Anthology of American poetry compiled and edited by Richard Kostelantz. Contributors include Randall Jarrell, Delmore Schwartz, Daniel Hoffman, John Logan, J.V. Cunningham, Robert Lowell, John Berryman, Theodore Roethke, Stanley Kunitz, Charles Olson, Louis Zukofsky, John Cage, John Giorno, Dan Graham, W. ... [details]
Inaugural issue of Culture Hero, published by Les Levine and edited by Claudia Dreifus. Contents include: "An Interview with Peter Fonda," by Elizabeth Campbell; "Peter Fonda: Aquarius;" "The Culture Heroine of the Month: Joy Bang," by Claudia Dreifus; "Culture Hero Runs a Contest," featuring full page of photographs of a Claes Oldenburg happening / performance;" "Latimer on Lichtenstein," by D. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held at the Seattle Art Museum Pavilion, Seattle, Washington, September 5 - October 5, 1969. The catalogue consists of 137 printed 4 x 6 inch index cards containing artists' proposals and conceptual works. ... [details]
September 1968 issue of Form, a quarterly magazine of the arts. Edited by Philip Steadman, Mike Weaver, and Stephen Bann. Artists, writers, and other figures in the issue include John Bowlt, Thomas Bernhard, Xanti Schawinsky, and Pierre Albert-Birot, with translation by John Neves, Ruth Brandon, Barbara S. ... [details]
Large-scale folded poster published in conjunction with a series of six readings held May 20 - 25, [1968] at the homes of six artists and writers in celebration of the publication of "The Young American Poets Anthology," edited by Paul Carroll with an introduction by James Dickey. ... [details]
Single sided poster published in conjunction with show held January 1-2, 6-7, 8-9, and 13-16, [1967]. Books and lyrics by Helen Adam with Pat Adam; music by Al Carmines; directed by Lawrence Kornfeld; set by Lee Guilliat; costumes by Nancy Christofferson and Maria Irene Fornes; lighting by Patrika Brown; starring Reathel Bean, David Berk, Ronald K. ... [details]
Program for series of performances staged at the Judson Memorial Church on May 22, 23, 24, 26, 27, 28 and June 3, 4, 5, 1966. Program included "Patter for Soft-Shoe Dance" by George Dennision with music by Al Carmines and choreography by Remy Charlip; "March" choreographed and danced by Jame Waring; The Mind is a Muscle" by Yvonne Rainer; "Tambourine Dance" by Waring; "Home Movies" by Rosalyn Drexler with music by Carmines and directed by Lawrence Kornfeld and paintings by Jon Hendricks; "Promenade" by Maria Irene Fornes with music by Barmines and directed by Kornfeld; "Morning Raga with Yellow Chair" choreographed and danced by Arlene Rothlein; "April and December" choreographed by Charlip and danced by Aileen Passloff; "What Happened" by Gertrude Stein with music by Carmines, directed by Kornfled and performed by Joan Baker, Lucinda Childs, Passloff, Rainer, Rothlein, Carmines, Hunt Cole, Masato Kawasaki and Burton Supree with set by Geoffrey Hendricks; "Pomegranada" by H. ... [details]
May 1961 issue of the periodical Art News. Articles include : "Edward Steichen," by Henry Geldzahler ; "Bishop Eadfrith's Masterpiece," by David H. Wright ; "The Rule that Measures Emotion," by Lawrence Campbell ; "'Happenings' in the New York Art Scene," by Allan Kaprow ; "New Maps of Nineteenth-Century Art," by Robert Rosenblum ; "Cubism: Generate and Degenerate," by George McNeil ; "Art News from Paris," by Pierre Schneider ; "Art News from London," by John Russell. ... [details]
A quarterly of poetry edited and published by Alan Brilliant. Dick Fass, assistant. Poems "This Desire, This Pain," by Frank J. Darlington; "Three Poems," by James Wright; "Two Poems," by Cecil Hemley; "Two Poems," by James May; "Two Poems," by Felix Stefanile; "Three Poems," by William Pillin; "Time has a Million Meanings," by Harold Briggs; "Translation from Corbiere," by Michael Benedikt; "The First Sorrow of Joseph," by Tim Reynolds; "Two Poems," by Harold Witt; "Three Poems," by Samuel Menashe; "Three Poems," by Fred Cogswell. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue re-issued in conjunction with show held September 9, 2010 - March 6, 2011 and based upon a show originally held August 9 - September 9, 1956. New foreword by Iwona Blazwick and Nayia Yiakoumaki. ... [details]