Showing posts with label Jannis Kounellis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jannis Kounellis. Show all posts

Friday, September 13, 2024

Jannis Kounellis | Kounellis











Jannis Kounellis
Kounellis
Monchengladbach, Germany: Städtisches Museum, 1978.
[5] pp., 19.5 x 15 cm., loose leaves, boxed
Edition of 440 numbered copies


Accompanying his exhibition, which ran from May 11th to June 11th in 1978, this boxed catalogue consists of a printed cardboard box containing four cards and a multiple by Kounellis. Three of the cards feature a continuous text of the poem Die Skythen, a poem written in 1918 by Russian lyrical poet Aleksandr Blok. The fourth is the title or colophon page. The multiple is made of compressed board, and features a metal rod embedded in white tissue. The rod is laminated in explosive powder the the work is intended to be ignited. 

When lit, the fuse produces a “bright hissing glow that leaves a black smoke trail on the grey-white plate”. 

This was the final boxed work in the Städtisches Museum series that began with Joseph Beuys in 1967 and also included editions by Carl Andre, Hanne Darboven, George Brecht & Robert Filliou, Piero Manzoni, Stanley Brown, Daniel Buren, Jasper Johns, Marcel Broodthaers, Lawrence Weiner, Gerhard Richter, and James Lee Byars, amongst others. 

The price during the run of the exhibition was DM 6. The work can now be purchased from Printed Matter, here, for $1800.00 US. 









Friday, February 17, 2017

Jannis Kounelli, RIP







The Greek-Italian artist Jannis Kounellis, one of the founders of Arte Povera, died yesterday at the age of 80, in his hometown of Rome. Read obituaries in the Guardian, The Art Newspaper and Artnet, below.


https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2017/feb/17/jannis-kounellis-obituary
http://theartnewspaper.com/news/arte-povera-artist-jannis-kounellis-has-died-aged-80/
https://news.artnet.com/art-world/jannis-kounellis-dies-at-80-864170


Sunday, March 25, 2012








The last of the boxes, for now. Future posts will include Brecht's classic Wateryam, Filliou's Ample Food for Stupid Thought, and the box that started it all, Duchamp's Boite en Valise.