Sunday, November 9, 2025

Dieter Roth | Little Tentative Recipe














Dieter Roth
Little Tentative Recipe
Stuttgart, Germany: Edition Hansjorg Mayer, 1968
11.3 x 10.3 x 10.3 cm.
Edition of 100 signed, dated and numbered copies


A miniature book (8.8 x 8.8 x 8.8 cm) made from approximately 800 multicoloured Rotaprint-prints and housed in a stamped wooden box (typically made to hold tea), which also served as its shipping container. 

The work was designed and bound by Graham Paw and John Wells and printed by students at the Watford School of Art, England, following the instructions/score or 'recipe' by Roth:

"PRINT until you cant stand it anymore or [until] you dont want anymore, take away, for binding for instance, the sheets which the machine cannot take anymore (torn, wrinkled, or beautiful according to someone's taste), dont throw anything away"






Saturday, November 8, 2025

Micah Lexier | Collaborative Drawing












In lieu of an opening or closing event for Micah Lexier’s debut MKG127 exhibition A Drawing and a Sculpture, today the gallery is hosting a collaborative drawing event from noon to 6pm. 

Drawing participants will wear a necklace related to the shape they will be drawing—lines or dots—and will be supplied with a template and a pencil, then given three minutes to complete their portion of the drawing. Lexier will do the same with his shape.

Drawings will be made on a custom letterpress-printed sheet and at the conclusion of the drawing session the collaborator will be given the actual drawing to take home, once it has been scanned. Drawings are made on a first come, first served basis.




 

Gaetano Pesce












Gaetano Pesce was born on this day in 1939. He was an Italian architect, urban planner, and industrial designer, whose work was characterized by an inventive use of colour and materials.

Pesce is best known for his work with resin, moulds, and casting techniques used to create vases, chairs, lamps, and the two-dimensional reliefs that he termed “industrial skins.”

Above are some of his innovative pieces produced as exhibition invitations. 



Friday, November 7, 2025

Kelly Mark | Everything is Possible










“Stop by Art Metropole to view Everything is possible, a display of Kelly Mark’s works drawn from Art Metropole’s inventory, including books, buttons, multiples, audio, and sculpture.⁠
This display is presented as a part of Everything & Nothing, a multi-site survey exhibition highlighting the influential work of the late conceptual artist, Kelly Mark. The project is anchored by a wide-spanning solo exhibition hosted by Olga Korper Gallery (Oct 4 – Nov 1, 2025) who continues to represent Mark’s estate. Everything & Nothing will also take place across a number of other venues around the city with a cascading sequence of events, screenings, and presentations that hone in on distinct qualities of Mark’s career and interests.⁠
Mark was known for isolating moments of the everyday in ways that were unpretentious, unglamourous but full of warmth, ritual, and wit. Time, duration, measurement, and process are essential focal points in Mark’s multidisciplinary practice. Time’s governance of our reality, especially its undeniable grasp over working class experiences, is a central concern in her oeuvre. Each satellite project is fittingly named after a line from Mark’s recurring work, Everything & Nothing, which stages an existential dialogue made up of common expressions pertaining to “everything” and “nothing.” Hosted by nine venues of varying scales and audiences in the city, the exhibition marks a special occasion to celebrate Mark’s important legacy and her influence on many generations of artists.⁠
Everything is possible will be on view at Art Metropole until November 23rd. Please inquire for pricing. ⁠
Images by Nathaniel Fischer.”
- Art Metropole Press release


Thursday, November 6, 2025

Daniel Spoerri














Daniel Spoerri died a year ago today, at the age of 94. 




Wednesday, November 5, 2025

Black Art Notes





[Tom Lloyd, ed.] 
Black Art Notes
New York City, USA: Primary Information, 2021
48 pp., 8.5 x 8.5", softcover
Edition of 2000


Primary Information announced earlier this week that their 2021 facsimile publication Black Art Notes is back in print in a new perfect bound volume. 
 

"Originally published in 1971, the book was conceived as a critical response to the Contemporary Black Artists in America exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art but grew into a “concrete affirmation of Black Art philosophy as interpreted by eight Black artists,” as Lloyd notes in the publication’s introduction.

Published on the 50th anniversary of the original printing, Black Art Notes features writings by Lloyd, Amiri Baraka, Bing Davis, Melvin Dixon, Jeff Donaldson, Ray Elkins, Babatunde Folayemi, and Francis and Val Gray Ward. “If there is one lesson the post–civil rights period has taught us, it is that those most likely to shape the destiny of Black Americans in the next decade are activists and artists, who may possess additional skills as organizers,” writes Ward in “The Black Artist—His Role in the Struggle.”

The artists featured in the publication position the Black Arts Movement outside of white, western frameworks, and articulate the movement as one created by and existing for Black people. Their essays condemn the attempts of museums and other white cultural institutions to tokenize, whitewash, and neutralize Black art, and call for immediate political and institutional reform and the self-determination of Black cultural producers. While the publication was created to respond to a particular historicized moment, the systemic problems that it addresses remain pervasive, making the artists’ potent critiques both timely and urgent.

Tom Lloyd (1929–1996) was an artist and organizer whose electronically programmed light works were chosen for the inaugural exhibition at The Studio Museum in Harlem in 1968. In 1971, Lloyd founded the Store Front Museum in New York, a cultural center that hosted exhibitions, concerts, classes, and lectures for the predominantly Black community of Jamaica, Queens, for over a decade. The center acted in tandem with his call for the marriage of social action and aesthetics in Black Art Notes, published the same year."
- press release



Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Lolly Batty | Philatelic Items








Lolly Batty
Philatelic Items
London, UK: The Everyday Press, 2022
96 pp., 29.5 x 21 cm., staple-bound
Edition of 1000

 
Mail artist Lolly Batty died last week after a long illness.