GRIN Journal / May 2026
Signals from the Public Realm
This month’s GRIN Journal gathers signals from art, sport, AI, cinema, heritage and climate futures — tracing how culture is being rebuilt in public, across bodies, cities, archives and systems.
01 / Public Realm as Museum
The car park that changed British art
Bold Tendencies turns the city itself into cultural infrastructure — a rooftop, a staircase, a car park, a civic stage.
Inside Museo Jumex’s soccer-inspired art shows
Football becomes exhibition language: a shared emotion, a public ritual, and a bridge between art, design and the street.
02 / Bodies, Archives & Repair
Arts and cultural engagement linked to slower biological ageing
Culture is not decoration. It is health, memory, rhythm and repair.
Malian filmmaker captures disappearing Tuareg culture
Film becomes an archive for a way of life under pressure.
Rwandan filmmakers reclaim genocide narratives
Ownership of memory shifts from outside interpretation to lived proximity.
40 hidden gems of LGBTQIA+ cinema
A reminder that cinema history is full of hidden constellations waiting to be re-seen.
03 / Symbolic Remixing
How the adidas Trionda became a canvas for cultural creativity
The football becomes a cultural object: community, identity and movement held in one form.
Reclaiming maypole dancing with dancehall and drum’n’bass
Linett Kamala remixes folk ritual through bass culture, LED light and Caribbean memory.
04 / Technology, Energy & Human Futures
Human-centered AI is becoming a leadership imperative
The signal here is clear: useful technology must remain accountable to human imagination, trust and care.
The hydrogen car chasing a zero-emissions speed record
Energy transition meets spectacle: speed, engineering and climate futures on the salt flats.
100% renewable energy by 2050?
A systems-level question: what would it take to redesign the global energy map?
05 / Global South, Global Signal
The Global South takes center stage in the art world
The art world’s centre of gravity is shifting. The Global South is not a theme — it is a method, a pressure point, and a future-facing cultural axis.
