social media. It's not being sold to me via an advertisement.'
The Miami Zine Fair is a platform for this unique type of media, where dozens of zine makers – artists and designers, nonprofits and other organizations – can bring their creative work to the public.
'The great thing about zines is it's totally open access. Anyone can make a zine,' says Amanda Keeley, founder of Exile Projects and the Miami Zine Fair. 'A lot of zines are kind of DIY, but then you also see zines that are absolutely gorgeously designed, and so it's like the full gamut.'
The fair started as an outgrowth of Exile Books, now Exile Projects, a pop-up artist bookstore Keeley started in 2014 that evolved into a publishing house in Little Haiti. 'It was called Exile because we constantly moved. We had no home, and then we would keep shifting locations.' They started the fair while in residence at the YoungArts Foundation in Edgewater in 2015, holding the event outdoors with around 60 vendors in 98-degree heat.
'We had lots of zine workshops happening in the gallery, and it was cool there. So everyone wanted to be in the workshops,' recalls Keeley.
Despite the heat, the event was successful, setting the groundwork for future fairs. The last edition in 2019 at the Little Haiti Cultural Center attracted 120 exhibitors and over 4,000 visitors, an expansion that felt slightly too rapid for Keeley. After taking a break due to the pandemic, Exile held a few smaller events, such as a 2022 fair focused on food and wellness at the Underline in Brickell.
But people kept asking when the main event would return, says Keeley, and so 2025's edition, which celebrates Exile's 10th anniversary, is the zine fair's big comeback.
Nearly 100 vendors will take over the Paradise Plaza Event Space in the Design District. Additionally, quite a few local organizations have been brought on to assist with organizing and staging events, including Sweat Records, the Miami Paper and Printing Museum, and Radiator Comics. Dale Zine, which hosts several smaller zine fairs every year, will host the afterparty.
The O, Miami Poetry Festival, which runs through April and has been collaborating with the Zine Fair since its foundation, is one of the more prominent partners. They will table at the fair and stage two special projects, a photobook workshop and a 'poetic domino game activation' in which the dominos use words and phrases instead of numbers.
One debut program comes from the group Black Miami-Dade, an organization dedicated to raising awareness of Miami's Black history. Founded by journalist Nadege Green, its zines dive into Miami's Black cultural heritage, and their table will feature a vinyl storytelling experience exploring musicians such as Cab Calloway and Josephine Baker. Keeley was already a fan of the project and reached out to invite them to show their work, only to find that they had already applied.
'They're making these really beautiful zines that document and archive Black history within Miami,' Keeley says. 'I'm really excited to check (them) out.'
Keeley hopes the fair will serve as a means for people to connect with each other and learn more about the culture of independent publishing.
'A really cool thing that's a tradition in the zine fair, is a lot of times they trade (their zines). So it's not just buying a zine, it's also trading, and it's connecting.'
If you go:
WHAT: Miami Zine Fair
WHERE: Paradise Plaza event space, Miami Design District, 151 NE 41st St., Miami
WHEN: Noon to 5 p.m., Saturday, April 19
COST: Free, but RSVP requested.
INFORMATION: miamizinefair.com
ArtburstMiami.com is a nonprofit media source for the arts featuring fresh and original stories by writers dedicated to theater, dance, visual arts, film, music and more. Don't miss a story at www.artburstmiami.com.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tom Hiddleston Thought the LOKI Series Finale Was His Final Appearance in the MCU, Until AVENGERS
Tom Hiddleston Thought the LOKI Series Finale Was His Final Appearance in the MCU, Until AVENGERS

Geek Tyrant

time3 hours ago

  • Geek Tyrant

Tom Hiddleston Thought the LOKI Series Finale Was His Final Appearance in the MCU, Until AVENGERS

Tom Hiddleston has been playing Loki in the MCU for 14 years, and after the second season of his self-titled series neatly wrapped at the end of 2023, the actor thought maybe the time had come to say goodbye to the character. Over a year went by, in which he made the film The Life of Chuck (in theatres now), but it turned out that Hiddleston was the Michael Corleone of the Marvel Universe - "Just when I thought I was out, they pull me back in." Marvel made their cast announcement for Avengers: Doomsday back at the end of March, and Hiddleston was among the first batch to make the cut. He talked about the confirmation in a recent conversation on the Happy Sad Confused podcast, where he exclaimed, 'It's actually such a relief to be able to say, 'Yes, I'm in the film.'' He revealed that he wasn't aware of plans for Loki to return at the time of the series finale, stating, 'I didn't know that. So I was sincere in my conviction that I thought it was the end. I wasn't lying to you, I promise. No, I didn't know then. I didn't know what the plan was.' Although Hiddleston couldn't divulge how Loki reenters the Marvel Cinematic Universe after his sacrifice in the Loki finale, the actor answered affirmatively when asked if he's happy with his role in Doomsday . In Loki , He Who Remains warned that destroying the Temporal Loom would mean causing a 'brutal war where nothing survives,' including the Sacred Timeline, setting up a multiversal conflict in Avengers: Doomsday and Avengers: Secret Wars . 'I do know some things. I know some things,' he teased. 'It's an extraordinary privilege to still be on the team, and that there's more stories to tell. I feel like the character has grown as I've grown, and it's genuinely an honor to still be in the squad.' Hiddleston joins returning co-stars Iron Man actor Robert Downey Jr. returning to the MCU, this time in the role of the villain Doctor Doom, Chris Hemsworth as Thor, Anthony Mackie as Sam Wilson/Captain America, and Paul Rudd as Scott Lang/Ant-Man, as well as Letitia Wright (Shuri/Black Panther), Simu Liu (Shang-Chi), Danny Ramirez (Joaquin Torres/the Falcon), Tenoch Huerta Mejía (Namor the Sub-Mariner), Winston Duke (M'Baku), Mabel Cadena (Namora), Alex Livinalli (Attuma), and Channing Tatum (Remy LaBeau/Gambit). They are joined by Thunderbolts* stars Florence Pugh (Yelena Belova/Black Widow), Sebastian Stan (Bucky Barnes/Winter Soldier), David Harbour (Alexei Shostakov/Red Guardian), Hannah John-Kamen (Ava Starr/Ghost), Wyatt Russell (John Walker/U.S. Agent), and Lewis Pullman (Bob Reynolds/Sentry). The Fantastic Four: First Steps ' Pedro Pascal (Reed Richards/Mister Fantastic), Vanessa Kirby (Sue Storm/Invisible Woman), Joseph Quinn (Johnny Storm/Human Torch), Ebon Moss-Bachrach (Ben Grimm/the Thing) are confirmed to return, as are former X-Men franchise stars Patrick Stewart (Professor X), Ian McKellen (Magneto), James Marsden (Cyclops), Rebecca Romijn (Mystique), Alan Cumming (Nightcrawler) and Kelsey Grammer (Beast). Avengers: Doomsday is scheduled to release in theaters on December 18, 2026, followed by Avengers: Secret Wars on December 17, 2027.

Disney Defends THUNDERBOLTS* Spoiler Reveal of THE NEW AVENGERS; Says Fans Actually Liked It — GeekTyrant
Disney Defends THUNDERBOLTS* Spoiler Reveal of THE NEW AVENGERS; Says Fans Actually Liked It — GeekTyrant

Geek Tyrant

time5 hours ago

  • Geek Tyrant

Disney Defends THUNDERBOLTS* Spoiler Reveal of THE NEW AVENGERS; Says Fans Actually Liked It — GeekTyrant

Marvel fans who hit theaters opening weekend for Thunderbolts* got the full payoff after months of speculation on what that sneaky little asterisk meant. It turns out, the team introduced in the movie is officially The New Avengers in the MCU, a reveal held back until the film's final scenes… only for Marvel to drop the twist in its marketing just a couple days later. As you know, that didn't sit well with a lot of fans. I saw so many complints about that. But, Disney believes that they made the right marketing move, and that fans actually liked it. Speaking with Empire, Ryan Stankevich, Disney's SVP of Marketing, addressed the controversy over the spoiler-heavy promotional materials that rolled out post-release: 'Discourse is a great part of the Marvel fan experience. For as many people who complained, we saw a large percentage say they thought it was really clever. Some people also complained we didn't do *The New Avengers with a 'z'! But we welcome healthy debate.' Yeah, I'd say the fans that already saw the movie where the ones that thought the marketing was clever because it didn't hurt their movie-going experience. The studio rebranded the movie as *The New Avengers on posters and promo assets shortly after Thunderbolts opened, a move that many saw as premature, especially considering Marvel's usual spoiler-free grace period on social channels. Fans who missed opening weekend understandably felt blindsided. In the film, the twist unfolds near the end after the Sentry situation spirals out of control, Valentina Allegra de Fontaine publicly spins her ragtag group of heroes, Yelena, Red Guardian, U.S. Agent, Bucky, Ghost, and Bob, into heroes by branding them the 'New Avengers.' It's a big PR move for her. The post-credits scene then reveals Sam Wilson is putting together his own real Avengers team… and he's not thrilled. A lot of Marvel fans hoping for a surprise in the theater got a Marvel-branded reminder… nothing's sacred when the marketing machine kicks in.

THE FANTASTIC FOUR: FIRST STEPS Breaks 2025 Ticket Sales Record - Fans Are Ready for Marvel's First Family — GeekTyrant
THE FANTASTIC FOUR: FIRST STEPS Breaks 2025 Ticket Sales Record - Fans Are Ready for Marvel's First Family — GeekTyrant

Geek Tyrant

time6 hours ago

  • Geek Tyrant

THE FANTASTIC FOUR: FIRST STEPS Breaks 2025 Ticket Sales Record - Fans Are Ready for Marvel's First Family — GeekTyrant

Marvel's The Fantastic Four: First Steps hasn't even hit theaters yet, but it's already flexing its cosmic muscles. According to Fandango, the film has officially become the top first-day ticket pre-seller of 2025 beating out every other release this year in just 24 hours. This comes as no surprise if you've been following the movie, which introduces Marvel's First Family to the MCU with a fresh 1960s-inspired, retro-futuristic twist and a high-stakes showdown against Galactus and the Silver Surfer. Pedro Pascal leads as Reed Richards/Mister Fantastic, alongside Vanessa Kirby (Sue Storm), Joseph Quinn (Johnny Storm), and Ebon Moss-Bachrach (Ben Grimm). Fandango executive Jerramy Hainline said in a statement: ' The Fantastic Four: First Steps marks an exciting new chapter for one of Marvel's most iconic teams. Early ticket sales show fans are eager to see these characters reimagined for a new generation.' Fandango also noted the movie was voted the #2 most anticipated film of the summer in their 2025 Moviegoing Trends & Insight Study, which surveyed over 5,000 fans. 'Set against the vibrant backdrop of a 1960s-inspired, retro-futuristic world, Marvel Studios' The Fantastic Four: First Steps introduces Marvel's First Family — Reed Richards/Mister Fantastic, Sue Storm/Invisible Woman, Johnny Storm/Human Torch and Ben Grimm/The Thing as they face their most daunting challenge yet. 'Forced to balance their roles as heroes with the strength of their family bond, they must defend Earth from a ravenous space god called Galactus (Ralph Ineson) and his enigmatic Herald, Silver Surfer. And if Galactus' plan to devour the entire planet and everyone on it weren't bad enough, it suddenly gets very personal.' Directed by WandaVision 's Matt Shakman, the movie also features Julia Garner as a 'Shalla-Bal version' of the Silver Surfer, Ralph Ineson as Galactus, and mystery roles for John Malkovich, Paul Walter Hauser, and Natasha Lyonne. With its bold visual style, stacked cast, and the promise of a proper introduction to the Fantastic Four in the MCU, The Fantastic Four: First Steps might be Marvel's next big leap.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store