Sunday, April 20, 2025

Van Maltese | Pencil For Your Non-Dominant Hand









Van Maltese
Pencil For Your Non-Dominant Hand
Toronto, Canada: Slow Editions, 2024
20.5 x 4.5 cm.
Edition of 500


Produced by Eunice Luk’s Slow Editions as a free give-away, Pencil For Your Non-Dominant Hand invites artists to participate by submitting a drawing made using their non-dominant hand. 

Send a 300 dpi image of your drawing and your name to pencilforyournondominanthand@gmail.com. The drawings will be posted at https://pencil-for-your-non-dominant-hand.blogspot.com and eventually collected for a future publication. 


"For some time now, I have been experimenting with drawing using my left, non-dominant hand. This interest began as an exercise to develop muscle memory and potentially enhance cognitive functioning. However, I have since learned that the idea of practicing ambidexterity to improve brain function is widely debated—some argue that the brain’s efficiency benefits from having distinct hemispheric tasks. The idea of using ambidexterity to strengthen cognitive functioning is perhaps just another fact I thought I knew.

Alongside trying to get better at what I do, I am also very curious about getting worse at it. Drawing with my non-dominant hand has evolved into something more profound: a way of exploring failure, and relinquishing some sort of control. It’s a counterpoint to the idea that an artist’s legitimacy lies in some kind of consistency. Instead, I’m curious about how it feels to unlearn, or re-learn.”
- Van Maltese




Friday, April 18, 2025

Richard Kostelanetz | RECYCLINGS VOLUME ONE 1959-67 A Literary Autobiography




 


Richard Kostelanetz
RECYCLINGS VOLUME ONE 1959-67 A Literary Autobiography
Brooklyn, USA: Assembling Press, 1974
64 pp., 21 x 13.5 cm., staple-bound
Edition of 1526


"Quoted in the preface to Recyclings: A Literary Autobiography: Volume One 1959-67 are passages from Roland Barthes and John Cage that celebrate the vast encyclopedic significations of the single word and call for the demilitarization of syntax, respectively. This poetic thesis statement from Richard Kostelanetz foregrounds a collection of truly avant-garde poetry from the author’s early career. Kostelanetz abandons the formality of punctuation, the “militarization” of syntax, and structure altogether for a poetic formalism that, like the Abstract-Expressionists, triumphs the material: the word.”
- Printed Matter




Wednesday, April 16, 2025

Alex Morrison | Giving the Story a Treatment




Alex Morrison
Giving the Story a Treatment
New York City, USA: Lukas & Sternberg, 2005
106 pp., 17 x 11 cm., softcover
Edition size unknown


Giving the Story a Treatment is the first comprehensive publication on artist Alex Morrison, featuring contributions by Jeff Derksen and Danish art critic Lars Bang Larsen.

Last night I hosted an event in Toronto where it was announced that Morrison will be the 19th Canadian Artist in Residency at the Glenfiddich distillery in Dufftown, Scotland. He will arrive next month and spend three months at the site, alongside artists from China, Kenya, South Korea, Taiwan, and the United Kingdom. 

The residency includes airfare and accommodation, a salary, and a generous production budget. And lots of whisky. Former residents include myself, Annie Pootoogook, Damian Moppet, Van Maltese, Lee Henderson, Marla Hlady & Christof Migone, Jon Sasaki, Daniel Barrow, Eleanor King, and many others. 

During his residency Morrison plans to conduct an architectural design case study which will explore art forms at the distillery that serve dual purposes, specifically the rooftop pagoda forms of the distillery, initially designed by Architect Charles Doig, creator of the Doig Ventilator (1889). The Doig Ventilator was originally designed as a ventilation system adopted by distilleries in Speyside and beyond. Drawing inspiration from the architecture of Glenfiddich’s past, Morrison aims to create a repeating pattern design that could be applied to wallpaper, textiles or packaging design, combining his interest in architectural and design history, pace making and marketing promotional aesthetics. 

“Thematically, my work focuses on the intersection of heritage, the built environment, and selfhood, examining how various materials, aesthetics, and objects associated with public and domestic spaces in the present simultaneously shape and are shaped by visual identity, societal values, and our understanding of the past,” he said. “I am incredibly honoured to explore these processes while immersing myself in the rich, storied landscape of the Glenfiddich Distillery.” 





Kathe Burkhart | Ask me about being a Dominant Woman




Kathe Burkhart
Ask me about being a Dominant Woman
Antwerp, Belgium: Roger Vandaele Edition and Graphics, 1997
9 x 27.5 cm.
Edition of 500 signed and numbered copies


A bumper sticker printed on green adhesive vinyl and signed in black felt pen. Produced in an edition of five hundred, the work is scarce now, selling for upwards of two hundred dollars. 



Tuesday, April 15, 2025

Dieter Roth | Quick









Dieter Roth
Quick
Koln/Amsterdam: Rudolf Rieser/Bookie Wookie, 1965/1994
[150] pp., 1 x 3 x 1.8 cm., softcover
Edition of 150 signed and numbered copies


Quick was a German-language news magazine active for forty-four years, between 1948 and 1992. It was the first periodical published in Germany after World War Two1. By 1960 the magazine had reached peak circulation, with 1.7 million copies printed weekly. 

After previously turning its pages into sausage, Dieter Roth used the periodical to produce approximately 150 copies of a small hand-bound book to distribute for free at an exhibition in Koln, in 1965. They were published by Rudolf Reiser, a bookbinder who helped fabricate, finance and promote many of Roth’s works of this era. Fewer than fifty were taken by visitors to the exhibition, leaving behind just over a hundred copies. 

Decades later, in 1994, gallerist Rudolf Zwirner discovered a shoe box containing 105 copies of the miniature books. He contacted Walter Koenig, who suggested that Boekie Woekie in Amsterdam might help revive the project. 

A ‘re-issue’ was released with the copies signed “1965/1994” by Roth and housed in a clear plastic box with a blue adhesive hinge and the addition of a wrap-around information sheet. Printed in Dutch, English, German, and Icelandic, the info sheet explains the work’s provenance in the artist’s own handwriting. 

The books - reportedly the smallest Roth had made - feature approximately 150 sheets cut from Quick Magazine, bound by glue and a cotton string spine. Other magazines that received similar treatment include Dagblegt Bul, Der Spiegel and Icelandic Leather.

Quick is currently valued at over a thousand dollars. 




1. The magazine’s chief editor for many years was Traudl Junge, the former secretary to Adolf Hitler, who typed out his Last Will and Testament immediately before the dictator's suicide. 










Monday, April 14, 2025

Sophie Calle | True Stories








Sophie Calle
True Stories. Hasselblad Award 2010
Göttingen, Germany: Steidl & The Hassleblad Foundation, 2010.
112 pp., 27.5 x 25.5 cm., hardcover
Edition size unknown


In 2010, Sophie Calle was awarded the Hasselblad Foundation International Award in Photography, which was celebrated with an exhibition and this publication. 



Sunday, April 13, 2025

Mike Kelley | The Uncanny









Mike Kelley
The Uncanny
Arnhem, The Netherlands: Sonsbeek, 1993
152 pp., 24 x 17 cm., softcover
Edition size unknown


An influential catalogue published in conjunction with Mike Kelley’s landmark exhibition of the same name, at the Gemeentemuseum Arnhem, as part of Sonsbeek 93. 


"Mike Kelley's contribution to Sonsbeek '93, 'The Uncanny' - an exhibition within an exhibition - has since attained almost mythical status. Many know it only through the book, which sold out long ago, so its return in updated form 11 years on, in Liverpool rather than Arnheim, is itself a little uncanny. 

The book's essay, 'Playing with Dead Things', accompanied by a long and extraordinary photo-essay, is the artist's most ambitious to date. Like the best writings of Dan Graham and Robert Smithson, it is a remarkable piece of cultural synthesis that makes most academic writing on art seem pale, confined and reiterative. Without the essay the exhibition is just half the story.”
- Alex Farquharson