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Album artwork for 8-Ball Almanac by 8-Ball Community
Album artwork for 8-Ball Almanac by 8-Ball Community
Album artwork for 8-Ball Almanac by 8-Ball Community

This is a collectively told oral history of 8-Ball Community, a NYC-born organization of people who seek to nurture a community of art through the creation and maintenance of free and accessible platforms of expression. 8-Ball Almanac acts as both a retrospective of the decade since the community’s accidental conception in a Brooklyn pool hall in 2012 and a guidebook for those who wish to cultivate a community like this one.

8-Ball Almanac is split into two parts, with the first half consisting of majority of the text in the book, beginning with an introduction by 8-Ball’s founder and longest active member, Lele Saveri, and a conversation between him and his fellow founding members Josh and Giuseppe on how the collective began. This half contains histories of each space 8-Ball inhabited in its decade of moving around New York as well as descriptions of each 8-Ball “team”: the events team, the library team, the publishing team, the radio team, the TV team, and the team responsible for activism and community outreach. The second half is a visual journey acting as a visual counterpart to the first half through a selection of photos, scans, and documents collected over ten years.

In keeping with the community’s tenets of collectivism and non-hierarchy, the story told in 8-Ball Almanac is from the perspective of more than 100 people who have been involved over the past decade. Interviewed about their time with 8-Ball and edited by members of the community, their conversations are accompanied by hundreds of photos and scans of ephemera taken over 8-Ball’s history.

In the interviews, 8-Ball asks past members how things could have been better, what worked, what didn’t, why they left, what they remembered best, or why they’re still involved. The process of looking back is an attempt to trace the path which led the group to where it is now, so that those who wish to navigate the similarly murky waters of non-hierarchical organization might be able to see where the collective both stumbled and succeeded on its decade-long journey.

8-Ball Community

8-Ball Almanac

NERO Editions
Album artwork for 8-Ball Almanac by 8-Ball Community
Paperback +

$65.00

LIMITED! - Softcover with colored PVC dust jacket

Released 02/10/2023Catalog Number

8ballsoftcover

8-Ball Community

8-Ball Almanac

NERO Editions
Album artwork for 8-Ball Almanac by 8-Ball Community
Paperback +

$65.00

LIMITED! - Softcover with colored PVC dust jacket

Released 02/10/2023Catalog Number

8ballsoftcover

This is a collectively told oral history of 8-Ball Community, a NYC-born organization of people who seek to nurture a community of art through the creation and maintenance of free and accessible platforms of expression. 8-Ball Almanac acts as both a retrospective of the decade since the community’s accidental conception in a Brooklyn pool hall in 2012 and a guidebook for those who wish to cultivate a community like this one.

8-Ball Almanac is split into two parts, with the first half consisting of majority of the text in the book, beginning with an introduction by 8-Ball’s founder and longest active member, Lele Saveri, and a conversation between him and his fellow founding members Josh and Giuseppe on how the collective began. This half contains histories of each space 8-Ball inhabited in its decade of moving around New York as well as descriptions of each 8-Ball “team”: the events team, the library team, the publishing team, the radio team, the TV team, and the team responsible for activism and community outreach. The second half is a visual journey acting as a visual counterpart to the first half through a selection of photos, scans, and documents collected over ten years.

In keeping with the community’s tenets of collectivism and non-hierarchy, the story told in 8-Ball Almanac is from the perspective of more than 100 people who have been involved over the past decade. Interviewed about their time with 8-Ball and edited by members of the community, their conversations are accompanied by hundreds of photos and scans of ephemera taken over 8-Ball’s history.

In the interviews, 8-Ball asks past members how things could have been better, what worked, what didn’t, why they left, what they remembered best, or why they’re still involved. The process of looking back is an attempt to trace the path which led the group to where it is now, so that those who wish to navigate the similarly murky waters of non-hierarchical organization might be able to see where the collective both stumbled and succeeded on its decade-long journey.