Monday, December 23, 2024

New Yoko Ono Phaidon monograph








[Yoko Ono, Laurie Anderson, Eriko Osaka, Theirry Raspail]
Yoko Ono
London, UK: Phaidon, 2024
160 pp., 25 x 29 x 1.5 cm., softcover
Edition size unknown


The Phaidon Contemporary Artists Series is a consistently reliable collection of monographs surveying important contemporary artists. Titles in the series each include an interview, survey, focus, artist’s writings, “artist’s choice”, and an extensive chronology. They feature good reproductions, thoughtful writings and - perhaps most importantly - excellent distribution, bringing contemporary art to suburban shopping mall bookstores. 

First launched in 1996, the series includes books on Marina Abramovic, Francis Alÿs, Lynda Benglis, Vija Celmins, Tacita Dean, Mark Dion, Tom Friedman, Hans Haacke, Jenny Holzer, Roni Horn, Mary Kelly, On Kawara, Yayoi Kusama, Christian Marclay, Wangechi Mutu, Lucy Orta, Nancy Spero, Simon Starling, Sarah Sze, Gillian Wearing, Jeff Wall, Lawrence Weiner, Ai Weiwei, and many others. 

As far as I can tell, this is the first instance in which the artist appears on the cover, instead of an art work. Abramovic and Alÿs are both pictured on the cover of their titles, but mid-performance, their faces obscured. Yoko Ono is pictured posing for the camera while installing her 1966 Indica Gallery exhibition.

This may be the result of trying to grapple with the fact that Ono herself is better known than any of her works. “The world's most famous unknown artist,” is how her husband John Lennon frequently described her, “...everyone knows her name but no one knows what she actually does."

Or perhaps it’s a response to Ono eschewing a signature style or medium. In her essay Yoko Ono: Transcendent Freedom and Hope, Eriko Osaka observes “Having come to the art world via a training in music, literature and philosophy, with only a passing interest in painting and drawing, [Ono] was freer in her thinking, less fixated on any one technique or medium than others who went to art school.”

This site is dedicated primarily to Artist’ books, Multiples and Editions, with a secondary focus that  
reflects my interests in Artists’ Records, Conceptual Art, Performance Art, Mail Art, Advertisements, Text, etc. Yoko Ono has not only created works in each of these often disparate media, she has frequently produced defining examples. 

Grapefruit is the quintessential Artist Book, and in some ways functions as a blueprint for the rest of Ono’s seven decades-long career.1 The title is still in print over fifty years later, and has been translated into Chinese, German, Spanish, French, Italian, and back to its original Japanese.2

Her Fluxus edition Box Of Smile ranks among the best of the hundreds of boxed works George Maciunas produced for the group. It is simple, poetic, funny and participatory: a small square plastic box with the title foil stamped onto the lid opens to reveal a mirror reflecting the viewer’s face, who completes the work with a grin of recognition. 

White Chess Set - first exhibited in the Indica Gallery show featured on the book’s cover - is an all-white chess board with white playing pieces, emphasizing concentration over competition. Sometimes known as Play it By Trust, the piece has been editioned a few times, made into large scale public art, presented as public participation pieces, and in performances reminiscent of the Toronto chess match by Marcel Duchamp and John Cage.

Cut Piece is as powerful and influential a work of Performance Art as anything by Marina Abramovic, Vito Acconci, Chris Burden, or Carolee Schneemann. Ono sits on the stage in her best dress and places a pair of scissors in front of her. Audience members are invited to come up one by one and cut away pieces of her clothing. Osaka notes that the work “brought out people’s latent feelings of desire, anger, vulnerability, destructiveness, confrontation, dedication, forbearance, acceptance”. 

Film works like Fly or Film No. 4 (better known as Bottoms) are rightly celebrated as important early examples of artists’ cinema, but lesser known works like Erection (not what you think), Self-Portrait (what you thought) and Apotheosis are equally compelling. Apotheosis [1970] is a 17-minute film shot from an ascending air balloon. Following the initial landscape view, audiences are presented with a test of their patience by several minutes of white-out, when the balloon reaches the clouds. The pay off is the “huge poem”3 of the reveal once the balloon ascends above the clouds.4 

Ono’s use of advertising spaces such as public billboards5 anticipated Jenny Holzer’s public works and the Time Square Jumbotron by over a decade. Her presentation of text-only works predate Joseph Kosuth and can rightly be considered the first exhibited examples of Conceptual Art.6

Phaidon’s Yoko Ono examines these works and countless others, from pieces made in the artist’s childhood, to projects realized in the last few years. The two essays are well-researched and share little overlap. The Artist’s Writings section features early examples of Ono’s essays, often presented in facsimile.  

The Artist’s Choice section presents Ono’s 9 Concert Pieces for John Cage, from 1966, which were originally intended for inclusion in Cage’s 1969 Something Else Press book Notations. Only a single example made its way into that legendary collection, but all nine are reproduced here, one to a page. 

The major disappointment in the book was the thing I was most highly anticipating: an interview with Ono conducted by Laurie Anderson7. The latter’s questions are interesting enough, but Ono opts to answer in single sentences only. This was likely a deliberate strategy - and nod to the direct short Event texts of Grapefruit -  but is not particularly illuminating. I would have preferred a long rambling conversation. 

The most interesting takeaway from the exchange was the fact that Ono provided comforting words to Anderson following the loss of her husband. She tells Ono “You were very encouraging and consoling to me when Lou [Reed] died. You helped me see that he had become a sum of all the thing he was in his life. This completely changed my ideas and feelings about time and loss, life and death. And it helped me accept that he would always be a part of my life in ways that continuously change.”

Grief is a difficult subject for an artist to explore without succumbing to over-indulgence, or saccharine platitudes. Both Ono and Anderson have brilliantly worked through the loss of their partners in their practice: Anderson with the 2015 feature film Heart of a Dog8 and Ono with Season of Glass9. Recorded and released only half a year after Lennon’s murder, the LP features several heart-breaking songs about loss, the sound of gunshots, and a cover graphic of Lennon’s blood-stained glasses

There is very little in the book about Ono’s musical output, which includes thirteen solo studio albums, six in collaboration with Lennon, and one with Kim Gordon and Thurston Moore10. Her activism also, is mostly overlooked, other than when it dovetails with her visual art. 

The book is - of course - not intended as comprehensive biography or catalogue raisonné. There would not be enough room to do justice to Ono's multi-faceted practice within the confines of the Phaidon series’ 160 pages. It is a welcome and long-overdue addition to the ongoing series. 

If you own no monographs on Ono, this is a good a place as any to start. If (like me) you have dozens, this book will be a necessary addition to the library. 






1. Curator Thierry Raspail proposes the opposite: that Grapefruit represents Ono’s first retrospective, including pieces that date back more than a decade prior to its publication. 

2. When translated back into Japanese the title somehow ends up as Grapefruit Juice

3. Filmmaker Jonas Mekas described the moment as: "suddenly the cloud landscape opened up like a huge poem, you could see the tops of the clouds, all beautifully enveloped by sun, stretching into infinity..."

4. Apotheosis is similar to Michael Snow’s Wavelength (a work which Ono greatly admires), in that the image is limited by a particular camera movement: Snow used the zoom of the camera, and Ono employed the ‘pedestal’ shot. 

5. From the groundbreaking War Is Over (If You Want It) campaign, to the more recent Imagine Peace billboards and full page ads in newspapers. 

6. The rightful credit denied to Ono is unsurprisingly owing to racism (or "cultural differences", if we’re being generous). Presented in her native Japanese, the all-text works featured characters that were ‘drawn’ in a calligraphic style by Ono’s first husband, composer Toshi Ichiyanagi, and were therefore dismissed as being ‘graphic’ works, and not strictly ‘conceptual’.

7. Laurie Anderson herself is a perfect candidate for the Phaidon treatment. I’d also like to see titles on Kay Rosen, David Hammons, and Cary Leibowitz. 

8. Heart of a Dog is ostensibly about remembering her late beloved dog Lolabelle. I don’t recall Lou Reed’s name mentioned at all (maybe once?) but it’s clear that Anderson is working through grief from his loss two years prior. 

9. Songs from Season of Glass have been covered by Anohni, Apples in Stereo, Deerhoof, Roberta Flack, Japanese Breakfast, Holly Miranda,  Harry Nilsson, Sudan Archives, Sharon Van Otten and others. 

10. In addition to the studio albums, Ono has released two live recordings, several EPs, compilations, a collaboration with The Flaming Lips, and an ill-advised off-Broadway musical. 








Adam David Brown | Hunter and Cook Magazine No. 5











Adam David Brown
Hunter and Cook Magazine No. 5
Toronto, Canada: Hunter and Cook, 2010
9" x 13"
Edition of 50 signed and numbered copies


Hunter and Cook was a Toronto-based arts magazine founded in 2008 by artists Tony Romano and Jay Isaac. It published tri-annually until 2011, for a total of ten issues. The periodical featured essays and interviews with artists, as well as projects curated for the page. 

Issue 5 includes features on Laura Owens, Douglas Huebler, Luke Fowler, Sheila Heti, Valérie Blass, Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun, and others. 

This special edition of fifty signed and numbered copies features an intervention by Adam David Brown consisting of circular holes of various diameters hand-cut into the pages of the issue. 





Sunday, December 22, 2024

Wim Delvoye | SeXrays








Wim Delvoye 
SeXrays
Luxembourg: Beaumont Public, 2002
[94] pp., 30.5 x 23 cm., spiral-bound
Edition of 220

Published to accompany an exhibition of the same name, this title features twenty-five X-ray images of sex acts on acetate sheets from aluminum cibachromes, held together by spiral binding underneath a card cover book. With the help of a radiologist, the artist invited several friends to paint themselves with small amounts of barium and perform explicit sexual acts in medical X-ray clinics.


"The first x-rays were done in 1999, or 98, but then I made some very good ones in 2000-2001, and that was when I was showing the Cloaca machine – a large installation that turns food into feces. That was in 2000. Then I went to New York in 2001, I was in the New Museum – so I was immersed in that math and science kind of stuff. I was much more into bronzes, and other types of sculptures. But at that time, everyone’s fascination was for science, medical, clinical things, the human body, and x-ray machines. X-ray machines were fun, and I returned to that. As soon as I got the Cloaca machine finished, I went back to the x-rays.

[...]

A lot of my work, in general is machine-like; we make spud guns, we make shit machines. It is not why I started to do x-rays. I’m thinking of a movie where Jeremy Irons plays two characters in the film [David Cronenberg’s Dead Ringers from 1988].  From the beginning of the movie, you know that this is going to end up wrong. There’s these twin brothers, and there was this really strange sexual tension. I was aware of that movie when we were doing these x-rays – you have science and the medical, contrasting with human feeling and romance. By the way, only later I realized I could never do the sex x-rays in the United States. This country is so religious. Doctors are so worried about being sued. There’s a certainly prudent attitude in the United States. For example, I needed doctors, and the doctor I found was so adamant to participate. He was astonished that he’d never thought to do that. He happened to be in his midlife crisis. And it was also funny – I put my penis in the mammography machine, and he said, “Look, I’ve been here for years and never thought to put my penis in this machine.” I thought, that’s the first thing I think of. I opened his eyes to his own clinic!”
- Wim Delvoye, interviewed by Andrea Blanch



Saturday, December 21, 2024

Les Levine Copies Everyone










Les Levine
Les Levine Copies Everyone
Toronto, Canada: The Isaacs Gallery, 1973
156 pp., 29 x 22.5 cm., loose leaves in cardboard box
Edition size unknown


Part artist book as press kit, part press kit as artist book, Les Levine Copies Everyone includes a checklist of works in the 1970 Isaacs Gallery exhibition, a bibliography and biography, reproductions of works, newspaper clippings, transcripts of telephone calls, and an essay by David Bourdon entitled "Conceptual and Decorative Elements in the Graphic Work of Les Levine.” The box also contains information about Levine’s Restaurant in New York, which served Irish, Jewish and Canadian Cuisine and advertised as "You get more with Les”. 

This title is rare, and rarer still in good condition. 



Friday, December 20, 2024

Ernest Cole | House of Bondage






Ernest Cole
House of Bondage
New York City, USA: Aperture, 2022
232 pp., 21.5 x 29 cm., hardcover
Edition size unknown


Last night I went to see Raoul Peck's documentary Ernest Cole: Lost and Found, which was essentially an adaptation of an artist’s book. Cole was South Africa's first black freelance photographer and House of Bondage (originally published in 1967) was his only publication. 

The book features eighteen photoessays about life under apartheid, including mining, education, domestic work, healthcare and banishment. To avoid arrest, many of the images had to be taken surreptitiously, with Cole learning to shoot discreetly, from the waist. 

“That was the first time you basically have a camera inside the belly of the beast,” said Peck.

House of Bondage was instantly banned in South Africa and the photographer, 27 at the time, was exiled. Smuggling his negatives with him, Cole fled to live in New York, which he describes as a "soulless city.” He continued to take photographs, but never made another book. The film follows what he describes as his “slow disintegration and descent into hell”, living in rooming houses and sometimes on the street. 

Cole died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 49, in 1990 - a week after Nelson Mandela was released from prison. 

Almost thirty years later, in 2017, 60,000 negatives of his work were mysteriously discovered in a Swedish bank safe, along with research materials and writings by the artist. Ernest Cole: Lost and Found consists almost entirely of these still b&w images, and Cole’s own words, narrated by Actor LaKeith Stanfield (the star of Sorry to Bother You).

This 2022 expanded edition of House of Bondage makes use of some of these newly discovered images, and is also supplemented by a text by MoMA curator Oluremi C. Onabanjo, who observes: "Deftly harnessing image and text, Cole mines the grounds upon which Black life in South Africa during the twentieth century was surveilled, regulated, and subjected to forms of punitive existence. His lucid analysis and sophisticated visual grammar produces a blistering critique that reverberates not through the register of the spectacular, but rather through the relentless documentation of so-called unremarkable scenes".



Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Art Unlimited: Multiples of the 1960s and 1990s




Hillary Lane and Andrew Patrizio [eds]
Art Unlimited: Multiples of the 1960s and 1990s
London, UK: The Arts Council & South Bank Centre, 1994
92 pp., 20.5 x 21.5 cm., softcover
Edition size unknown


An exhibition catalogue for a touring exhibition of multiples purchased by the Arts Council, presented at the Centre for Contemporary Arts, CCA (3 Jan 1994 – 15 Jan 1995), Brighton University (8 Mar – 4 Apr 1996), Ferens Art Gallery, Hull (27 Apr – 16 Jun 1996) and the Newlyn Art Gallery (22 Jun – 27 Jul 1996). 

The book features works by Joseph Beuys, George Brecht, Sophie Calle, Ian Hamilton Finlay, Richard Hamilton, Damian Hirst, Jenny Holzer, Roy Lichtenstein, Stephen Wewerka, Richard Wilson, and many others. 




Tuesday, December 17, 2024

Germano Celant | Record As Artwork







 



Germano Celant
Record As Artwork
London, UK: Royal College of Art Gallery, 1973
[28] pp., 17.2 x17.7 cm., staplebound
Edition size unknown


An exhibition catalogue published on the occasion of Royal College of Art Gallery in London show in November 1973, which is often considered the first survey of artworks made for the format of the vinyl LP. 

Edited by Roselee Goldberg (who went on to become a leading authority on Performance Art), the book features records by Marina Abramovic, Richard Artschwager, Joseph Beuys, Jean Dubuffet, Marcel Duchamp, Yves Klein, Arthur Koepcke, Bruce Nauman, Jean Tinguely, Bernar Venet, Andy Warhol, Lawrence Weiner, and others. 

The title is scarce and valued at around $500 US.