Wednesday, April 2, 2025

Herman de Vries | Rationele Structuren 1969















Herman de Vries
Rationele Structuren 1969
Apeldoorn, Gemeentelijke: Van Reekum Galerij, 1969
12 pp., 22 x 16.5 cm., staple-bound
Edition size unknown


A rare early exhibition brochure by Herman de Vries, published to coincide with the show Random Objectivations which was held in early 1969 at the Gemeentelijke van Reekum Galerij in Apeldoorn. The twelve-page booklet is illustrated with eight sculptures of objectivations and a portrait of the artist. It also includes a list of the artwork featured in the exhibition. The text is in Dutch. 

Available from The Idea of the Book, here, for £131.33.





Tuesday, April 1, 2025

Cindy Sherman | Madame de Pompadour (née Poisson)











Cindy Sherman
Madame de Pompadour (née Poisson)
New York City, USA: Artes Magnus, 1990
36.8 x 55.9 x 28.6 cm.
Edition of 75 


A 21-piece breakfast tea service, with a setting for six: cups and saucers, breakfast/dessert plates, a teapot, creamer and covered sugar bowl. Produced in an edition of 75 in each colour: yellow, Pompadour pink, apple green and royal blue. 

Still available from the publisher (thirty-five years later) for ten grand. If this seems steep, an incomplete set sold at Christies earlier this year for $32,760 US. 


"This limited-edition tureen was manufactured in the famed pottery factory at Limoges, France, according to designs by the noted contemporary American photographer Cindy Sherman. The highly embellished Rococo style of the tureen became popular during the reign of the French king Louis XV (1715–1774), and porcelain was an important vehicle for its spread throughout Europe. The object is decorated with printed photographic images of Sherman in the guise of Madame de Pompadour, a mistress of Louis XV’s and an avid collector of porcelain. These images are typical of Sherman’s work: the artist is known for turning the camera on herself in order to raise questions about a variety of issues, particularly the role of women in society. Madame de Pompadour’s maiden name was Poisson, French for “fish,” and the interior bottom of the tureen is embellished with a still-life image that combines fish with luxurious jewelry in an amusing reference to both Pompadour and her social status.”
- Brooklyn Museum




Monday, March 31, 2025

Dan Graham














Dan Graham was born on this day, in 1942.








Sunday, March 30, 2025

Panamarenko | Das Flug Zeug











Panamarenko
Das Flug Zeug
Monchengladbach, Germany: Stadtisches Museum Monchengladbach, 1969
21 x 17 x 3 cm.
Edition of 330 numbered copies


Last week I gave a talk to Amish Morrell’s OCADU Publishing class and spoke about, amongst other things, the brilliant boxed Stadtisches Museum catalogues. Today I came across an earlier Powerpoint presentation from a talk I gave to his class eight years ago. It also included the same works. 

I first featured them here eleven years ago, and with any excuse will repost them (such as a new photograph, or scrap of information). 

The series began in 1967, when Joseph Beuys was invited to present his first ever museum solo exhibition at the Stadtisches Museum in Mönchengladbach, Germany. There were no funds in the budget for an accompanying catalogue, just a small brochure printed on the cheapest paper stock.

Beuys - who had published a boxed work with Edition Rene Block the year prior - proposed a catalogue/multiple hybrid, and the influential series was born.

Rather than illustrate the exhibitions, the boxed works were typically an independent artistic project, some without any reference to the accompanying show at all. Many did include essays and exhibition check lists, but they might also contain found objects, an artists’ production or other interventions into the format.

The Stadtisches series continued into the mid-eighties when the curator left the museum. In eighteen years the institution produced thirty-five boxed publications, playing an important contribution in the evolution of the artists’ catalogue.

One of the simplest and most effective is Das Flug Zeug by Panamarenko. The work consists of a cardboard box with a photograph of the artist next to a Dakota airplane glued to the cover. A single-page of text about the exhibition is glued to the underside of the box. Inside is a rolled parcel string affixed to both the box and lid, by adhesive tape. The string’s length is identical to the wingspan of the largest of the aircrafts presented in the exhibition. 





Saturday, March 29, 2025

Geza Perneczky | Stamp International (Secret)










Géza Perneczky
Stamp International (Secret)
Cologne, Germany: Self-published, 1980
[16] pp., 10.5 x 15 cm., loose-leaves
Edition size unknown


A set of eight artists’ postcards each featuring the word ‘Secret’ rubber-stamped in white in eight different languages (Arabic, Bulgarian, English, German, Hebrew, Hungarian, Japanese, and Spanish) housed in a C6 envelope rubber-stamped with the title. 




Friday, March 28, 2025

KAWS /Brian Donnelly | Bendy (Red)






KAWS /Brian Donnelly
Bendy (Red)
Tokyo, Japan: Medicom Toy, 2003
33 x 7 x 3 cm.
Open edition


A painted vinyl multiple produced in an unlimited edition, housed in a clear acrylic box. The work was also available in blue, yellow and green. 





Thursday, March 27, 2025

Nona Faustine | White Shoes








Nona Faustine
White Shoes
London, UK: MACK, 2021
72 pp., 30 x 29 cm., hardcover
Edition size unknown


Nona Faustine first began the White Shoes series after reading about Sarah Baartman, an enslaved Khoekhoe woman who was exhibited as a freak show attraction in 19th-century Europe, under the name Hottentot Venus. In the series, the artist photographed herself naked except for a pair of white high heels in each of New York City’s five boroughs, in locations historically associated with the slave trade. 

The large-format self-portraits take place in public, at the sites of former burial grounds, the farms of slave-owners and locations where slaves ships docked. The most notorious image features Faustine in the freezing cold, naked but for a pair of white pumps, in the middle of the intersection at 74 Wall Street (Seamen's Savings Bank) where enslaved people were once auctioned. 

Faustine died a week ago today, in New York. She was forty-eight. Her death was announced by her gallerist Higher Pictures, and no cause was given.