Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Robert Filliou | There Was A Drawing In the Centre of this Page










Robert Filliou
There Was A Drawing In the Centre of this Page
Köln, Germany: Galerie and Edition Hundertmark, 1993
[24] pp., 21 x 14.5 cm., staple-bound
Edition of 500


One of my favorites in the Hundertmark Booklet series is not an artists' book, but this posthumous catalogue listing many of Filliou's editions and multiples (for Hundertmark, but also other publishers, such as Vice-Versand, Zona, Edition Block and other contemporaries of Armin Hundertmark). Black and white images of A Most Curious Invention of Gaga Yogi, the LEEDS card game, Information Box, the Sans Object brick,  the Optimistic Boxes, Monsters Are Inoffensive, and many other works are accompanied by brief descriptions. 

Filliou died in December of 1987, five or six years before this publication, though it's possible that it could have been arranged many years prior to publication. Dorothy Iannone contributes a two page remembrance about Filliou, his partner Marianne and their child Marcelline. She calls him warm and wise and notes that she never - in twenty years - heard him say anything trivial: 

"When he spoke it was usually of the things we care most about. He dealt with them seriously, humorously, sometimes even sadly or bitterly, at times joyously, but he always seemed to abide by the heart of the matter."

The best part of the publication is the reproduction of a drawing Filliou gifted Armin Hundertmark nearly twenty years earlier, which is where the booklet takes its title, also. 

Last month Micah Lexier posted an image of the book to his Instagram account, alongside the promotional announcement, see below. 





Primary Information Sale



 


The above image is a small selection of the titles I own from Primary Information, my favorite contemporary publisher of Artists’ Books. For the next 48 hours everything in stock is between 50 and 90% off, with virtually everything available between five and ten dollars. 

With excellent sales like this a few times a year it’s tempting to wait for one, if it weren’t for the fact that many (most?) of their titles sell out quickly, despite relatively high edition sizes. 

https://primaryinformation.org


Monday, January 12, 2026

Thomas Virnich | Ora Povera






Thomas Virnich 
Ora Povera
Düsseldorf, Germany: Chaos Editions, 1994
5 x 6.8 x 9.5 cm. 
Edition of 1499 signed and numbered copies


A reworked wristwatch with an artist-designed dial and silver and gold print, housed in a plastic box. The work is signed on the dial as well as the verso, and numbered on the inside of the bracelet.





Sunday, January 11, 2026

Barbara Bloom | Weimar. Vergangenheit,...,Zukunft und jetzt?











Weimar. Vergangenheit,...,Zukunft und jetzt?
Weimar, Germany: Stadt Weimar, 1996
21 x 16 x 4 cm
Edition size unknown


Weimar. Past…Future. And now? is a book-like box of chocolates featuring motifs of the German city of Weimar. The individually wrapped chocolates are said to be infested with small bugs. Inside of each wrapped chocolate is a strip of paper with information and images.

In 1937, the Nazis established Buchenwald concentration camp five miles from Weimar's city centre, providing slave labour for local industry, including the Wilhelm-Gustloff-Werk arms factory. The death toll between 1938 and 1945 is estimated to be 56,545. 

 
“Box of chocolates which looks like a book. Designed for the city of Weimar, Germany, uncovering its prickly history.” 
- Barbara Bloom


Saturday, January 10, 2026

Sol Lewitt | A Retrospective









Sol Lewitt
A Retrospective
New Haven/London, USA/UK: Yale University Press, 2000
416 pp. 29.8 x 25 cm., hardcover
Edition size unknown


A large catalogue/monograph for a show organized by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art which travelled to the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago and the Whitney Museum in New York. The title includes 350 images of LeWitt's work from 1960 to 2000, including wall drawings, three-dimensional structures, and works on paper. It features essays by Brenda Richardson, Martin Friedman, Anne Rorimer, Andrea Miller-Keller, John S. Weber, and Adam D. Weinberg. 






Friday, January 9, 2026

Q. And babies? A. And babies.






Artist's Poster Committee of Art Workers Coalition
Q. And babies? A. And babies. 
New York City, USA: Self-published, 1970
63.5 x 96.5 cm.
Edition size unknown


Cover-Up, the 2025 documentary about investigative journalist Seymour Hersh, features a chilling interview clip that I had read many times, but never seen: 

Mike Wallace: So you fired something like sixty-seven shots?
Paul Meadlo: Right.
Mike Wallace: And you killed how many? At that time?
Paul Meadlo: Well, I fired them automatic, so you can’t- You just spray the area on them and so you can’t know how many you killed ‘cause they were going fast. So I might have killed ten or fifteen of them.
Mike Wallace:  Men, women, and children?
Paul Meadlo: Men, women, and children.
Mike Wallace: And babies?
Paul Meadlo: And babies.

Coupled with the infamous My Lai Massacre picture taken by combat photographer Ronald L. Haeberle on March 16, 1968, the last question and answer became part of one of the most enduring and disturbing art world images of the Vietnam war. 

The Artist's Poster Committee of Art Workers Coalition presented the two word question with the identical two word answer in an enlarged, blood-red distressed font overlaid onto the colour photograph of women and children killed by US forces on a dirt road

It has been estimated that over 500 unarmed civilians were killed - some raped, tortured and mutilated before their deaths - as part of the March massacre in South Viet Nam. The story caused global outrage when it became public knowledge in November of 1969. Eventually twenty-six US soldiers were charged with criminal offenses, but only one was convicted. Despite being found guilty of killing 22 villagers, he served only three and a half years under house arrest.

The poster was produced by AWC and GAAG members Frazer Dougherty, Jon Hendricks and Irving Petlin, along with Museum of Modern Art members Arthur Drexler and Elizabeth Shaw. Unexpectedly, the MoMA had agreed to fund and circulate the poster, but it was eventually vetoed by the president of the Board of Trustees, William S. Paley (chief executive office of the CBS radio and television networks). He and fellow board member Nelson Rockefeller were both "firm supporters" of the war and had backed the Nixon administration.1 Paley reportedly "hit the ceiling" when he saw the poster proofs. Funding was cancelled and the MoMA's press release stated that the project was outside the "function" of the museum, which could not take a position on any matter not directly related to a specific function of the institution.

"We picketed and protested in front of Guernica, published 50,000 posters on our own and distributed them, free, via an informal network of artists and movement people; it has turned up all over the world," wrote AWC member Lucy Lippard in November of 1970. The poster image was broadcast on television and reprinted in newspapers, as well as carried in protest marches around the globe.

"The success of And Babies gave the AWC a sense of self-determination that MoMA’s patronage would not have offered,” Lippard later wrote, in Vietnam in Art

The AWC press release stated "Practically, the outcome is as planned: an artist-sponsored poster protesting the My-Lai massacre will receive vast distribution. But the Museum's unprecedented decision to make known, as an institution, its commitment to humanity, has been denied it.”

A second version of the poster was released when Nixon ran for re-election, with the caption changed to “Four More Years?”

The poster was included in two major MoMA exhibitions: Kynaston McShine's 1970 exhibition of conceptual art, Information; and Betsy Jones' The Artist as Adversary in 1971. It is now included in the gallery's permanent collection.



1. In the years that followed Paley would shorten a second instalment of a two-part CBS Evening News series on the Watergate, based on a request by Charles Colson, an aide to President Richard M. Nixon, and order the suspension of a critical analyses by CBS news commentators following Presidential addresses.

It was just reported this week that new head of CBS News Bari Weiss has spiked another 60 Minutes story critical of the Trump administration. 

















Thursday, January 8, 2026

Kippenberger Enquiry

 




If you’re able to help Micah Lexier out with his quest to catalogue every Martin Kippenberger Broken Centimeter, please reach out to him via Instagram