Recap: it's a new initiative, it's print only and it seeks the curious minds:
'A quarterly magazine that features essays, artist projects, photography, and interviews from contributors from all over the world. We think of bathing as a practice of letting go. We will explore many practices, but there’s no denying: we’re bathing obsessed'.
'The Magazine of letting go'
It's a hefty magazine (heavy quality paper 100+ pages) and outside the US not available everywhere. Thankfully, a book store in my crazy capital was also in the mail order business and forwarded my order in.
First impressions were that it's certainly neat; very high quality all round. Flicking through though it brought me back to the pre-internet days when a magazine was king. Maybe in the US it's still such, but over here internet is so ubiquitos, magazines are going out of business.
Contentwise there are articles on Victorian Turkish baths in the UK, Mongolian sky burials (stretching the definition of bathing a bit), there are a couple of takes from the onsen photo reportage by Mark Edward Harris (below; The way of the Japanese bathing) and and there's a long article on the Saunatarian (SWEATERS OF THE WORLD, UNITE!). Other theme's dropped: US banya, Korean bath experience, Totto-na-tta (Japanese tuning), rewilding, James Mortimer, Palau Swimming Association, David Mason poetry and Urban bathing.
But what did I think, other than the presentation?
'... not to convince everybody to travel my way, or that every Saunatarian needs such zeal. Instead the point of my telling is to inspire others to their own kinds of creative travel, and to record for history what happened when one man said that he was going to sauna every place he visited'.
'The only downside to this whole situation was my deep and abiding unease about the opulence of these facilities,...which are completely inaccessible to the majority of the population in financial terms. This observation extends, by and large, to the entire global wellness sector, which preaches a message of well-being but is generally priced at the luxury end of the market. Put another way, wellness is like money: it doesn't trickle down. The dissonance here -between the message of the wellness sector and the practical realities of access- is deafening, and in need of significant critical theorization in coming years. The aim of such theorization would be to expand access to facilities of regeneration in all areas of human habitation'.