June 14 2026 Physical Issue
Visitior Issue
*This page will constantly be updated, please check again in the second week of July.
Editor’s Message(Clip)
“First of all, none of this would exist without the artists who trusted us with their stories, and the readers, you, who showed up. We want to take a moment to honor Davis, California — where most of us went to college, where we met each other, and where DART was born. We also worked with an extraordinary UCD Design Alum, Sky, to create the graphic visuals in this issue.
DART Magazine is a collective effort of independent collaborators, editors and designers. Most of us are international students who visited here, uncertain of where we will drift to, yet still had the courage to pour our talents, effort, care and love on this project that offered no guarantees. DART Magazine has been running online for more than two years, as we are going to graduate or already graduated, it felt right to make a print issue to honor this milestone, this is for Pan, Yuchen, Livia, Rachel, Kayla, Sally, Oliver, Larissa, and Meredith. This issue is a reflection of our journey as visitors to this land, and in reading it, you become one too.
The visitor, as an identity, as a state of being, feels more urgent than ever. In a world that is rapidly deciding, criticizing who belongs where, and what it means to arrive somewhere new, we hope this issue offers a quieter kind of answer, not a stance, but a story.
In that spirit, we offer you a timely reminder that every place worth loving was first seen through the eyes of a visitor.”
Product Detail
Size 8.5 × 11 Inches
Page 338
Bound Perfect Bound
Contents
Side B
Blue Shackles by Various Artists
Little Choir in the Wild by LFZ Studio
Future Artifacts by Kristiana Chan
I Want to Hold You Longer by Sarah Sense*
Dark Extinction by Xiao TianYi
Maquette & Oak Hide by Joel Murnan
Wild Animal by Tianyun Lyu
TALL WALL by Bea Qian
Rules of Play by Merlin Flügel
Tunnel Wandering by Zehao Li
Chasing the Moon & Seven-Treasure Moon by Yu Zefeng Der Wunsch by Anna Rubin
HOLED WIND by WILLOW
Animal Factory by Luca Boscardin
Samaritan & To be Departed by Robert Ortbal*
Side A
Blue Hour by Elaine Nguyen
Outlying Island & The Little by Shiyu Chen
Hotaru by Yū Nakaito
River of Destiny by Wang Xuehan
The Urban Palimpsest by Danbi Kim
My Haphazard Life by Ji Young Lee
Bound by Hong Chun Zhang
Clay Hitting Self & Flower Vessels by Tianzong Jiang Ashraf by Martha Ashraf
My Culture by Jiajun Wu
DIE IN THE SEA by BAKUI
Golden Cow Mountain by FENG Yifu
A Journey to Celebrate and Seek by Yuanjie Chen
Artemis: Vision of the Universe by Seongmin Yoo*
The Day the Ears Came Out by Jaebin Lee
Truth by Songlin Lee
*Cover Artists
Cover Stories(Clip)
Ortbal Cover
Ortbal’s Eccentric Behaviors
Artits: Robert Ortbal
Edgar Zhang Wrote:
This is what all of Ortbal’s visitors do. The Samaritans in their traveling cases make the ordinary objects around them, a smooth flat stone, a scrap of fabric, a tiny figure in a suit, look like artifacts from a world worth examining. The bunny heads at the Crocker did not transport the parents who wore them to somewhere else; they transformed the museum they were already standing in, made it a place where the usual rules had been suspended, where a sixty-year-old stranger could become the most interesting person in the room. The astroturf suit on a bicycle in Davis was not about departure, it was an elegy for someone who had traveled those same streets and was gone, it’s a way of returning to familiar ground and finding it charged with loss and memories.
And in each case, the visitor does something else: it makes the people watching visible to each other. The parent who puts on the mask and finds their child suddenly, unexpectedly laughing at them. The strangers who bonded years later over a shared memory of bunny heads, having never recognized one another inside them. The shopper in Emeryville who stopped mid-stride, bewildered, and reached for their phone — not to document the figure, but because something in them needed to tell someone else: you have to see this. The visitor is a mirror as much as they are a traveler. It passes through and, in passing, shows people where they are and who is next to them.
Cover Photographer:
Edgar Zhang
Artist Costume:
Robert Ortbal
Yoo Cover
Yoo builds vessels to tell stories of our present and hopeful premonitions of our future
Artits: Seongmin Yoo
Savannah Anno Wrote:
Across Yoo’s body of work, each alien is unique: some appear to be melting, others appear on the canvas like colorful, sewn together puff balls. Adorned with tentacles, webbed feet, missing teeth, and cyclops-like eyes, the magic of Yoo’s work lies in building a sense of aliveness where there should not be. While it may seem likely for viewers to sit with these works in the same playful way they’re presented, the stillness of the landscapes surrounding them and the expressive life found in their gestures spurs a unique sense of empathy and affection for these aliens. In her visions, Yoo poses an important question:
If we are able to celebrate the uniqueness of these small beings, to marvel at their bodies and lives and languages which are wholly different from our own, why can we not apply this openness to other people?