Friday, January 17, 2025

Vito Acconci | Park up a Building/House up a Building







Vito Acconci
Park up a Building/House up a Building
Cologne, Germany: Texte zur Kunst, 1996
26 x 35 x 3.5 cm.
Edition of 100 signed, numbered and dated copies [+ 20 AP]


A 264-piece photographic jigsaw puzzle housed in a clear plastic box bearing the imprint of the image which is in turn, inside a card box with paper label.






Thursday, January 16, 2025

Rodney Graham
















Rodney Graham was born on this day in 1949. 




Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Hollis Frampton | Circles of Confusion




Hollis Frampton
Circles of Confusion: Film, Photography, Video, Texts 1968-1980
Rochester, USA: Visual Studies Workshop, 1983
178 pp., 6 x 8.75"., softcover
Edition of 2000


A book of collected essays from Hollis Frampton which had previously appeared in October magazine and Artforum, with a foreword by Annette Michelson.


"It is only with the intervention of photography, along with its evolutionary progeny, film and video, that a reproducible and verifiable stream of words begins, just as the historical stream of words begin, for us, not with the articulating voice but with print, the sociable image of language. Language and image are the substance of which we are made; so it is much more than a matter of interest—it is our most inescapable and natural desire— that we undertake to invent, and to specify (using language, and even subverting it, if we can) the system of images... Eventually we may come to visualize an intellectual space in which the system of words and images will both, as Jonas Mekas once said of semiology, “seem like half of something,” a universe in which image and word, each resolving the contradictions inherent in the other, will constitute the system of consciousness."
—Hollis Frampton, preface




Tuesday, January 14, 2025

Judy Chicago | Gerowitz Rare Wood Blocks









Judy Chicago
Gerowitz Rare Wood Blocks 
Self-published, 1967 
29 x 31 x 10 cm.
Edition of 3 initialed, dated and numbered copies


Judy Chicago was born Judith Sylvia Cohen, and took her husband's name when she married Jerry Gerowitz in 1961. Two years later - when Judy was only 23 - he died in a car accident. Rather than reverting to her maiden name, the artist legally changed her name to the nickname she had been given by gallerist Rolf Nelson: Judy Chicago. 

She posted a banner across the gallery at her 1970 solo exhibition at California State University at Fullerton, that read: "Judy Gerowitz hereby divests herself of all names imposed upon her through male social dominance and chooses her own name, Judy Chicago.” The same declaration was published as an ad in ArtForum in the October 1970 issue (below). 

This work was produced three years prior to the name change. It consists of twelve Indian Rosewood blocks housed in a canvas bag, accompanied by an initialed, dated and numbered card. 

The work was drawn to my attention by Micah Lexier, who replied to AA Bronson’s question about where the three editions are located:

“One seems to be in collection of The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles and was gifted by Michael Asher, another seems to be in the collection of Museo Jumex, and another looks like it was up for auction, but not sure if that one ended up in either of those collections or is actually a third."

 

"By reducing minimalist sculpture to the scale of a child's plaything, the blocks also seem like a damning proto-feminist critique of Minimalism as a male dominated, "boys & their toys" clique, which feels especially prescient for 1967.” 
- Greg Allen, 2009







Monday, January 13, 2025

The Anders Tornberg Gallery invitations

























The Anders Tornberg Gallery in Sweden prided themselves on producing interesting ephemera as their exhibition invitations. Many on their mailing list collected them, and now they often appear on auction sites. 




Saturday, January 11, 2025

bp Nichol | Lament





bpNichol
Lament : a sound poem to the memory of D. A. Levy who took his own life, November 1968
Toronto, Canada: Ganglia Press, 1969
[24] pp., 3.6 x 5”, staple-bound
Edition size unknown


d.a. levy was an American poet, artist, and publisher based in Cleveland, Ohio. Like bpNichol, he used lower case letters in his name and published mimeographed editions of his own work, and the work of poets he admired. 

He died at the age of 26, of a self-inflicted gunshot wound on November 24, 1968, following a long legal battle over distributing “obscene poetry”. 

Published May 3rd, 1959, Nichol’s tribute Lament was previously performed as part of a reading in conjunction with the opening of an exhibition of concrete poetry at the UBC gallery the previous month. 

A second edition was released by the Writers Forum in London, in late ’69. A copy is available here, for $75.00. 





Laurie Anderson on Desert Island Discs today




I have an unusual and possibly unfair contempt for radio, and haven’t purposefully tuned in since my teens.  But I’ve always enjoyed BBC Radio’s Desert Island Discs, an archive of which is housed on the BBC website.

The series began in 1942 and is now approaching three and a half thousand episodes. The format remains largely the same, with the guest (or “castaway”) asked to choose eight recordings, a book and a luxury item that they would want with them if stranded on a desert island. 

In 2019, a panel of industry experts voted the program the greatest radio series of all time. 

I’m drawn to the show because I like to hear people talk about their work, and the ways that other culture has influenced them. 

They book mostly celebrities with occasional left field choice like a puppeteer, dog trainer, clown, death-row lawyer, medium or teddy bear expert. 

Periodically they will invite artists onto the show, mostly if they've won the Turner Prize or their work crosses over into pop culture. This is not a criticism - often artists communicate best through their work. 

Laurie Anderson’s primary medium is storytelling, so it’s surprising this is the first time she will appear on the show. She joins artists Marina Abramović, Sonia Boyce, Peter Doig, Jeremy Deller, Antony Gormley, Lubaina Himid, Steve McQueen, Yoko Ono, Grayson Perry, and Rachel Whiteread, who have all previously participated . 

The program airs today and typically can be downloaded, for free, a week or two after the initial air date.