Saturday, October 19, 2024

Art Metropole Fall Sale




This weekend, Art Metropole is hosting an In-Store Sale offering deep discounts, including: 

70% off back-issue periodicals
40% off zines
10% off hardcover books
20% off posters
20% off multiples
and up to 50% off select Art Metropole publications

Visit www.artmetropole.com for more information. 


Friday, October 18, 2024

Paige Gratland | Celebrity Lezbian Fist






Paige Gratland
Celebrity Lezbian Fist 
Toronto, Canada: P.G. Thing Co., 2008
24 x 13 x 13 cm.
Edition of 25 numbered copies


Yesterday I visited Adriana Kuiper’s sculpture class and a student was casting her pink rabbit vibrator in silicon, reminding me of this Paige Gratland project from 2008. 

Celebrity Lezbian Fists are a series of  silicone fists cast from the hands of queer cultural icons. 

Working under the name P.G. THING CO. (a nod to Iain and Ingrid Baxter’s N.E.Thing Co.), Gratland takes super-groupie Cynthia Plaster Claster’s notorious casting of rock star cocks (most notably Jimi Hendrix, see below) as her starting point, but replaces the phallus with the raised, clenched fist. The resulting works become both a symbol of solidarity & defiance in the face of oppression, and a fully functioning sex toy. 

The fists are produced in an edition of 25 each, cast in colours chosen by each participant. The artists, activists, athletes, academics, poets, musicians, and filmmakers who took part include: 

JD Samson, is an American musician, producer, songwriter and DJ and member of the bands Le Tigre  and MEN.  Le Tigre’s song "Nanny Nanny Boo Boo" includes a shout-out to C.P. Caster. Additionally, both KISS and Jim Croce have written songs about her practice ("Plaster Caster", and "Five Short Minutes", respectively).

Phranc is a singer and activist who I saw open for Morrissey many years ago. She came onto the stage alone with her guitar and introduced herself as an “all-American Jewish lesbian folksinger”.

Savoy Howe is a boxer and coach who founded Newsgirls, a women's only boxing club that ran almost a quarter of a century before closing during Covid. 

Cathy Opie is a celebrated artist, photographer and educator (see her notorious Dyke Deck playing cards, here). 

Eileen Myles is a poet and author of more than twenty volumes of poetry, fiction, non-fiction, libretti, plays, and performance pieces. Novelist Dennis Cooper described them as "one of the savviest and most restless intellects in contemporary literature."

Harmony Hammond is an artist, activist, curator, writer and co-founder of the A.I.R. Gallery, the first women's cooperative art gallery in the United States.  

Cheryl Dunye is a Liberian-American film director, producer, screenwriter, editor and actress. She was the first out black lesbian to ever direct a feature film (The Watermelon Woman, 1996) and runs the Oakland-basaed production company Jingletown Films. 

Jack Halberstam is an American academic and author whose work focuses on queer and transgender identities in popular culture. Halberstam is a professor at the Institute for Research on Women, Gender, and Sexuality at Columbia University. His best known book is Female Masculinity (1998).  

G. B. Jones is an artist, filmmaker, and musician, who will be best known here as the co-creater (with Bruce LaBruce) of the queer punk fanzine The J.D.s

Shawna Dempsey and Lorri Millan are a Canadian performance art duo who often perform as The Lesbian Rangers. Their video for What Does a Lesbian Look Like?, received regular airplay on MuchMusic in 1990’s and was featured on the spoken word poetry compilation album Word Up, alongside John Giorno, Jill Watson, Clifton Joseph and Judy Radul. 


Celebrity Lezbian Fists were launched at Art Metropole in 2008, and are still available there, for $250 each. Proceeds from the sale of “Celebrity Lezbian Fists” will be donated to The Triangle Program; Canada’s only classroom for LGBTTI2QQAP Youth













Thursday, October 17, 2024

Show (&) Tell: The Films & Videos of Lawrence Weiner.






Bartomeu Mari
Show (&) Tell/ The Films & Videos of Lawrence Weiner. A catalogue raisonné
Gent, Belgium: Imschoot Uitgevers, 1992 
148 pp., 21 x 28,5 cm., hardcover
Edition size unknown


A catalogue raisonné of the films and videos by Lawrence Weiner, edited by Bartomeu Mari and Alice Weiner, with a preface by R.H. Fuchs. The book is designed by Lum Derycke with Lawrence Weiner.



Wednesday, October 16, 2024

American Narrative Story Art. 1967-1977










Paul Schimmel, editor
American Narrative Story Art. 1967-1977 
Houston, USA: Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston, 1978
116 pp., 24 × 27 cm., 
Edition size unknown


A catalogue to accompany an exhibition that ran from December of 1977 to February 25th, 1978, at the Contemporary Arts Museum, in Houston, Texas (see below poster).

The exhibition and book examine the then-burgeoning trend of explicit narrative in contemporary art. It features the work of forty-three artists, including Laurie Andersen, Eleanor Antin, David Askevold, John Baldessari, Robert Cumming, Les Levine, Duane Michals, Martha Rosler, Allen Ruppersberg, Ed Ruscha, Lisa Steele, and William Wiley. 

The title includes essays by Mark Freidus, Alan Sondheim and editor Paul Schimmel, alongside documentation on the artists’ careers; and a ten inch flexi-disc record featuring audio works by seven of the participating artists. 

The book, when accompanied by the 33 1/3 RPM RECORD, is now valued at around $150 US. 

Side A: 

1. Terry Allen "The Collector/Art Mob" 2:02
2. Terry Allen "Writing On Rocks Across The U.S.A." 2:46
3. Laurie Anderson "Tape Bow Song For Juanita" 3:08
4. Eleanor Antin "Kings Meditations I, VII, IX" 3:12

Side B: 

1. Ed McGowin "Dad Knew About Wine" 3:16
2. Dennis Oppenheim "Theme For A Major Hit" 2:56
3. Jim Roche "Cadillac Piece"






Tuesday, October 15, 2024

David Byrne | Strange Ritual








David Byrne
Strange Ritual
Faber and Faber, 1995
192 pp., 26 x 19.5 x 1.5 cm., hardcover
Edition size unknown


Strange Ritual is the Talking Heads singer’s first stand-alone book (True Stories from nine years prior was ultimately a companion to the film of the same name). Subtitled Pictures and Words, the book is collection of photographs of icons, graffiti, consumer displays, advertising and book covers. The latter have titles that read like the works of Michael Dumontier and Neil Farber: “The Truth About Mars”, “I Dare You”, “How to do All Things”, “The Secret Museum of Mankind”, “Ponder on This”.

The book takes its title from  song from Byrne's third studio album (not counting film and theatre soundtracks), released two years prior. 

The leather-bound volume features a promotional wrap-around, and the Japanese edition was issued with a colourful dust jacket [see below]. 




"Internationally renowned musician, filmmaker, performer, David Byrne is an artist of diverse talents. Strange Ritual is Byrne's extraordinary first work of photography and words. Witty, antic and seductive, this book is a barrage of color photographs that reinvent the icon: playful religious images of high-rise madonnas and squadrons of crucifixes; incantorial representations of worldwide consumerism, from altars of food displays to retail signs out-shining the stained glass of cathedrals; culture-scapes of the omnipresent grid that video has imposed on our perception of reality.

Juxtaposed with the photographs are excerpts from Byrne's travel observations, unpublished song lyrics and poems, including a list of the gods and goddesses of the 90's. Byrne has also compiled found writing in the form of computer-generated poetry, odd book titles, poems and unusual messages found on the street. Traveling in Mexico, he writes, "Anything is up for grabs. Anything is available for everyone to use. Language, clothes, religions, facial features, narratives, gestures, foods, colors."

Strange Ritual offers 240 jam-packed pages of exciting, challenging, ironic, and often hilarious art and words that address the universals in an honest and direct voice. More than a book of photography, it is a bizarre, brilliant vision."
- Publisher's press release








Monday, October 14, 2024

Wolf Vostell













Wolf Vostell was born on this day in 1932.





Saturday, October 12, 2024

Carla Liss | Sacrament Fluxkit




Carla Liss
Sacrament Fluxkit 
New York City, USA: Fluxus, c1969

Edition size unknown


A hinged plastic box housing vials of water of varying hues labeled "well," "faucet," "pool," "rain," "brook," "lake," "snow," "river" and "sea”. 

The water was intended to be housed in test tubes, though no known examples of this indicate that it was ever produced this way. Instead the water is housed in small injection bottles with metal caps and rubber diaphragms. The vials originally contained cortisone, which publisher George Maciunas injected to control his asthma. 

Maciunas also designed the box label, this being the less common of the two designs used for this work (see earlier post, here). 

Several versions of the Sacrament Fluxkit were advertised in Fluxus newsletters and price lists, varying from $6 to $30, including a wooden box containing test-tubes housing "water from many sources".


"Geoffrey Hendricks’s Flux Reliquary [below] and Carla Liss’s Sacrament Fluxkit take different approaches. Hendricks’s satirical “Flux Relics” include “Sweat of Lucifer from the heat of Hell,” “Fragment of rope by which Judas Iscariot hung himself,” “Holy Shit from diners at the Last Supper,” and other objects not that far removed from the relics found in churches around the world. Liss’s poetic Sacrament Fluxkit, on the other hand, consists of a box that is labeled on the inside lid with everyday sources of the “holy” water in the nine specimen bottles: “well, faucet, pool, rain, brook, lake, snow, river, sea.” Liss implies that it’s up to us; if we want, we can choose to have a sacramental experience each time we encounter water.”
- Fluxus and the Essential Questions of Life