Fillip No.19 opens with “Scripting Misperformance, Misperforming Scripts,” an essay by Byron Peters and Jacob Wick, which theorizes notions of resilience and “misperformance” as, respectively, forms of control and resistance in the age of networks. Christopher Regimbal’s “Institutions of Regionalism: Artist Collectivism in London, Ontario” continues Fillip’s ongoing Institutions by Artists series by examining artist-run initiatives in London, Ontario, from the 1960s until the end of the 1980s vis-a-vis “regionalism,” a term used to discuss Canadian cultural production in the twentieth century. And, in “Intimate Cacophonies,” Bettina Funcke and Andrew Stefan Weiner consider the publication project 100 Notes–100 Thoughts, dOCUMENTA (13)‘s catalogue volumes and artists’ books. - Fillip