Zustand: Very Good. Item in very good condition! Textbooks may not include supplemental items i.e. CDs, access codes etc.
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. No Jacket. May have limited writing in cover pages. Pages are unmarked. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.
Paperback. Zustand: Good. No Jacket. Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: steidldangin, Göttingen, Germany, 2006
ISBN 10: 3865211968 ISBN 13: 9783865211965
Anbieter: Vincent Borrelli, Bookseller, Albuquerque, NM, USA
Erstausgabe
Hardcover. Zustand: Fine. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Fine. 1st Edition. First edition, first printing. Hardcover. Gray cloth-covered boards with title stamped in gray on cover and spine; with photographically illustrated dust jacket. Works in various media and texts by Felix Gonzalez-Torres. Edited and with text by Julie Ault. Essays, interviews and contributions by Robert Storr, Robert Nickas, Amada Cruz, Bertolt Brecht, Tim Rollins, Russell Ferguson, Rainer Fuchs, Roland Barthes, Susan Tallman, Marguerite Duras, Virgilio Piñera, bell hooks, Carlos Basualdo, David Deitcher, Gerardo Mosquera, Rainer Maria Rilke, Lewis Baltz, Charles Merewether, Anne Umland, Wallace Stevens, Nancy Spector, Susan Sontag, Miwon Kwon, Joseph Kosuth and Simon Watney. Includes an exhibition history, bibliography, notes on the contributors and an index. 412 pp., with numerous four-color plates. 11 x 8-5/8 inches. Fine in Fine dust jacket.
Verlag: Exit Art New York, NY, 1993
Anbieter: Specific Object / David Platzker, New York, NY, USA
12 pp.; 28 x 21.6 cm; loose leaves; black-and-white; edition size unknwon; unsigned and unnumbered; photocopy / xeroxed Exhibition brochure / checklist published in conjunction with show held May 1 - July 23, 1993. Curated by Jean-Noël Herlin, with research by Karen Bubb and Sarah Wagner. Selected artists include Jean-Noël Herlin, Karen Bubb, Sarah Wagner, Wolfgang Paalen, Tom E. Lewis, Joseph Cornell, Laurence Vail, A. Raymond Katz, Irving Kriesberg, Yves Tanguy, Piet Mondrian, Fernand Léger, Claude Bentley, David Smith, Matta, Jean Follett, Pablo Picasso, Marcel Duchamp, Robert Brownjohn, Ivan Chermayeff, Thomas Geismar, George Brecht, Jim Dine, Claes Oldenburg, Jim Davis, Elaine de Kooning, William T. Wiley, Frank Stella, Man Ray, Red Grooms, Michael Todd, Ay-o, George Ortman, Nam June Paik, Harry Soviak, Arni Hendin, Thomas Downing, Gerald Oster, Reginald Neal, Dakota Daley, Nicholas Quennell, Bela Julesz, Michael Noll, Dan Flavin, Louise Nevelson, Peter Saul, Lila Katzen, Elaine Sturtevant, Kim MacConnel, Liliana Porter, Mel Bochner, Lawrence Weiner, Eleanor Antin, Jean Dubuffet, Yoko Ono, Larry Bell, Marilyn Levine, Larry Rivers, Susan Weil, Arman, Dorothea Rockburne, Robert Rauschenberg, Robert Kushner, Lynda Benglis, Marcia Hafif, Joan Miró, Karole Armitage, Beverly Naidus, Meret Oppenheim, Ronnie Cutrone, Keith Haring, Michael Graves, Judith Shea, Gordon Matta Clark, James Lee Byars, Louise Lawler, and Izhar Patkin, and many others. Materials presented drawn largely from the Jean-Noël Herli Archive. "Exhibition invitations? I've seen a few. Any working art critic inevitably acquires an extensive knowledge of this genre of printed ephemera. Heralding gallery and museum shows, invitations flood the mailbox, crowd the desk and all too often accumulate so intractably on the kitchen counter as to seem part of the decor. You can't live with them, and until the show is over, you can't throw them out. Still, life without such art-world byproducts would be a lot more difficult. Not only do they convey the important facts -- the who, when and where -- of shows that need to be seen. They're also advertisements bent on seducing us into attendance by being clever, eye-catching or provocative -- although sometimes they nip interest in the bud. (There's probably no art lover with mailing-list credentials who hasn't held up some gallery announcement and said, "Forget it!") Invitations are style statements in a minor key, ancillary artworks of a collective sort. Designed by artists, by graphic designers, by art dealers and museum curators -- usually a combination of the above -- they are the advance guard for the real thing. Their merit is judged in the very act of reading one's mail." -- Roberta Smith, "Art Invitations As Small Scraps Of History," New York Times, May 16, 1993. Very Good. Light edge wear. Contents clean and unmarked.
Verlag: The Clocktower / The Institute for Art and Urban Resources New York, NY, 1975
Anbieter: Specific Object / David Platzker, New York, NY, USA
[1] pp.; 44.4 x 65.8 cm.; black-and-white & color; edition size unknown; unsigned and unnumbered; offset-printed Poster published in conjunction with "Artists Make Toys" held at The Clocktower, New York, January 1 - February 15, 1975. Image features a topless Hannah Wilke in a bed with a fully clothed Claes Oldenburg. Allegedly the image prompted the withdrawal and destruction of the exhibition catalogue and this poster for the show prior to its distribution. Artists included Laurie Anderson, Jared Bark, Bill Beckley, George Brecht, Trisha Brown, Chris Burden, Scott Burton, Tosh Carrillo, Enrique Castro-Cid, John Chamberlain, Angus Chamberlain, Cara Croninger, Brad Davis, Jean Depuy, Steve Gianakos, Charles Ginnever, Michael Goldberg, Peter Gourfain, James Grashaw, Marty Greenbaum, Red Grooms, Bob Grosvenor, Susan Hall, Susan Hartnett, Peter Hutchinson, Patrick Israel, Robert Israel, Kurt Kranz, Robert Kushner, Jeffrey Lew, Les Levine, Kim MacConnel, Christa Maiwald, Gordon Matta-Clark, Richard Mock, Ree Morton, Forrest Myers, Max Neuhaus, Richard Nonas, Claes Oldenburg, Dennis Oppenheim, Robert Owings, Gary Perkins, Howardina Pindell, Lucio Pozzi, Italo Scanga, Willoughby Sharp, Thomas Schmidt, Alan Shields, Charles Simonds, Marjorie Strider, George Sugarman, Don Sunseri, Mark di Suvero, Richard Tuttle, Richard Van Buren, Robert Watts, William Wegman, Susan Weil, Lawrence Weiner, Charles Wiley, William Wiley, Hannah Wilke and Joe Zucker. Fair / Poor. Light creasing and yellowing across poster with a 10.2 cm. dog-ear to top right corner and 4.8 cm. dog-ear to top left corner. Multiple tears to bottom left corner ranging from 2 mm. to 5.4 cm. with 1.5 cm. and 2 cm. areas of loss. 3 cm. area of loss to top left corner with additional tearing along poster edge and a 8 mm. and 1.5 cm. tear to center of poster. Curl to poster. Otherwise clean and unmarked.