Tuesday, October 31, 2023

Cameron Jamie | Front Lawn Funerals and Cemeteries















Cameron Jamie
Front Lawn Funerals and Cemeteries
Zürich, Switzerland: Edition Patrick Frey, 2015
[144] pp., 23.5 x 35 cm., hardcover
Edition size unknown


Cameron Jamie began photographing the Halloween decorations that adorned the homes in his suburban Los Angeles neighbourhood, in 1984. After relocating to France, he continued to travel back to L.A. to continue documenting the makeshift cemeteries, ghosts, guillotines, skeletons and scarecrows, where scenes of death play out for the amusement of children. 

 
"The book itself is an exceptionally produced, as is everything on Edition Patrick Frey, complete with glow in the dark cover and gravestone-imitated endpapers. It is a rightful production for such a project, the monochrome images inside becoming pathologically reduced from the myopia of nostalgic affect that color sometimes disables." 
- Brad Feuerhelm

Monday, October 30, 2023

Emmett Williams | Genesis: A Light Poem






Emmett Williams
Genesis: A Light Poem
Lodz, Poland: International Artists' Museum, 1991
22 pp., 24 x 24 cm., hardcover
Edition of 95 signed and numbered copies


Genesis: A Light Poem - translated into Polish by Piotr Bikont and Andrzej Chetko - consists of twenty-two pages with embossed typography on hand pressed white paper, and a portrait of Emmett Williams on front and back cover. 

During the book presentation in Lodz the artist recited the poem in a room lit by candles. After reading each letter he blew out a candle. By the time of the poem's end, the room was dark. 




Saturday, October 28, 2023

Simon Cutts | workfortheeyetodo






Simon Cutts
workfortheeyetodo
Tipperary, Ireland: Coracle Press, nd [c.1993]
6.5 x 20.5 cm.
Edition size unknown


Coracle Press founders Simon Cutts and Erica Van Horn later teamed up with Maggie Smith to open Workfortheeyetodo, a "book-space" that operated as a bookstore, distribution centre and reference place for the activities exploring the book as a medium. The centre hosted exhibitions, displays, and readings, often exploring the intersection between poetry and visual art. 

Workfortheeyetodo operated from 1992 to 1997. This undated enamel plaque is thought to be from the first year of operation. It features corner holes for hanging and his housed in a cardboard box. 




Nancy Holt | Time Outs









Nancy Holt
Time Outs 
Rochester, USA: Visual Studies Workshop, 1985
64 pp., 28 x 23 cm., softcover
Edition size unknown


“In this book, Holt, an internationally known sculptor and video-filmmaker emerges as a longtime football fan. Photographs of football games, shot off the television screen, are accompanied by texts consisting of TV commentary and interviews with the players.” 
- Visual Studies Workshop




Thursday, October 26, 2023

Xiu Xiu | Deforms the Unborn




Xiu Xiu
Deforms the Unborn
New York City, USA: Guggenheim, 2018
24 pp., 21.6 x 17.8 cm., staple bound
Edition size unknown


In May of 2018, the band Xiu Xiu premiered a long piece titled "Deforms the Unborn" at the Guggenheim Museum. The work was about the "agonizing experience of demonic possession, based on firsthand accounts of exorcisms in modern history." 

The composition was inspired by Danh Vo’s body of work titled after obscenities uttered in William Friedkin’s classic horror film, The Exorcist (1973).

Two years later, a three track LP was self-published by the band, as MP3s




Wednesday, October 25, 2023

Dick Higgins
















Dick Higgins died on this day twenty-five years ago, in Quebec City, at age 60. 






Tuesday, October 24, 2023

Ida Applebroog, RIP











It was announced today that Ida Applebroog has died at the age of 93. 






Masanao Hirayama | Pyramid Quiz








Masanao Hirayama
Pyramid Quiz
Tokyo, Japan: Editions OK FRED, 2014
24 pp., 20 x 15 cm., staple-bound
Edition of 100


Thin zine Hirayama's Quiz series, with accompanying 15 x 4.5cm bookmark. 

Available from Art Metropole, for $17.00 CDN, here




Monday, October 23, 2023

John Waters | Tragedy









John Waters
Tragedy
Zurich, Switzerland: Parkett, 2015
46 x 46 x 12.5 cm
Edition of 25 signed and numbered copies


Scalp as sculpture, for Parkett magazine issue #96. Made of acrylic, synthetic hair, painted silicone, and urethane, the work resembles a serial killer's trophy, with the type of 'bad taste' artist and filmmaker John Waters is known for.

Waters has had an obsession with Jayne Mansfield since he first saw Frank Tashlin's The Girl Can't Help It, as a skinny ten year old boy in 1956. "This wasn't a movie that my boy classmates wanted to see or cared about," he told The Director's Guild of America Quarterly, "they weren't interested in discussing Jayne Mansfield's complete lack of roots. I really had no one that I could be enthusiastic with about it. So it was a private secret of mine, this movie."

He has referred to his frequent collaborator, the performer Divine (Harris Glenn Milstead 1945 – 1988) as his own Jayne Mansfield. "Well, Jayne Mansfield mixed with Godzilla."

When Mansfield died in a car accident in 1967 it was reported that the actress was decapitated. The urban legend originated with police photographs of her crashed car with its top virtually sheared off, and what resembled a blonde-haired head tangled in the smashed windshield.  

Twenty years later the New York Times sent a journalist to interview the undertaker, who clarified that it was only her wig that came off in the crash. Shortly afterward another report claimed that part of her scalp was separated from her skull, also.

After Mansfield's death, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration recommended requiring a steel underride guard on all tractor-trailers, something the trucking industry was slow to adopt. In the USA, the underride guard is known an "ICC bumper", or a "Mansfield bar".


"John Waters, appropriately known as the 'Pope of Trash', adores bad taste and things despicable, negative, and disgusting. He loves difference and paradox." 
- Christine Macel, Parkett  

"Wouldn't Jayne Mansfield appreciate the irony of my appalling taste inside a tony swiss art magazine with highbrow credentials?"
- John Waters