Big Changes: A Letter from the Editors
Over the last six years, I have learned to love your arts community through deep and
incredibly meaningful conversations. You all give more than you take, and truly my life has
been shaped by my experiences with you. During these years, I have actively worked to
document these beautiful conversations and the work made around them by founding and
running Informality. This January, I have made the decision to formally step down as Senior
Editor and take a more informal and less hands-on role as an Editor at Large. I will still
remain working with The H&R Block Artspace on PDF Club and be an editorial lead on a
couple of upcoming projects through which Informality is the main collaborator.
My team is amazing. Our new Editor in Chief, Julia Monté, is full of exuberant enthusiasm
through which I know she will be an incredible advocate for artists in the community and the
writers who cover them. Blair Schulman, my trusted writing art mentor and fellow Guerrilla
Docent will be taking the role of Managing Editor, overseeing the editorial content and
process, alongside the publication schedule. If you’ve got a pitch, he is your guy. Rounding
out the team I have Senior Editor Patricia Graham, handling our bad habits of passive voice
and turning draft dreams into published realities.
Informality began as, and always will remain a service to the artists. That is what sets us
apart truly, as our goal has always been foster growth and document the city’s art history.
Through informally and informatively engaging with artists I know it will continue to do good.
This little blog I started as an offshoot of an undergraduate internship, turned into a
publication I could have never imagined. I am so thankful to the people in the community
who have supported it from the beginning. It will remain a service to people who want to
read about art on a deep and engaging level. For those who want to dive deep into the
cultural critiques and avoid the International Art English. A place to read about radically
vulnerable artists being transparent and talking about theories and their practice. This is
exactly what it has become and I’m so thankful. It has been an incredible artist-run virtual
space for learning, growth, and love.
This blog and its approach were always to remain accessible. My goal in its creation was to
make an art blog for my grandma a painter, a community organizer, an advocate, and one of
my biggest heroes.
My hope as I step down from this role is that you will continue to support these amazing
people that volunteer their time and effort to make this artist-run arts blog happen.
With Love,
Melaney Ann Mitchell
Hello Kansas City!
My name is Julia Monté and I am thrilled to become Informality’s Editor-in-Chief this year.
As I take over this space, I want to grow the publication’s writer pool to be more of a
community. Informality’s distinguishable trait to cover art and culture in the midwest has
made the publication unique, in addition to its goal to be informal and informative. I am
thinking about how to best serve the artists in Kansas City, and in that, I am planning some
meaningful changes. We are going to accept submissions for more diverse content and new
types of writers looking at criticism in a broader sense. Our scope will shift at times to a more
national conversation, thinking about how an informal and informative conversation about
contemporary art can change and shift within and outside of KC. Our style guide will develop
to include more fiction, creative writing, and experimental forms, still focusing on how to have
reciprocity and care in forms of review and interpretation of contemporary art. We are going
to focus on programming that will create the foundation for the voice of the publication and its
future. Our new public program P E R E N N I A L starts January 30th. These bi-weekly,
drop-in, informal writing workshops aim to bring together writers in the community and bring
their current projects to the forefront. We want to offer accountability partners and editorial
support, to foster the growth of one another’s publishing goals and deadlines. There will be
more opportunities for more diverse categories of writing, expanding beyond the midwest
with occasional national stories, artists’ essays about their own practices, and creative
writing. The focus on Informality will still aim to be informal and informative, with an emphasis
on Kansas City artists and writers, and now offering national features that will help grow our
contribution to the national conversation.
I am looking forward to lots of writing, sharing, and growing this year! I am so thankful for
Melaney and her vision behind Informality, the Informality team, past and present, for all the
time they dedicate to writing and editing, and all the writers who have contributed to
Informality. Thank you for entrusting me with this project, and I hope you join the
conversation, wherever you are!
With love,
Julia Monté