Sunday, December 7, 2025

Martin Parr








Martin Parr died yesterday, at the age of 73. 





Saturday, December 6, 2025

John Latham | Early Works 1954 - 1972




John Latham
Early Works 1954 - 1972
London, UK: Lisson Gallery, 1987
40 pp., 10.04 x 0.39 x 8.46”, softcover
Edition of 1200


A catalogue published on the occasion of a John Latham exhibition held at the Lisson Gallery,
January 14th to March 14th, 1987. 


"No product of the sixties phenomenon ‘concept art’? produced anywhere survives with the distinction of Latham’s piece on Clement Greenberg’s Art and Culture (1965). For those too young to remember this historic happening I should say that it began with a party held in 1966 1n which students and friends of Latham chewed pages of Greenberg’s book (borrowed from the library of St Martin’s School of Art) and spat the pulp into a centrally placed bowl. The fermented mash was distilled and the resultant spirit of Art and Culture was offered to the library in a test tube in 1967 in reply to a request for the return of an overdue loan; Latham was sacked from his teaching job — but the work is now part of the collection of the Museum of Modern Art, NY."
- Richard Hamilton, introduction





Friday, December 5, 2025

STAMPS IN PRAXIS












[Guy Schraenen]
STAMPS IN PRAXIS
Antwerp, Belgium: Archive Small Press & Communication, 1977
[12] pp., 21.5 x 15.5 cm., softcover
Edition of 200


An exhibition catalogue produced to accompan a show organized by Guy Schraenen at Galerie Kontakt, Antwerpen, in November 1977 and at Stempelplaats, Amsterdam in January 1978. The exhibitions featured original stamps collected on correspondence, documents and in publications.


“The major part of the stamps presented in this exhibition were collected since 1975 in our daily mail, some were found in publications remaining in the Archive.

The exhibition is divided in three parts:
1/ Stamps in correspondance and documents.
2/ Publications where original stamps are used principally or partly as printing process.
3/ Original stamps in publications.

Contrary to other stamp art exhibitions, which mainly showed, not the use of stamps, but the “stamps”, our purpose was to show how stamps are used in praxis as art, in mail art, as message or as ornamentation.

In small press and in artist’s publication stamps are wildly used because no printers or expensive technics are involved. Stamps also have the advantage to give color and image to printing.
In an other exhibition “printing processes in the small press”, which will be organised in the future, a large part will be consecrated to the use of stamps as typography.” 
— Guy Schraenen




Thursday, December 4, 2025

Barbara Bloom | A Birthday Party for Everything










Barbara Bloom
A Birthday Party for Everything
New York City, USA: I.C. Editions, 1999
12.1 x 49.1 x 29.6 cm. 
Unlimited Edition


We had a copy of this work when I was at Art Metropole (I think it quickly sold to the AGO) and I couldn’t make heads or tails of it. It seemed like a cheap box of cheap dollar store party items and the gallerist's description does nothing to disabuse me of this notion: 

“Barbara Bloom's A Birthday Party for Everything includes the essential ingredients for a picture-perfect party in a convenient carrying case. 
 
No occasion would be complete without party hats and horns, plates, cups, napkins, and favors including puzzles, frisbees, wooden tops, yo-yos, kaleidoscopes, pinwheels, fans, bubbles, candy, and balloons. The artist makes this party her own and ours by festooning each surface with images ranging from the sub-atomic to the universal, from molecular structures to bodily systems to street maps to cityscapes to world views to the moon.
 
A Birthday Party for Everything is quite simply a celebration of life.”



Wednesday, December 3, 2025

2012 Olympic Posters











Every year since 1912, the city hosting the Olympics or Paralympic Games commissioned at least one poster project to celebrate. A hundred years later, London commissioned twelve posters, by some of the most acclaimed British visual artists of the day. These include Fiona Banner (pictured below), Michael Craig-Martin, Martin Creed (below, bottom), Tracey Emin (below), Anthea Hamilton, Howard Hodgkin, Gary Hume, Sarah Morris, Chris Ofili, Bridget Riley, Bob and Roberta Smith (below) and Rachel Whiteread. The Tate Modern held an exhibition of the works to coincide with the 2012 games. 

The Olympic posters: 

Martin Creed "Work No. 1273”
Anthea Hamilton “Divers"
Howard Hodgkin “Swimming"
Chris Ofili "For the Unknown Runner”
Bridget Riley "Rose Rose”
Rachel Whiteread "LOndOn 2O12.”

The Paralympic posters:

Fiona Banner "Superhuman Nude”
Michael Craig-Martin “GO"
Tracey Emin "Birds 2012”
Gary Hume“Capital"
Sarah Morris "Big Ben 2012”
Bob and Roberta Smith "LOVE.”

Martin Creed also created “Work No. 1197: All the Bells in a Country Rung as Loudly as Possible for Three Minutes,” to take place from 8 to 8:03 a.m. on July 27, the first day of the Olympics. The festival’s web site explained that the idea was to encourage the entire nation “to ring thousands of bells at the same time, whether school bells, church bells, town hall bells, bicycle bells or doorbells.

The Central Council of Church Bell Ringers refused to participate n the project, stating "We are not able to work closely with this project as we believe it is misconceived … We think 8am is not the right time for ringing in very many towers … We do not believe ringing for three minutes nor ringing as fast as possible is really suitable for church bell ringers.” 

A smaller group of enthusiasts visited the clock tower known as Big Ben and brought their own bells. Watch the short video, here









Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Donate to Art Metropole





"As Art Metropole concludes our 51st year of operations, we would like to extend a thank you to the members of our community who made this year so special through attending our programs, collaborating with us on exhibitions and publications, and supporting the artist-run culture that Art Metropole champions.

With your support in 2025, were able to distribute over 5000 artists’ books, multiples, and other editions by artists through our retail shop, pop-ups, and presence at art book fairs, attending 8 fairs in Canada and internationally to ensure the distribution of Canadian artists’ books to wide audiences."

Donate here: 

Lawrence Weiner










Lawrence Weiner died on this day, four years ago.