Showing posts with label NSCAD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NSCAD. Show all posts

Friday, November 28, 2025

Dara Birnbaum | Rough Edits. Popular Image Video 1977-1980









Dara Birnbaum
Rough Edits. Popular Image Video 1977-1980
Halifax, Canada: Press of The Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, 1987
130 pp., 26.5 x 19 cm., softcover
Edition size unknown


After a two-year hiatus owing to limited funds, the Nova Scotia College of Art Press resumed publishing in 1978. President Garry Neill Kennedy invited Benjamin Buchloh to relocate from Dusseldorf and serve as editor. An admirer of the Nova Scotia Series (“I considered it to be one of the best edited and produced series in the field of contemporary art” he later wrote), he proposed the Nova Scotia Pamphlets as a companion project. 

His goal was to provide "artists who work outside traditional media an adequate form of publishing their work and to make it accessible when galleries and museums are reluctant to even consider the historical consequences that conceptual art and contemporary thinking in other fields have had on the definition of aesthetic practice in the beginning of the eighties.”

Martha Rosler’s 3 Works was published in 1980 and was followed by Gerhard Richter’s 128 Details from a Picture and Jenny Holzer’s Truisms and Essays

The fourth and final pamphlet was Rough Edits: Popular Image Video Works - 1977-1980. The booklet was based on a seminar Birnbaum gave when she taught at the school in the late seventies. Some biographies suggest that it was while teaching at NSCAD that she first began producing the edited video works that she became known for. 

This publication - one of the artist’s earliest - explores these early television appropriation works, with stills from Kiss the Girls: Make them Cry (1979) and the iconic Technology/Transformation: Wonder Woman (1978-79). Birnbaum describes these works as 

Recognized as one of the first video artists to employ the appropriation of television images as a subversive strategy, Birnbaum recontextualizes pop cultural icons and TV genres ( to reveal their subtexts. Birnbaum describes her tapes as new “ready-mades for the late 20th Century” and as works that “manipulate a medium which is itself highly manipulative.”

The reader also features interviews with the artist and an essay by Norman Klein titled Audience Culture and the Video Screen.

Birnbaum died May 2nd of this year, at the age of 78. 



Wednesday, August 7, 2024

Lee Ranaldo and Leah Singer








Last week Lee Ranaldo and Leah Singer visited Sackville to perform at Sappyfest. Lee played his Hurricane Transcription piece on the Mount Alison Chapel organ (a wind-powered instrument to present a piece about the wind, Leah noted), accompanied by the debut of Leah’s film Motel Glitch, which looked great in front of the stained glass windows of the venue. 

We visited the few places we take all our guests: Guy’s Frenchys thrift store, Amy’s Books (where half the titles are shelved spine-out for some reason), the UNESCO site Joggins Fossil Cliffs, and (at the urging of Julie Doiron) Dorchester Cape, where we found a huge field of wild blueberries. 

The loaded us up with a very generous stack of gifts, including five prints they produced during a residency at NSCAD, three LPs, a book, a score, and a not-yet-released cassette. I’ll try to get to as many of them as possible in the coming days. 





Friday, February 10, 2023

Simone Forti | Handbook in Motion






Simone Forti
Handbook in Motion
Halifax, Canada: The Press of the Nova Scotia College 
of Art and Design, 1974
143 pp., 22.5 x 17 cm., softcover
Edition size unknown


Handbook in Motion documents the artist's early conceptual dance work with photographs, drawings, and texts, many of which are handwritten, covering work from the years 1959 – 1973.

It is one of the earlier titles published by the influential NSCAD Press, which also published classic bookworks by Michael Snow, Jenny Holzer, Dan Graham, Steve Reich, Gerhard Richter, and Yvonne Rainer (who credits Forti with being instrumental to the Judson Dance Theater: "Simone was its inspiration and fountainhead. We all owe her.")

After apprenticing with Anna Halprin in the 1950s, Forti went on to work alongside artists and composers such as Nam June Paik,  La Monte Young, Trisha Brown, Charlemagne Palestine, Peter Van Riper, Dan Graham, Yoshi Wada, and Robert Morris. Her other publications include Angel (1978), and Oh Tongue (2003). 

Yesterday she was awarded the Golden Lion for lifetime achievement in the field of dance from the Venice Biennale, at the age of 87. 

“I didn’t know what the Golden Lion was,” she told the New York Times, “[but] if someone has to take the role and stand there holding it, I am honoured to be the one to do it for the community.”


The first edition of Handbook in Motion sells for between $150 and $200 but the title was reprinted in 2021 and available for a tenth that price. A full scan of the title can be downloaded here, for free. 






Monday, November 14, 2022

David Askevold | Projects Class










David Askevold
Projects Class 
Halifax, Canada: Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, 1969
[12] pp., 13 x 19 cm., loose leaves in rubber-stamped envelope
Edition size unknown


David Askevold began teaching at the Nova Scotia College of Arts and Design in 1968 and the following year developed the idea for his Projects Class. Originally hired to teach a Foundation year course in Sculpture, Askevold took advantage of the number of conceptually-based artists who had visited the school at that time, including James Lee Byars, Dan Graham, Lawrence Weiner and Joseph Kosuth. When he bumped into Weiner in New York City he pitched the idea of approaching artists to submit proposals for the students to manifest. Together they secured the involvement of many of the world's most innovative conceptual artists at the time: Robert Barry, Mel Bochner, Jan Dibbets, Graham, Sol Lewitt, N.E. Thing Co., Byars, Robert Smithson, Doug Huebler, Lucy Lippard, Kosuth, and Weiner himself.

Askevold said "My idea at the time, as an instructor of art, was to bring students closer to the sensibilities of practicing contemporary artists by engaging them directly with the work." He planned to serve mostly as a moderator, monitor, or "midwife" to the process. The original concept involved the artists visiting the school, but when that became too costly, his compromise was to operate through the mail and via the telephone.

Several of these artists also participated in the Art By Telephone project at the Chicago MOCA that same year. Art By Telephone followed a similar premise, in which the gallery staff realized the works from the artists’ instructions, with a nod to Laszlo Moholy-Nagy’s 1922 Telephone Paintings, which were made by a sign manufacturer according to specifications that the artist dictated over the phone.

The projects were submitted on typed or handwritten cards, and the students enacted the works in a collaborative manner. This exchange helped initiate a pedagogical shift, where the idea of teaching or engaging with a class could itself be viewed as a work of art.

Jan Dibbets’ asked the students to document the shadows of trees every ten minutes. Mel Bochner had them measure the classroom in height, length, volume, temperature, humidity, illumination, etc. He closed his text with the statement “It doesn’t matter to me what the specific details are, or how they are presented”.

Lucy Lippard, whose curatorial project Groups at the New York School of Visual Art earlier in the year was a precursor of sorts to Projects Class, contributed the following:

"A. A group of people (anywhere from five to fifteen) are photographed in the same place and approximately the same position in relation to each other every day at the same hour for two weeks. (No diversion from the conventional group photograph taken for school yearbooks, Knights of Columbus annual picnics, etc.) The people need not wear the same clothes or pose exactly the same way each day, but the immediate impression should be almost identical.


B. These photographs are developed and dated (a record about what one person is wearing each day, or something similar, should be kept each day so that the dates will be accurate.); each photograph is then described in writing, in detail, either by the person (or persons) who took the pictures or by someone who was not present at the picture taking. (Note which case was chosen.)


C. Put the photographs together with the texts in one of the following manners: 
1. Both pictures and texts in chronological order.
2. Pictures in chronological order, but texts scrambled (they are still dated though).
3. Texts in chronological order but pictures scrambled (and dated).
4. Scramble the whole thing in some totally random manner so that sometimes pictures are with their proper texts and sometimes not (still dated), and so that the time sequence is broken entirely: “illustration” and text diverge. If more than one person is doing the project, each one should take a different last step (and take his own photographs of different groups from the others)."

Robert Smithson’s Mud Flow called for “1000 tons of mud dumped from a dump truck over a rocky or stony cliff”. Robert Barry’s piece is known only to the students who conceived of it.

One of Askevold’s favorite proposals was Douglas Huebler’s Variable Piece #5, which asked that the students create a myth. They responded by creating another art school, the fictitious Haliburton. An ad in Artforum announced the institution, which was accepting students with “limited availability”. A dozen or so artists (who were not forewarned) were listed as teaching there. The only one they heard back from was Frank Stella, via his lawyer, who demanded they “take his name off this thing”. 

The class ran from 1969 to 1972, when Askevold took a sabbatical to visit London, England. He arranged to have Graham, Byars, Dennis Oppenheim and Vito Acconci replace him, each for six weeks at a time.  The project helped to initiate a very extensive visiting artists program, which in turn put NSCAD on the map as a centre of innovative teaching practices and conceptual art in general.

Bruce Barber called NSCAD “one of the pre-eminent art schools in the world, arguably as important a centre in its own time as the Bauhaus and Black Mountain College had been for the fostering and dissemination of contemporary avant-garde activity” and Askevold's Projects Class is often identified as “the most innovative and interesting aspect of the NSCAD curriculum of the period,” (Gil McElroy, ARTSatlantic, Spring/Summer 1996).

The Art Metropole collection at the National Gallery of Canada houses both the original handwritten and typed cards and letters, and the above multiple, which is now valued at upwards of $5000, depending on condition. 

Askevold’s essay on the class can be read here

Monday, March 28, 2022

Sunday, February 20, 2022

Dan Graham | Video - Architecture - Television




Dan Graham
Video - Architecture - Television 
Zurich, Switzerland: Lars Müller Publishers, 2013
96 pp., 28 x 21.6 cm., softcover
Edition size unknown


Dan Graham’s affiliation with the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design in Halifax dates back to 1969, when he produced two of his earliest film and video performance works (From Sunset to Sunrise and Two Correlated Positions) using the college’s video equipment. He made several trips as a visiting artist and his second solo exhibition was held at the school's Anna Leonowens Gallery in 1970.

"He was a fixture, almost, at NSCAD", noted Garry Neill Kennedy, who was appointed President of the college in 1967 and immediately began transforming the school into an international centre for artistic activity. He instituted an aggressive and well-funded visiting artist program, inviting such artists as Vito Acconci, Sol LeWitt, Lawrence Weiner, Joseph Beuys and Claes Oldenburg to speak and to interact with the students. Professional quality facilities, such as the lithography workshop and new multi-media equipment, made visiting the remote small town attractive to artists. Graham advised that an active publishing press could continue these mutually beneficial relationships.

"Dan Graham was a kind of intellectual ambassador, identifying with this weird place in Halifax. Many people didn't even know where Halifax was. It was more about identifying with a place that makes things happen," says Kasper Koenig, who was hired as editor of the press, at Graham's urging. Along with his brother, bookseller Walther Koenig, Kasper had previously published books with artists such as Stanley Brouwn, Gilbert & George, Franz Erhard Walther, Robert Filliou and Jan Dibbets. At a young age he had curated exhibitions at the Moderna Museet in Stockholm by Claes Oldenburg and Andy Warhol. The accompanying catalogue for the latter show was an integral component of the exhibition and is now regarded as a classic artists’ publication (with prices ranging from several hundred dollars for later printings and several thousand for signed copies).

Koenig was made an associate professor and offered the role of editor/director of the press. He accepted, he says, because the school was "open and without fear". Between the years 1972 and 1976 the press published nine books with Koenig, under the banner name of "Source Materials for the Contemporary Arts". Five were by visual artists, two by dancers (Yvonne Rainer and Simone Forti), and one by composer Steve Reich (artist and composer La Monte Young was also invited to produce a title, but his proposed project was deemed too costly). The books by artists are all now considered classics: Raw Notes by Claes Oldenburg, Framing and Being Framed by Hans Haacke, two volumes by Donald Judd (one of his writings, another his drawings) and Michael Snow's Cover to Cover

Financial troubles in '76 led to the resignation of Koenig and a two year period of inactivity. In 1978 Benjamin Buchloh from Dusseldorf, then best known as the editor of the influential Interfunktionen magazine, was brought in as editor of the press and part-time faculty member in art history. In addition to finishing up two books initiated before his arrival, he published five titles with the press, including Graham's Video – Architecture – Television

Subtitled Writings on Video and Video Works 1970-1978, the book documents the artist's use of video equipment as a functional tool in sculptural installations, environmental concepts and performative activities. Each work is illustrated with either drawing, photograph, or both, as well as a brief description. The title features contributions by Michael Asher and Dara Birnbaum - both artists Graham had suggested be brought to NSCAD to speak - as well as Graham's own Essay on Video, Architecture and Television, in which he discusses video as a medium distinct from film. 

"Film," he writes, "is a reflection of a reality external to the spectator's body; the spectator's body is out of the frame." Conversely, he calls video a "present-time medium" and argues that "In a live-video-situation, the spectator may be included within the frame at one moment, or be out of the frame at another". The text also examines the difference between private and corporate video production, and argues in favour of the integration of the former into public cable TV stations' programming schedules. 

The book, an important document in Graham's examination of the video medium, has long been out of print and has been selling for upwards of $350. This paperback reprint arrived in 2013 from  Lars Müller Publishers, with a new introduction by Eric de Bruyn. 

It is available from them, here, for €32.00.


Dan Graham died yesterday, at the age of 79. 



Friday, November 26, 2021

Garry Neill Kennedy






















When Garry Neill Kennedy died on August 8th I was kind of at a loss for words, and found myself waiting for the obituaries to pour in before posting. Surprisingly, this didn't really happen. There were one or two local things, but given his importance as an artist, as an educator, and to the history of NSCAD and conceptual art in this country, it was shocking how little attention was paid. Hopefully some longer pieces are in the works. 

Tomorrow, Art Metropole - who have a long, rich history with Kennedy - will host a celebration of his life, both in their brand new location, and as a Zoom Webinar. 

Due to limited space, particularly due to COVID19, the store is now at capacity. 

Register in advance to join the Zoom call, here: 


The event takes place Saturday, November 27th at 2PM EST. 

Tuesday, August 31, 2021

James Lee Byars | I’m collecting questions







James Lee Byars
I’m collecting questions
Croton, USA: Hudson Institute, 1969
43.2 x 28 cm.
Edition size unknown

A questionnaire from the artist's brilliant World Question Centre (see earlier post, here) that states "I’m collecting questions. Please list yours and send to Byars (Temp. Art. in Res.) Hud. Inst. Croton, N.Y. 10520".



"So running the World Question Center I tried many things. I tried as I said street-tests, I went to schools. My biggest amazement was Columbia where I managed to hand out probably 1000 of the questionnaires which said, were regular size paper simply saying at the top “I’m collecting Questions. List yours.” And the return address of the Hudson Institute and so forth and then the numbers one to one-hundred down the side. On the reverse side there was a small ‘?’ in the middle of the page. It is interesting that I got only one return from Columbia. One questionnaire. But people dislike paper, I expect a lot of prejudice for that. So I don’t know if that’s a reasonable statistic or not."

- James Lee Byars, Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, April 21, 1970

Tuesday, February 2, 2021

Michael Snow | Cover to Cover




Michael Snow
Cover to Cover
New York City, USA: Primary Information/Light Industry, 2020
[316] pp., 7 x 9”, softcover
Edition of 2500

In the history of contemporary Canadian Art, the legacy of the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design is legendary. It’s impossible to discuss pedagogy, Conceptual Art or Artists’ Publications in the country without reference to Garry Neill Kennedy’s time as president of NSCAD. Fresh out of grad school and only thirty-one years old, the artist became the youngest ever president of a Canadian University. 

He immediately moved to remake the college from a provincial art school into an internationally acclaimed epicentre of arts education. Art in America magazine called NSCAD "the best art school in North America” in 1973. In 2012, the MIT Press published a five-hundred page coffee table book on the first decade after Kennedy arrived. The legacy looms so large that it is resented by many current faculty members and students (presumably in part because the history is predominantly white and male.)1

The visiting artists series was hugely important to the school’s reputation, as was the Lithography workshop, but for me the sustained legacy is rooted in the brilliant decision to begin a publishing press at the College.

Between 1972 and 1987, the NSCAD Press published 26 titles by painters, sculptors, filmmakers, dancers, a composer, etc. These include books by Michael Asher, Dara Birnbaum, Daniel Buren, Gerald Ferguson, Simone Forti, Hollis Frampton, Dan Graham, Hans Haacke, Jenny Holzer, Donald Judd, Bernhard Leitner, Claes Oldenberg, Yvonne Rainer2, Gerhard Richter, Martha Rosler, Steve Reich, and Lawrence Weiner, among others. All are now considered classics and are difficult to find, and expensive to purchase on the secondary market. 

Arguably, the most significant of these is Michael Snow’s Cover to Cover. 

“The Nova Scotia College of Art and Design began a press with Kasper Konig as the director, and they put out some really wonderful things, which were mostly artists’ statements about their work,” Snow told me in 20123. “I was asked to do something, which was very nice but I thought, I don’t want to do that. I want to do a work. I didn’t want something about my work, but something that was an example of it.”

The artist then began studying books for what he called their “bookishness” and eventually determined that his guiding principle would be the “recto-verso” aspect of the codex. The term is derived from the Latin “rēctō foliō” and “versō foliō”, which translate as "on the right side of the leaf" and "on the back side of the leaf”:

“One thing is that the pages are two-sided. There’s always an ‘other’ side. That led me to the idea of having two cameras take a subject, placing one image on one side, and the other camera’s view on the opposing side, exactly the same size. Then, you get a true physical contact with the two-dimensionality of photographs, and you experience the compression that’s involved in photography, which mostly vanishes in the face of the realism of it.” 

With a working title of Cover to Cover/Over and Over4, the book can be read forwards and backwards and eventually upside down. It consists entirely of photographs, including the front and back covers. The only disruption to the photographic flow of the book is the spine, on which the artist’s name and title appears. Even the colophon information is presented diegetically - appearing on a sheet of paper inside a typewriter, many pages into the book.  

The artist told the National Gallery of Canada in 1967 that “My paintings are done by a filmmaker, my sculpture by a musician, my films by a painter, my music by a filmmaker, my paintings by a sculptor, my sculpture by a filmmaker, my films by a musician, my music by a sculptor… who sometimes all work together.” Despite the fact that this is a bookwork through-and-through, the statement holds true for Cover to Cover - the work has a clear cinematic quality, and Snow described the book to me as being “a quasi-movie”.

Beyond being the most significant publication of the NSCAD Press, Cover to Cover is one of the most significant and quintessential titles in the entire arena of artists’ books. If I were advising an institution starting a collection of books by artists, Cover to Cover would be first on the list. Yet it was a title I have never owned myself. The first copy I saw for sale was $75, which at the time was just out of my price range. By the time that was no longer the case, the book’s value had doubled. Well over a decade ago, when I was with Art Metropole, we had a copy and took it to the Basel Art Fair. We priced it at $300 US and it sold the first minute of the fair. 

Currently, the softcover is listed at between $600 and $750 US, and the hardcover is double that. Luckily, the long out-of-print rarity is now available in a facsimile edition from Primary Information, in collaboration with Light Industry. The project is almost ten years in the making. In my 2012 interview with Snow I asked about a possible reprint, and he replied: 

“There’s a publisher in New York who put out, recently, a boxed set of facsimile reprints of Avalanche magazine. The publisher [James Hoff] worked at Printed Matter for a while, and he asked me about reprinting Cover to Cover with them. What they did with Avalanche was really wonderful.”

Primary Information do indeed get the details right and this faithful reproduction is another reason why they are easily the most essential publisher of rare and classic bookworks. The book can be had for the very affordable price of $25 US, here



1. Though less celebrated that the male art stars of the day (Sol Lewitt, Lawrence Weiner, Dan Graham, John Baldessari, Joseph Beuys, Vito Acconci, etc.) the school also worked with important women artists such as Alice Aycock, Dara Birnbaum, Carol Conde, Agnes Denes, Simone Forti, Jenny Holzer, Lucy Lippard, Lee Lozano, Yvonne Rainer, Martha Rosler, Joyce Weiland, and Martha Wilson, among others. 

2. Rainer’s NSCAD Press title was released as a facsimile reprint by Primary Information in February of last year.  A reprint of Michael Asher : Writings 1973 - 1983 on Works 1969 - 1979 is forthcoming. 


4. The Michael Snow Fonds, Box 70, Folder 2 indicates that several other titles were briefly considered: Door to Door, The Book of Sides, On the Other Hand, The 2 Faced Book, etc. 




Monday, November 30, 2020

Eleanor Antin | Library Science








Eleanor Antin
Library Science
Halifax, Canada: NSCAD, 1972
7.5 x 12.5 cm.
Edition size unknown


An invitation to Antin's week-long exhibition show "Library Science" at NSCAD, which was held from February 1 to 9, 1972. For the exhibition, Antin appropriated the Library of Congress’s classification system to classify “a sub-set of the world of people” (i.e. women). 

The exhibition invitation mimicked Library Card Catalogue systems, something Antin also did for shows in Glendale and Valencia. 


“Each participant in the exhibition of women artists was asked to provide me with a ‘piece of information’ of any form that she felt appropriate at this time. Twenty-six participants repsonded. Each 'piece of information’ (object or document) was classified for subject as a book in accordance with the classificational system of the Library of Congress…All of the 'pieces of information’ were exhibited beside their 'subject catalogue cards.’” 
- Eleanor Antin

Saturday, November 21, 2020

Gerald Ferguson | Selected Works





Gerald Ferguson
Selected Works
Halifax, Canada: Anna Leonoewens Gallery/Nova Scotia School of Art and Design, 1974
14 pp., 8vo., staple-bound
Edition size unknown

From a twelve-day exhibition held in March of 1974, this slim publication documents work from 1969 to 1973. Ferguson, who arrived in Halifax in 1969, and taught at NSCAD until 2006, was one of the preeminent Canadian conceptual artists, and a primary force behind the rise of the school's influence. 

Available on Ebay, for $330 US, here


Wednesday, November 20, 2019

David Plattzker talk at NSCAD tomorrow




New York City-based curator David Platzker will present a lecture at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design tomorrow evening.

One of the leading authorities on artists' books and multiples, Platzker is the Director of Specific Object, an innovative gallery, bookshop, and storehouse for a range of items from artists’ publications. He was previously the Curator of Drawings and Prints at The Museum of Modern Art, New York from 2013-2018, and the executive director of Printed Matter from 1998 to 2004. Prior to that has also held positions at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles and the Guggenheim Museum.

His curatorial projects at Specific Object and Printed Matter included shows of John Baldessari, Hanne Darboven, Marcel Duchamp, Guerrilla Girls, Jenny Holzer, Yoko Ono, Raymond Pettibon, Ed Ruscha, and Claes Oldenburg. At MoMA he co-curated There Will Never Be Silence: Scoring John Cage’s 4’33” in collaboration with Jon Hendricks; Sites of Reason (2014) with Erica Papernik; and in 2015 the exhibition Gilbert & George: The Early Years.

His publications include Printed Stuff: Prints, Poster, and Ephemera by Claes Oldenburg A Catalogue Raisonne 1958-1996, Hard Pressed: 600 Years of Prints and Process, Yoko Ono: One Woman Show, 1960–1971, Adrian Piper: A Synthesis of Intuitions 1965–2016, among others.

The talk takes place Thursday, November 21, at 7:30 p.m., at Art Bar +Projects, Fountain Campus, (1873 Granville St, Halifax, NS).





Friday, August 2, 2019

The Halifax Conference Book Launch



Craig Leonard
The Halifax Conference
Vancouver/Los Angeles, Canada/USA: New Documents, 2019
184 pp., 12 x 19 cm., softcover
Edition size unknown


This book just arrived in the mail today from New Documents, and launches tonight at Art Metropole.

"Adapted" by Halifax-based artist Craig Leonard, the book is the transcription of a notorious conference held in October of 1970, at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design. Organized by curator Seth Siegelaub, the Conference was conceived as a means of bringing about a “meeting of artists…[from] diverse art making experiences and art positions…in as general a situation as possible.”

Participants included Carl Andre, Joseph Beuys, Daniel Buren, Gene Davis, Jan Dibbets, Al Held, Mario Merz, Robert Morris, Robert Murray, Iain and Ingrid Baxter of N.E.Thing Co., Richard Serra, Richard Smith, Robert Smithson, Michael Snow, and Lawrence Weiner. The event was held in the college’s 6th floor boardroom, while around 500 students, faculty and other curious parties crammed into the gallery to watch the proceedings on a video monitor.

The conversation soon devolved into farce, both because of the poor sound quality of the live feed, and because of some opposition to the event, from both spectators and participants.

Reports at the time, and the subsequent mythological status of the conference, all indicate that several of the artists refused to allow NSCAD to record or transcribe the event, so I'm not yet clear if Leonard's "adaptation" is fictional or not. Publisher New Documents have also released some previous titles that blur the line between art history, investigative journalism and artists' books (such Walter Benjamin: Recent Writings and Bas Jan Ader Discovery File).

Find out tonight between 7 and 8:30pm at Art Metropole.

Sunday, July 29, 2018

Jenny Holzer | Abuse of Power Comes as No Surprise







Jenny Holzer
Abuse of Power Comes as No Surprise
Halifax, Canada: The Press of The Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, 1983
[136] pp., 8.5 × 8.5 × 0.5", softcover
Edition size unknown

An early artist book by Holzer, whose full title is Abuse of Power Comes as No Surprise - Truisms and Essays, featuring texts in English, French, German and Spanish.

Holzer celebrates her 68th birthday today.

Wednesday, June 15, 2016

Garry Neill Kennedy | The Big Five










Garry Neill Kennedy
The Big Five
Toronto, Canada: Nothing Else Press, 2016
five coasters in a printed sleeve
13 x 13 cm.
Edition of 50 signed, numbered and dated copies

The Nothing Else Press is pleased to announce a new artists' multiple by one of Canada’s most prominent and pioneering contemporary artists.

The country's five largest banks (in terms of assets, deposits and capitalization) are the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, the Royal Bank of Canada, Toronto Dominion, the Bank of Montreal and Scotiabank. Together they account for more than 85% of the banking industry in Canada.

Kennedy, whose work has often explored institutional power and the political implications of colour, has reassigned the colour schemes of the bank's corporate logos,  shifting them one down the financial ladder. The CIBC logo appears in RBC colours, the RBC in TD colours, TD in Scotiabank colours, etc., thus disrupting the institutions' corporate identities.


Garry Neill Kennedy is a recipient of the Order of Canada (2003) and the Governor General's Award in Visual and Media Arts (2004). In addition to an extensive international exhibition history, Kennedy was the president of the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design for twenty-three years (1967-1990), establishing NSCAD as a forerunner in art education. Recently, MIT Press invited Kennedy to author a book, The Last Art College, NSCAD (1968-1978) which chronicles the first decade of his presidency. In 2012, the National Gallery of Canada published the catalogue raisonné Garry Neill Kennedy: Printed Matter, 1971 –2009. Kennedy is represented in Toronto by Diaz Contemporary

The edition will launch this week at the Toronto Art Book Fair. Visit www.nothingelsepress.com to place an order.