Monday, December 29, 2025

Willem de Ridder













Willem de Ridder died three years ago today, at the age of 83. 

The Dutch artist, anarchist, storyteller, publisher, and composer had a career that stretched over seven decades, typically working in the margins of the art world.  

De Ridder graduated from the Academy of Arts in Den Bosch, and shortly afterwards decided to stop painting. He first came into contact with Fluxus when he interviewed Nam June Paik, who introduced him to George Maciunas, who asked him to join the group. 

He ended up running the Fluxus European Mail-Order House. 

"An enormous crate arrived by freight, delivered to my house," de Ridder told me in 2002. "There was a huge amount of things from Maciunas: suitcases, boxes, all kinds of work. I thought, "Shit, now I have to do something about it." So I arranged all the various editions beautifully and had a friend of mine take a photograph of the display. My girlfriend [Dorothy Meijer] at the time sat in the middle of display. The photo looked so great that I distributed it and made a catalogue of the work, which I also heavily distributed. It listed all of the Fluxus works for sale, with prices and a description. Of course, I didn’t sell anything. Not a single thing."

The photograph became an iconic image of Fluxus publishing (see below)

A recreation of the work (with a cardboard cut-out of Meijer) is now in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art, New York .

“The list of fluxprojects that I did is endless,” he said, "and it became very clear to me that the young generation is very interested in the way Fluxus liberated us from all those officials who not only decided how we had to live, but what was art and what wasn’t.”

Together with Wim T. Schippers, de Ridder organized Dutch Fluxus festivals in 1963 and 1964 and, later, the Wet Dream Festival, the first international erotic film festival. 

The latter was a spin-off from Suck: The First European Sex Paper, which he ran as part of the SELF group (Sexual Egalitarian and Libertarian Fraternity), alongside Germaine Greer and others. Only eight issues were produced over a five year period of the periodical now called "an experimental amalgam of sexual liberation, feminist ferment, alternative visual culture, and literary ambition." De Ridder provided an office for the newspaper, and spearheaded the graphic design and artistic content, tapping his network for contributions by John Giorno, Valerie Solanas, Otto Muehl, Thomas Bayrle, Gunter Rambow, Ed van der Elsken, and others. 

Previously, the artist had founded the music newspaper Hit Week, which published 32 issues between 1965 and 1969. He also co-founded the "counter culture" nightclubs Provadya and Paradiso.

“When I started at Paradiso, everyone could just jump on stage. And if you didn’t know what was going to happen, we didn’t either,” De Ridder recalled in 2018. “In no time it was packed and they came from all over the country.” The venue - operational for over fifty years - has hosted performances by Adele, Arcade Fire, David Bowie, James Brown, Nick Cave, Duran Duran, Guns ‘n’ Roses, Hole, Ice Cube, Curtis Mayfield, Willie Nelson, Nirvana, the Pixies, Prince, The Ramones, The Rolling Stones, Sonic Youth, U2, Frank Zappa, and countless others. 

He was the co-founder of the Mood Engineering Society (MES) and started the Society for Party Organizing (SPO) to introduce audience generated theatre. Together with Schippers he founded the Association for Scientific Research in New Methods of Recreation. 

De Ridder collaborated with performance artist and porn star/activist Annie Sprinkle, with whom he was also romantically involved, from 1978 to 1980. 

A consummate story-teller, with a captivating voice, de Ridder hosted a weekly radio show on Amsterdam radio station Radio 100 for over twenty years. 


"I hated Art. Shit, it kills everything. All creativity is killed by calling it fucking art. But I liked what the Fluxus people were doing - making things up on the spot. So I organized a big Fluxus concert at a very famous big theatre on the coast, near the Hague. I made big posters and a lot of people came. I invited friends to do some pieces; [George] Maciunas came, Dick Higgins, and several others. I also organized one in Amsterdam at a student theatre. Jackson Mac Low was there, and Alison Knowles, Eric Anderson. You name it, lots of people. And it generated a fair amount of interest.
- Willem de Ridder











Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Monday, December 22, 2025

Howard Hodgkin | Blue Skies, Nothing but Blue Skies















Howard Hodgkin
Blue Skies, Nothing but Blue Skies
London, UK: Momart, 2002
13 x 16 cm. (boxed)
Edition size unknown


Perhaps channeling Geoffrey Hendricks and James Lee Byars, this Xmas edition consists of a lithograph printed in blue on thin paper, crumpled, and housed in a blue paper-covered box.

The work is published by Momart, the British company specialising in the storage, transportation, and installation of works of art, as part of their annual limited edition Christmas card series. The project began in 1984 and has featured artists such as Eduardo Paolozzi, Helen Chadwick, Damien Hirst, Tracey Emin, Gary Hume, Mark Wallinger and Sarah Lucas.




Sunday, December 21, 2025

Christian Marclay | Music Box












Christian Marclay
Untitled (Music Box)
Santa Monica, USA: Peter Norton Family Foundation, 2005
13 x 9.5 x 7 cm.
Edition size unknown


You can imagine the excitement when Christian Marclay realized that Silent was an anagram of Listen, and then Tinsel, too, making it perfect for a Christmas music box. 

The work consists of a hinged-lid pine wooden music box accompanied by a card that reads: "Each year, Peter Norton commissions a work of art to celebrate the holiday season. This year's edition is by Christian Marclay... For this project, Marclay has composed 'Tinsel' - a seamless melodic loop without beginning or end that incorporates the gradual slowing of the unwinding mechanism - To play with our expectations of the music box..."

The word SILENT is engraved on the exterior and LISTEN on the interior, a possible nod to Ken Friedman's Fluxus box Open and Shut Case which Marclay would have known well. 

The work was manfucatred by Reuge, a renowned Swiss “Maison” specializing in luxury music boxes and singing bird automata that was founded by Charles Reuge in 1865. In 2005, they were the last remaining music box manufacturers in Switzerland. 

Other multiples and artists’ books in the Peter Norton Christmas series include a porcelain ashtray, a lapel pin, a printed fan, a music box, a CD, a woven blanket, a lifesaver, a dollhouse, trophies, cards, a cup & saucer, a slide viewer, salt & pepper shakers as snow globes,  pop up books by Peter Coffin and Kara Walker, etc., etc.  Participating artists include Robert Lazzarini, Do Ho Suh, Ry Rocklen, Takashi Murakami, Anna Gaskell, Yinka Shonibare, Sanford Biggers, Yasumasa Morimura, Christian Marclay, Vik Muniz, Sanford Biggers, Nina Katchadourian, Marc Swanson, Jim Hodges, Kevin Sommers, Brian Eno & Peter Schmidt, Benjamin Lord, Richard Kostelanetz, Lorna Simpson, Lawrence Weiner, and many others.






 


Saturday, December 20, 2025

Sanford Biggers | Cheshire Smile






















Sanford Biggers
Cheshire Smile
Santa Monica, USA: Peter Norton Family Christmas Project, 2008
4.4 x 10.2 cm.
Edition size unknown

https://artistsbooksandmultiples.blogspot.com/2023/12/norton-family-christmas-greetings.html

Sanford Biggers told Time Out in 2010 that he places "no hierarchy on chronology, references or media” and that his themes are "meant to broaden and complicate our read on American history.” His work often references African-American ethnography, hip hop, jazz, Afrofuturism, urban culture and icons from Americana.

He employs history as a "malleable material” to repurpose and reinterpret, connecting past and future temporalities to create what he calls ‘future ethnographies’. A 2016 work called Laocoön features the corpse of cartoon character Fat Albert (Fatal Bert) as an oversized inflatable. 

His 2008 project for the Peter Norton Family Christmas card consists of a plastic light up sculpture, and a lenticular card that reads: 


Every year since eighty eight
A Norton Christmas project was made.
All mimsy were the borogroves
Who got what Peter gave.
For this year's gift, the twenty-fourth,
What artist for the edition?
O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!
Sanford Biggers accepts the mission!
He put his thinking cap on straight, What does the season call for?
A light, a fright, a toothy grin,
Something one can't go to the mall for.
One two! One two! The job complete, Sanford chortled with delight.
So rested he by the Tumtum tree, And bid you all Good Night.

The light and card both feature an exaggerated toothy smile reminiscent of the titular Cheshire cat, from Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland. The work conflates the infamous ear-to-ear grin with the history of minstrel blackface and the “darky" icon that appeared in cartoons, comics and advertisements and adorned consumer goods such as sheet music, postcards, jewelry, food, even children’s toys and literature. 

Biggers later produced  Cheshire (Janus), an illuminated sculpture using similar iconography (see below). The sculpture improves on the multiple, using the backlighting to make the toothy grin appear and disappear as it did in Caroll’s book and Disney’s animated adaptation.1

Cheshire Smile has an estimated value of between two and four hundred dollars. 


1. When Disney classics such as The Aristocats, Dumbo, Jungle Book and Peter Pan stream on Disney+ they all feature the prior warning "This programme includes negative depictions and/or mistreatment of people or cultures. These stereotypes were wrong then and are wrong now. We want to acknowledge its harmful impact, learn from it and spark conversation to create a more inclusive future together”. The worst of them all, Song of the South, is not available to stream or purchase. Alice in Wonderland does not feature a warning. 












Friday, December 19, 2025

Do-Ho Suh | Bowl with Hands














Do-Ho Suh
Bowl with Hands
Santa Monica, USA: Peter Norton Family Christmas Project, 2004
17 x 24 cm.
Edition size unknown


A clear glass bowl - hand blown by Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania - with two cupped, outstretched hands embossed in the bottom, sent as the 2004 Peter Norton Family Xmas card. 


"In this project, Suh continues exploring the cultural meaning of space by creating a vessel with an impression of his own outstretched hands in its base. The hand blown glass offers Suh's creative energy as a gift. With this gesture of generosity, something ephemeral solidifies and something deeply personal becomes social.” 
- publisher's statement