Loslyf Magazine Now

It isn't about living "loslyf" as a permanent state. It is about giving yourself permission to exist in the raw, unfinished, and real version of your life, right now.

Loslyf's influence extended beyond its own pages. The magazine provided a platform for artists like Anton Kannemeyer, who created sexually explicit drawings for the publication before starting his own groundbreaking work. It also contributed to the visual economy of post-apartheid South Africa, offering a glimpse into the desires, tensions, and tastes of an imagined community still shaped by a past ruled by censorship. loslyf magazine

The trajectory of the publication can be split into distinct phases, evolving from a high-minded political statement into a standardized commercial product: 1. The Ryk Hattingh Era (1995–1996) It isn't about living "loslyf" as a permanent state

The magazine remains a significant subject of academic study, representing a pivotal moment where Afrikaner identity, masculinity, and sexuality were interrogated in a newly democratic South Africa. The magazine provided a platform for artists like