Verlag: Slubice-Frankfurt (Oder) 2019. 116 Seiten. Zahlreiche, teils farbige Abbildungen. Sprache: polnisch, englisch, deutsch. Format (28 x 23) cm., 2019
Anbieter: Antiquariat Bernd Preßler, Ahnatal Weimar, Deutschland
Tadelloser, frischer Zustand. Softcover / Original kartoniert. Kein Versand aufgrund von EPR Regelungen in EU-Länder außerhalb Deutschlands. No shipping to EU countries outside of Germany due to EPR regulations.
Verlag: Slubice-Frankfurt (Oder) 2019. 116 Seiten. Zahlreiche, teils farbige Abbildungen. Sprache: polnisch, englisch, deutsch. Format (28 x 23) cm. Handschruftliche Signatur des teilnehmenden Künstlers Jürgen O. Olbrich., 2019
Anbieter: Antiquariat Bernd Preßler, Ahnatal Weimar, Deutschland
Signiert
Tadelloser, frischer Zustand. Signiert. Softcover / Original kartoniert. Kein Versand aufgrund von EPR Regelungen in EU-Länder außerhalb Deutschlands. No shipping to EU countries outside of Germany due to EPR regulations.
Verlag: Galeria LDK Labirynt, Lublin, 1980
Anbieter: William Allen Word & Image, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 14,43
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbZustand: Very good +. Galeria LDK Labirynt, Antoniego Mikolajczyka, invitation card, Lublin, 1980. 105 x 150 mm. Printed black on pink, Polish text. Invitation to an exhibition of Mikolajczyka's entitled 'Fotografii oraz Video-Zapisy I Transmisje' ('Photographs, Video-recordings and Broadcasts'). Condition: Very good +.
Verlag: Galeria Sztuki Labirynt, Lublin, 1974
Anbieter: William Allen Word & Image, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 96,22
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbZustand: very good +. Galeria Sztuki Labirynt, Documents. Films. Contacts., Lublin, 1974. Exhibition catalogue, printed black on newsprint on recto and verso, folded once. Artists include Borgebaud, Clareboudt, Fischer, Groh, Hubert, Kaiwak-Kava, Moucha, Pineau, Trbuljak, Yokoyama. Condition: folded once, light toning to edges, overall very good +.
Anbieter: Penka Rare Books and Archives, ILAB, Berlin, Deutschland
EUR 2.000,00
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbLublin: Galeria LDK Labirynt, 1976. Original printed tan paper envelope measuring 22 × 31.5 cm, housing 36 leaves printed to rectos and versos, three unbound folded pamphlets, one staple-stitched pamphlet with illustrated self-wrappers, and one side-stapled pamphlet with eight leaves printed to rectos and versos. Envelope lightly creased along edges; small hole to front of envelope; still about very good. An early catalog of one of the most dynamic independent galleries in Communist Poland, published on the occasion of an exhibition held at the Gallery in December 1976. Designed as a kind of archive of Galeria Labirynt, this set of close to forty artist texts is printed on individual leaves with illustrations to versos, and is assembled in a single envelope resembling a piece of mail art, a form especially popular in this period. Founded in 1969, and led by the art historian Andrzej Mroczek, Galeria Labirynt focused especially on conceptual art, performance, as well as photography, film, and video art. The 1976 exhibition was curated by Mroczek, who aimed to capture "contemporary artistic trends" in collaboration with major figures of the Polish avant-garde such as Henryk Sta?ewski, who spoke at the opening, as well as representatives of the Polish neo-avant-garde Zbigniew D?ubak (Permafo group), Jozef Robakowski (Film Form Workshop), and the Czech concrete poet Ji?í Valoch, whose critical texts are included in the packet. In leading Labirynt, Mroczek brought many important international artists to the gallery, with more than half of the artists included in the present set coming from outside of Poland, such as Imre Bak, Gabor Attalai (Hungary), Mac Adams (USA), and Christian Boltanski (France), among many others. The critical texts in the catalog are printed in English and Polish, clearly aiming to attract an international audience. The Gallery stopped operation during the Martial Law in 1981 and would reopen in 1982 under the new title Labirynt 2. As of June 2025, not located in KVK, OCLC (The pink pamphlet with critical texts is held by Princeton as a separate publication).