Showing posts with label Ray Johnson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ray Johnson. Show all posts

Thursday, July 11, 2024

Shelly Duvall, RIP












Ray Johnson began the Shelley Duvall Fan Club in 1976. This followed the "First Marcel Duchamp Fan Club Meeting”, which was held at the Church of The Holy Trinity, on the Upper East Side, in April of 1971. In June of 1972, he held a "Meeting for Anna May Wong" at the New York Cultural Center. The "Paloma Picasso Fan Club Meeting" took place at Ronald Feldman Fine Arts on April 1st 1974. Others included the Guiseppe Arcimboldo Fan Club and the Jean Dubuffet Fan Club.

A second Shelley Duvall Fan Club Meeting took place on May 14th, 1977, on 53rd Street, “Between 5th and 6th Avenue”. 


"Duvall is an interesting character, and she didn’t set out to be an actress. Robert Altman meets her at a party in Texas and puts her in his films. She sure didn’t look like any other actress, did act like any; she was a strange and unique figure. Her outsiderness fit in 1970s films. And Ray Johnson was fixated on her.”

Tuesday, February 6, 2024

Ray Johnson | A Book About Death









Ray Johnson
A Book About Death
New York City, USA: Self published, 1963-65
26 pp.,  35.5 x 21.5 cm., loose leaves
Edition size unknown


The pages of A Book About Death were offset printed offset by Johnson at the Pernet Printing Company, and mailed out - unbound - to members of his "New York Correspondence School”. He he purposefully did not send every page to any single reader in order to avoid the assemblage of a complete book. 

He numbered the last page 15, with 13 and 14 never being produced. This was possibly out of superstition surrounding the number 13, or as a way to prevent anyone from amassing the completed book. 

Clive Phillpot is considered the leading scholar on the work Johnson. The two corresponded from 1981 to 1994 (Johnson took his own life in January of ’95). Philpot places the sequence of the book as follows: 

1. “Mary Crehan, 4 choked to death…” [3/8/63]
2. “Cigar Bands from the Diane…” [3/15/63]
3. “Aunt Fritzi—What’s This?…” [9/10/63]
4.  “8 Ton Show…Robin Gallery” [10/22/63]
5.  “Andy Warhol” [11/5/63]
6. “Michael Malce…” [3/17/64]
7. “Anne and Bill… The Bad Ara…” [4/17/64]
8. “Zuckerman Harpsichords” [5/8/64]
9. “Cara Men Nda Mara” [7/8/64]
10. “Send 96…A Brick Snake…” [10/1/64]
11. “Cigar Band from the Ami Lowell…” [11/11/64]
12.  “Send 96… Fred Herko…” [12/22/64]
 15. “Boom… Papa R Snake…” [2/19/65]


"If A Book About Death were finished, it would lose much of its meaning as a process rather than a product. A Book About Death, first planned as a whole that could close around itself like the ouroboros on PAGE 1, had to become an open book, indefinite and undecidable. For Ray, a closed book could be like a death, just as dying could be like closing a book. Because Ray wanted death to be an open book, his A Book about Death had to remain incomplete, with pages that would never be read.” 
- Bill Wilson, A Book About A Book About Death



Tuesday, April 18, 2023

Pictures to be Read / Poetry to be Seen








[Various Artists]
Pictures to be Read / Poetry to be Seen
Chicago, USA: Museum of Contemporary Art, 1967
36 pp., 23 x 21.5 cm., softcover
Edition size unknown


An exhibition catalogue for a group show held at the Chicago Museum of Contemporary Art from October 24th to December 3rd, 1967. Curated by Jan van der Marck, the exhibition featured works by Shusaku Arakawa, Gianfranco Baruchello, Mary Bauermeister, George Brecht, Öyvind Fahlström, Ray Johnson, Allan Kaprow, R. B. Kitaj, Alison Knowles, James Nutt, Gianni-Emilio Simonetti, and Wolf Vostell. 

The title suggests the show might feature concrete poetry and works that blurred boundaries between genres, but it was appears to be primarily works by Fluxus artists and associates. The exhibition features Alison Knowles now-classic The Big Book, a bookwork large enough to climb into, with the pages on casters (see below). 

A PDF of the catalogue can be downloaded from monoskop, here.


A second 'catalogue' of objects was also released. See next post. 





Friday, September 10, 2021

Image Bank Annual Report











Image Bank
Image Bank Annual Report
Vancouver, Canada: Self-published, 1971
18 pp., 28 x 22 cm., loose leaves in folder
Edition size unknown

An annual report published two years into into the Image Bank project, which was founded by Michael Morris, Vincent Trasov and Gary Lee-Nova, in order to use the postal system to facilitate the exchange of ideas, images and information between artists. 





 

Wednesday, June 24, 2020

Siglio Press Announce New Ray Johnson title



Frog Pond Splash: Collages by Ray Johnson was announced today as being released this fall by Siglio Press. The title is edited by Elizabeth Zuba and will include texts by Johnson confidant William S. Wilson.


"This gemlike Ray Johnson book celebrates his friendship with writer and logophile William S. Wilson in pictures and words.

Dubbed "Ray Johnson's Boswell," writer and logophile William S. Wilson was one of legendary artist Ray Johnson's closest friends and biggest champions. He was also perhaps Johnson’s most trusted poetic muse and synthesizer of referents and references. The influence was mutual: throughout their lifelong friendship, begun when both men were in their twenties, writer and artist challenged and enriched one another’s work.

Published on the occasion of the exhibition of Ray Johnson works from Wilson's archive at the Art Institute of Chicago, Frog Pond Splash embodies the energy, expansiveness and motion of their work and their friendship. Editor Elizabeth Zuba has selected short, perspicacious texts by Wilson (from both published and unpublished writings) and collage works by Johnson to create juxtapositions that do not explicate or illustrate; rather, they form a loose collage-like letter of works and writings that are less bound than assembled, allowing the reader to put the pieces together, to respond, to add to and return to the way Johnson required of his correspondents and fellow travelers.

Taking its title from Wilson's haiku equivalence of Johnson's process, Frog Pond Splash is a small book but many things: a collage-like homage to their friendship, a treasure chest of prismatic "correspondances," as well as an unusual portrait of the disappearing, fractured Johnson through Wilson's words. Zuba's nuanced selection and arrangement of images and texts in this sumptuous little volume honors Johnson's "open system" (which rejected closed and consistent meanings, codes and symbols) in its open, associative, and intimate playfulness.

- D.A.P.  listing

Previously Siglio Press have published Not Nothing: Selected Writings by Ray Johnson and a reprint of Johnson's classic Something Else Press title The Paper Snake.

Frog Pond Splash is due to be released on November 20th, 2020.



Wednesday, June 3, 2020

Siglio Press




Siglio Press has published books by and about Marcel Broodthaers, John Cage, Sophie Calle, Dick Higgins, Ray Johnson, Nancy Spero and many others (see post below on their new Bernadette Mayer book). For the month of June they are donating a quarter of their revenue to Black Lives Matter causes.

Visit their site here.




Sunday, December 1, 2019

This week on Tumblr
















This week on Tumblr: Rubber stamps by artists and rubber stamp artworks by Marcel Dzama, Ray Johnson, Dieter Roth, Fluxus, Michael Dumontier and Neil Farber, Jonathan Monk, Jenny Holzer, JH Kocman, Dick Higgins, David Horvitz, Lawrence Weiner, Maurizio Nannucci, Mel Bochner, Vincent Sardon, Dick Higgins, bpNichol, Andy Warhol, Ulises Carrión and others.

Friday, November 15, 2019

Siglio Pres Sale



Currently Siglio Press is offering 25% off of all stock (with a few minor exception). Use the code BOOKJOY when checking out. Siglio Press has published titles by or about Marcel Broodthaers, John Cage, Sophie Calle, Dick Higgins, Dorothy Iannone, Ray Johnson, Bernadette Mayer and many others.

The sale runs until December 9th. Details at http://sigliopress.com.