COPIED
8 mins

your trash my treasure

SMUT Press is a London-based, Irish-run, queer publishing project and party platform. In coincidence with the release of their latest publication, Cruising Archaeology II: Eurotrash, Alice Linehan sat down with founders Jack Scollard and Jordan Hearns to learn more about their work.

Jordan is from Portlaoise. He grew up with a keen interest in music, which evolved into a love for clubbing and photography. He studied the latter in Dublin, and after graduating, decided to move to London in 2022. Jack moved around the same time, after they finished their degree in printmaking at the National College of Art and Design (NCAD).

“Everyone just started emigrating at the exact same time, because a lot of the spaces were closing. I think after Covid, everyone was just fed up and kind of wanted a change,” Jordan said.

Although Jack admitted to now being more of a “retired party girl”, the pair met through nightlife, which is embedded in much of the work they do. It’s no surprise, then, that it was somewhat of a catalyst for starting SMUT.

“During the first summer of Covid, Jordan and I pulled together our archive of nightlife images that we had taken over the previous two or three years, and we made a very small staple-bound zine,” Jack explained. “We did a really small edition, sold it online, and it was meant to be an homage, a celebration of nightlife, which obviously wasn’t happening during Covid at that time. And the zine did quite well; it sold out very quickly.”

Due to its success, they made a follow-up edition, which was expanded and had a slightly bigger print run. They also got it in with a few stockists.

“I think that was the first idea around doing something in DIY publishing. But at that stage, it was not under SMUT; it was just its own individual project,” Jack continued.

It wouldn’t become SMUT until February 2022. Jordan had been in Paris the November before, during Paris Photo – the world’s largest fair for photography and image-based art.

“I went to this exhibition that was on that weekend, but not part of the official fair,” Jordan began. “There was one room of students and very small publishers, and there was another room of more established publishers. When I saw all the students’ work – they’re making work for them and their friends and publishing their own work themselves, kind of similar to what we had done together – I really liked the attitude and the energy of a lot of the work,” he remembered.

“I really liked what they were about and how they were expressing themselves in that way, and I was kind of like, ‘Oh, well, we don’t really have anything like this in Ireland. We have friends that make zines and that kind of thing, but no one is running their own collective’, and a lot of those students were. So I texted Jack at the time, like, ‘We should do something like this together’, and then Jack came up with the name ‘SMUT’. We launched two months later… We launched it on Thursday, February 22, and I moved to London on the 24th. So we did the launch, and the next day I sold my car, and then the next day I flew here.”

Since then, SMUT has enjoyed huge success. They have released 10 print publications, and in 2024, the project expanded beyond the primary domain of publishing to include events. They have regularly attended and exhibited at fairs like Athens Art Book Fair, SPRINT Milano, Dublin Art Book Fair, Paris Ass Book Fair, Bristol’s Books on Photography and Manchester’s Bound Art Book Fair, amongst others. Their work has been profiled by i-D, DJ Mag, The Face, Polyesterzine, BUTT, HERO and The Irish Times, and in December 2025, the project was included on the Dazed 100 list of global cultural changemakers.

Speaking about their ethos, Jack said, “The remit of the press is explicitly that we platform queer artists, and we’re assisting them in the production of printed matter… It’s kind of a play on the name, because obviously ‘smut’ has this relation to things that are obscene, but I think we want to try and maybe consider those ideas around what has value, what is acceptable. We’re interested, I think, primarily in work that maybe would struggle in a more mainstream capacity to get the exposure and visibility.”

In terms of whom they collaborate with, it is often their friends, or people who have become friends through their work. “It’s the same for the parties as well,” Jordan added. “A lot of the DJs that we have at the parties and the artists we commission to do installations are also friends.”

The press released its latest publication at the end of May, called Cruising Archaeology II: Eurotrash. It is the highly anticipated follow-up to their original Cruising Archaeology from 2024, which quickly became a cult favourite.

This particular project was initially born as an Instagram account of the same name, where scans of discarded material from over half a dozen cruising locations around London were documented as cultural artefacts. The unique relics have been used to uncover and investigate the types of sex and pleasure that happen in these areas, while also spotlighting the often invisible sexual practice.

“The project started because I was visiting this area that’s not that far from where I live – I was actually there earlier this afternoon – and it’s a real cruising area, but it’s also a very social, hangout area,” Jack explained. They added that this spot is different from what people might traditionally imagine when they think of cruising, which can be “quick, transactional, always fleeting… People really like hanging out there, and it’s a really nice area,” they elaborated.

“I was just spending a lot of time there, and I began to pick up the condom wrappers, or the things I found, because some of them were really interesting. I started scanning them on a flatbed scanner, and I was just building this archive on my laptop. Then I literally had this brainwave out of nowhere that the project would be called Cruising Archaeology; it just came to me, and I made an Instagram account. I kept it anonymous and started uploading the scans with the name of what it was, the description and where I found it.”

As Jack continued this work, they decided to expand it to cover more cruising locations around London. When SMUT was invited to attend the Paris Ass Book Fair in June 2024, they decided to make a publication specifically for it, and that’s when the print edition of Cruising Archaeology came to be.

Now, two years later, they have released the follow-up. The new book builds on the original’s success by expanding the breadth of archaeological sites to various locations around Europe, including Berlin, Athens, Dublin, Barcelona and Paris. The cruising locations span woodland areas, public toilets, palatial gardens, sex clubs and beaches, speaking to the inventive ways people seek pleasure within the folds of city infrastructure and natural landscape.

Like its predecessor, vivid scans exist alongside writing that contextualises, complicates and historicises cruising’s material traces. This edition features interviews with Marc Svensson of You Are Loved, a London-based harm reduction initiative, and Mati Klitgård of Gay Consent.Lab in Berlin. Both offer urgent perspectives on chemsex, intimacy, and consent in contemporary queer life. Other contributors include Stav B, who addresses the persistent erasure of lesbian cruising spaces; Jordan Tannahill, who recounts a wild night in Hampstead Heath; Prem Sahib, whose insert responds to the complicated relationship between the digital and the physical; and João Florêncio, who wrote the opening piece for the publication, interlacing queerness with empire, hauntology and decay.

“The danger a lot of the time with books around cruising is that they can often replicate certain narratives, and only certain voices get heard around this topic. It is very dominated by cis white gay men,” Jack replied when asked about the importance of including diverse perspectives in the publication. They pointed out that things like gender are not often interrogated in these spaces, and it was important for them to bring new angles to the conversation.

The book has launched at a number of events across several European cities, including at The Boilerhouse in Dublin, before an afterparty in Yamamori Tengu. By hosting some of these events in sex clubs and saunas, the pair hope to “reframe these spaces as sites of cultural relevance, and as sites of knowledge production, as well as community spaces. They are often overlooked, denigrated or seen as spaces of low value for culture, but they’re actually incredibly valuable community spaces,” Jack said.

“There aren’t many spaces that are like that… In terms of, for example, intergenerational interactions and also coming into contact with people that you might not anticipate. And I think that’s one of the biggest aspects that digital cruising through apps is not able to replicate.” People approach apps with ideas of what they think they desire, and who they are and who they are looking for, but cruising in physical spaces disrupts that, “because you end up figuring out that maybe you like something that you didn’t know that you were going to like, and in that way, maybe it reveals something about yourself,” Jack said, adding, “A lot of people really depend on these spaces.”

As well as the book release and launch events, there is also an accompanying exhibition at Studio Voltaire in London until July 5, marking the first time Cruising Archaeology has been presented in a gallery setting. It is clearly an exciting time for the press, which continues to go from strength to strength as it carves its own path through the world of independent publishing and event organising. As collaborators, Jordan and Jack’s story serves as an example of what’s possible when you allow friendships and creative passions to intertwine to build something fruitful for communities that are often hungry for more.

To find out more about SMUT Press and Cruising Archaeology II: Eurotrash, visit smutpress.online.

This article appears in 393

Go to Page View
This article appears in...
393
Go to Page View
gcn
FROM THE TEAM
Keep up to date across our socials: @gaycommunitynews
Reflections on Pride
The National LGBTQ+ Federation (NXF), publishers of GCN, are pleased to have the opportunity to once again update readers on recent developments in the advocacy and policy space.
ROAST BATTLE ROYALE
Following last year’s record-breaking Roast of Panti Bliss , a night of comedy, fundraising, and one of the Abbey Theatre’s fastest-selling shows to date, GCN is giving the people what they want and bringing the Roast back this Pride, bigger and bolder with a fresh, hilarious cast and a brand-new format. Please welcome to the stage, GCN’s Roast Battle Royale !
FRIEND OR FOE?
What do you think of when you hear the words best friend, partner or family? Most of us probably imagine our real-life counterparts, but as Anna Vichtova points out, a rising fraction of society sees things very differently.
A placetobelong
As part of GCN and Belong To’s ongoing collaboration to platform a new generation of LGBTQ+ voices in Ireland, Séamus McDonnell highlights the importance of having physical community spaces.
RUN WITH PURPOSE
The Irish Life Dublin Marathon returns in 2026, and GCN is recruiting a new team of runners to take on the challenge, with only one spot still available! Five dedicated individuals have already been selected, prepared to take on the 42.2km race in support of Ireland’s free, independent LGBTQ+ media.
DRIVING THE CONVERSATION
Klinefelter syndrome, or XXY, is a common but largely unknown genetic condition in which a baby is born with an extra X chromosome. Often considered part of the intersex spectrum, Alice Linehan spoke to Gareth Landy, a campaigner passionate about raising awareness.
Bi us, for us
For years, ANNA Kerslake longed for a place that celebrated and normalised bisexuality. In 2023, she took matters into her own hands and created the BI-Monthly social group.
A MOTHER’S LOVE
As anti-trans rhetoric continues to appear in parliaments, courtrooms, and public spaces, what the community needs now more than ever is allies. Mammies for Trans Rights are a shining example, and Chris Rooke spoke to one of the co-founders about their essential work.
READ WITH PRIDE
Children’s Books Ireland is proud to champion diverse and inclusive storytelling that best reflects the vibrancy and diversity of modern Ireland. Each year, the team proudly curates a collection of LGBTQ+ books for readers aged 0 to 18 in the Read with Pride guide, 10 of which are spotlighted here.
Save the Date!
Empowering our identities
Earlier this year, ShoutOut released a new resource created by and for LGBTQ+ neurodivergent people. Recognising the importance of this work, Emmet Mc Ardle spoke to the team to find out more. Photos by Salvador Gutiérrez .
TEACHERS' GROUP
Art is for Everybody
There is a joke shared by me and
Send love
Sky
Meditations on labour
Shanaia Kapoor sat down with the Wexford-native to discuss everything from queerness to class, and the crux of meaning-making when you’re good with your hands.
Recovery as resistance
As society continuously perpetuates several harmful beauty standards, many people feel under pressure to control their bodies in different ways. Having previously dealt with an eating disorder, Megan Devaney explains how recovery can be a powerful form of resistance.
THE SEARCH FOR SAFETY
From June onwards, international protection processes in Ireland are undergoing serious reforms with the enactment of the International Protection Bill 2026, giving effect to the measures of the European Union Migration and Asylum Pact. Oisín Kenny speaks with community groups about the potential impact of this act, the growing disconnect between wider public attitudes and populist political movements, and the need to combat misinformation amid shifting social, digital and political landscapes.
TAKING ACTION
With decade-long waiting lists, invasive assessments and refusals of treatment, trans healthcare in Ireland is broken, and these issues are symptoms of an outdated, centralised, pathologising system. To fill the void in providing life-changing care, the trans community and healthcare professionals joined forces to create Kindred Clinic Cork, Ireland’s first peer-led trans health service pilot. Beatrice Fanucci spoke to the team to find out more.
LOVE IN A COLD CLIMATE
This August, in a town where polar bears roam wild and the dark season is months long, Longyearbyen Pride returns for a three-day celebration in the Norwegian High Arctic. To find out more about the world’s northernmost Pride, Charlie Hayward spoke to the team in charge.
RESIST & PERSIST
In 2025, dykes of all diversities, alongside those who love them, took back the streets of Dublin for the first time in over 25 years, and filled them with protest, power and joy. Now, they’re ready to do it all again, and Chairperson Alice Linehan shares what to expect.
MARCHING ON ON ON ON ON
Bodily autonomy has always been a core demand and theme for Trans & Intersex Pride Dublin. As Founder Ollie Bell points out, the group was formed in 2018 after the historic ‘Yes’ vote to repeal the Eighth Amendment, the constitutional ban on abortion.
ONE STORY MANY VOICES
Dublin Pride will host its annual festival this June, with a fabulous range of events taking place all across the city. The organisation’s Creative and Cultural Lead, Colm Molloy , shares further insights into the theme, branding, grand marshal and events for 2026.
A new approach
Following the liquidation of the company behind Cork Pride in 2025, a community group, Cork Community Pride, emerged to take the reins, centring grassroots organising and a community-based approach. Sarah Fitz spoke to one of the organisers, Niamh Kennedy, to hear about the plans for this year’s festival.
PRIDE CALENDAR 2026
The 2026 Pride season is well and truly
FAB FORTY
As The George marks its 40th anniversary, Sarah McKenna Barry caught up with some of the drag artists and DJs that call the iconic LGBTQ+ venue home, as they reflect on the bar’s long and fascinating history.
DO IT FOR THE DANCE
Mother Pride Block Party returns to Collins Barracks this June with a fabulous two-day celebration. Ahead of the unmissable event, Ailo James Kerr spoke to three of the lineup’s most exciting local DJs.
PLEASURE & POLITICS IN THE PIT
Pride parties are nothing without electrifying artists, and that’s the best way to describe the force of nature that is Peaches. Brian Dillon spoke to the Canadian hitmaker before she makes her return to Dublin with a DJ set at Mother Pride Opening Party, just weeks after her show at The Academy.
FINDING OUR RHYTHM
When two friends found a gap in Dublin’s nightlife scene for queer people of colour, they decided to create Aphrodisiac, a unique space championing representation and acceptance. Michaiah Johnson spoke to Co-Founder Jhonnie about the organisation, and why it is so special for so many people.
50 YEARS AT FULL THROTTLE
For five decades, Dykes on Bikes have used their presence as a marker of bravery, visibility, diversity and empowerment. Nicole Lee charts some of the group’s history and chats to the Melbourne chapter about the work they do.
Documenting care _in Dublin’s queer nightlife
Keelin O’Shea is a Dublin-born and Dublin-based documentary
Discover hidden histories and fresh perspectives!
THE BEAUTY OF OVERCOMING
James Mac is an internationally acclaimed makeup and drag artist, photographer, and hairstylist, with a background in sports and a passion for advocacy, making him quite the Renaissance human. Conor O’Doherty spoke to James while he was home in Laois, surrounded by signs of his heritage and upbringing.
your trash my treasure
SMUT Press is a London-based, Irish-run, queer publishing project and party platform. In coincidence with the release of their latest publication, Cruising Archaeology II: Eurotrash , Alice Linehan sat down with founders Jack Scollard and Jordan Hearns to learn more about their work.
Pride, pleasure & protection
Pride is a time of connection, celebration and community. As Pádraig Burke notes, for many, Pride also includes travel, nights out, meeting new people, reconnecting with chosen family, intimacy and sex.
PUNK IN PRACTICE
In April 2026, Jack Haven, Mina Walker and Peter Nolan Smith travelled to Dublin for the European premiere of their film October Crow at the Trans Image/Trans Experience (TITE)Festival. Programmer and Guest Co-Ordinator Liadán Roche interviewed the trio after the screening and during a separate meeting in Outhouse, to learn more about the production and their filmmaking ethos.
Tender Migrations
Queer Spectrum Film Festival returns in 2026 to showcase migrant and QPoC journeys through desire, transition and healing. To tell us more, Founder, Director and Programmer Pradeep Mahadeshwar dives into the programme.
Ag foghlaim le chéile
In July 2024, Ireland’s first Gaeltacht camp for LGBTQ+ adults launched in Cléire, off the coast of Cork. Spearheaded by AerachAiteachGaelach, the group’s director Eoin Mc Evoy is on hand to tell us more.
[Music Makers]
Electronic music has been a staple in LGBTQ+ communities across the globe since its inception. After all, as Nicolas Prince notes, the genre and many of its subgenres were pioneered by queer people, with creation stories rooted in the underground Black and Latin queer communities.
Directory
Dublin & The East Acting Out Performance group
Directory
Cork, Kerry & The South Choral Con Fusion
An almost forgotten history
Born in Sligo in 1870, Eva Gore-Booth was an Irish poet, theologian and dramatist, as well as a committed suffragist, social worker and labour activist. Sarah Creighton Keogh traces through her often overshadowed story, and her involvement with the Urania journal.
A CAUSE FOR CELEBRATION
As she turns 80, Ailbhe Smyth hasn’t lost any of her political agency and unquenchable desire to right social injustice wherever she sees it. Tonie Walsh recently sat down with the activist to take stock of a full and noble life.
THE FRONT LINES OF RESISTANCE
According to the Global Peace Index, Ireland is the second safest country on the planet. This is largely thanks to our longstanding commitment to military neutrality; something many of us consider to be a defining trait of our national identity. But as Kelly Earley points out, this could all be at risk.
The INMO wish you a Happy Pride 2026
FOR ALL YOUR CEREMONY NEEDS SEE YOU AT PRIDE ACROSS IRELAND!
FIGHTING FOR OUR FAMILIES
I t’s been 11 years since Ireland voted
Looking for back issues?
Browse the Archive >

Previous Article Next Article
393
CONTENTS
Page 96
PAGE VIEW