Friday, February 28, 2025

Marina Abramovic | 100 letters 1965 - 1979





Marina Abramovic
100 letters 1965 - 1979
Paris, France: Onestar Press, 2008
197 pp., 29.7 × 21 cm., softcover
Edition of 1000


An Artist’s Book assembling of the first sentence of every letter the artist received between 1965 and 1979. These include correspondence between friends and family members with a wide variety of topics discussed, such as: food in the fridge, requests for wool, travel plans, birth announcements and artworks being framed. The text is in English and Serbian. 


"Since I was very young, until my early thirties, I had serious problems in opening and reading any letters I received. Letters would stay on my table for weeks before I found the courage to open them, and during this time my sense of guilt would grow and grow.

Most of the time, when I finally opened the letters, it was too late to answer them and my sense of guilt was worse than ever.

I kept every single letter, from the first notes received from my mother, in I965, up to the time I left Belgrade for ever in I979. I decided to chronologically write down the first sentence from all of these letters, without noting the name of the senders. When finished, I was astonished to see how it was possible to trace all my life just by reading the text created by all these first lines.

Later I heard that Marcel Duchamp, on receiving a letter, opened, answered, and immediately burnt the letter he’d received.

Jean Tinguely never opened or answered any letter, and every Christmas he made a ritual of burning unopened envelopes, which sometimes included important information and even checks.”
- Marina Abramovic


Wednesday, February 26, 2025

David Shrigley | The moon makes us crazy







David Shrigley
The moon makes us crazy
Copenhagen, Denmark: Shrig Shop, 2023
44 x 34 x 10 cm (bag section)
Edition size unknown



Tuesday, February 25, 2025

Martin Kippenberger













Martin Kippenberger was born on this day in 1953. 




Monday, February 24, 2025

Kelly Mark | The Kiss




Kelly Mark
The Kiss
Toronto, Canada: Self-published, 2007
55" x 22" x 14”
Edition of 3 [+1 AP]

A two-channel video/sculpture with a silent 15 minute loop. 


"Multi-media artist Kelly Mark has long been interested in the obsession of television in our culture and in technology’s gradual replacement of human interaction. Her light box entitled The Kiss was derived from an installation included in her Glow Video Series that Mark produced using reflected light as a primary material. The installation consisted of two television screens positioned as if “kissing” and emanating a glowing, flesh-toned light between them. “The light source for this work was created by simply recording the cast light from a hard core porn movie…the resulting glow is steady and rhythmic with quickening pulses of colour, mainly pinks, oranges and red hues.”

Viewers of Mark’s The Kiss are reminded of Constantin Brancusi’s sculpture by the same name, which was simplified over many incarnations until it became a highly distilled abstraction of his initial representation. Mark’s version takes the theme much further into the realm of the conceptual, as The Kiss becomes wholly symbolic of the intervening nature of technology in our daily lives.”
- Rosemary Heather




Roberta Flack







Roberta Flack died in her home today, amongst family, at the age of 88.

Her fifteenth and final full-length album was Let It Be: Roberta, an album of Beatles covers released in 2012. The album peaked at No. 30 on both the Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums and Top Independent Albums charts.

The following year she made a cameo in the video for Yoko Ono’s song “Bad Dancer”.

Flack moved into the New York City Dakota Apartment building in the mid-seventies, into a unit that purportedly once belonged to Judy Garland. She shared a wall with John Lennon and Yoko Ono. 

In a recent documentary on her life their son Sean, now 49, said "I was very blessed that I grew up with the coolest neighbour in the world. At first, I didn't even think of Roberta as this incredible artist and musician, she was just this really cool neighbour. We used to call her Aunt Roberta, and we were very close."

Flack covered Yoko Ono’s song "Goodbye Sadness" for the first of several Ono tribute albums, Every Man Has a Woman in 1984. Ono says: 

"Mine was trying to go away from sorrow. But in her song, it really sounds like goodbye, sadness, and you really feel that it's gone. She has the capacity to take songs as a tool to express herself, but each time she does that, it becomes Roberta. We're very close to each other and our kitchen is connected and there was a beautiful, spiritual exchange working together on this album."

Hear Flack’s version on Youtube, here: 




Sunday, February 23, 2025

Jonas Mekas | Artist’s Book









Jonas Mekas
Artist’s Book
New York Ciyy, USA: Onestar Press, 2003
144 pp., 22.5 x 14 cm, softcover
Edition of 1000


This 2003 title functions as a kind of scrapbook, filled with postcards, notes, drawings, and letters that the artist received over the years from friends such as Patti Smith, Allen Ginsberg, Paul Sharits, Michelangelo Antonioni, Joan Crawford, and others. 

Artist’s Book is published in an edition of 1000, with 200 copies signed, dated and numbered by Mekas. 






Saturday, February 22, 2025

Kelly Mark










Devastated to learn that our friend Kelly Mark has died. More information soon.