Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held at Paris musées and Musée Zadkine, June 11 - October 11, 1998. Text by Anne Dagbert and Noëlle Chabert. Artists include Martin Aballéa, François Arnal, Dominique Bailly, Jérôme Basserode, Lothar Baumgarten, Joseph Beuys, Bininyiwui, Anonyme, François Bouillon, Constantin Brancusi, Andreas Brandolini, Victor Brauner, Gilles Clément, Marc Couturier, Tony Cragg, Michael Craig-Martin, André Derain, Max Ernst, Étienne-Martin, Malachi Farrell, Jean Fautrier, Philippe Favier, Pierre Filippi, Gloria Friedmann, Jochen Gerz, Paul-Armand Gette, Alberto Giacometti, Andy Goldsworthy, Rodney Graham, Marie-Ange Guilleminot, Raoul Hausmann, Fabrice Hybert, Paul Klee, Jean Le Gac, Zoe Leonard, Richard Long, Rémy Marlot, André Masson, Piet Mondrian, François Morellet, Brigitte Nahon, Nils-Udo, Giuseppe Penone, Georges Pierre, Markus Raetz, Philippe Ramette, Jean-Jacques Rullier, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Anne Saussois, Thomas Schütte, Seton Smith, Philippe Starck, Holger Trülzsch, Lawrence Weiner and Ossip Zadkine. ... [details]
Issue edited by John Coplans. Essays "Camera Lucida/Camera Obscura," by Annette Michelson; "Eisenstein on Mayakovsky," by Sergei Eisenstein; "Stan Brakhage: Four Films," by Paul Arthur; "The Third Meaning: Notes on Some of Eisenstein's Stills," by Roland Barthes; "'Scenes From Under Childhood,'" by Phoebe Cohen; "For God and Country," by Noël Carroll; "Montage 'October': Dialectic of the Shot," by Rosalind Krauss; "'Western History' and 'The Riddle of Lumen,'" by Fred Camper; "Stan and Jane Brakhage, Talking," by Hollis Frampton; "Brakhage Filmography," by Joyce Rheuban. ... [details]
The first biography of the father of Fluxus. Based on personal reminiscences gathered by Emmett Williams and Ay-O. Edited by Emmett Williams and Ann Noël. With 107 black-and-white illustrations. Includes biography and index. [details]
"Originally published in the mid-1970s, Womens Work was a magazine that sought to highlight the overlooked work of female artists working at the cusp of the visual arts, music, and performance. The magazine was edited by Alison Knowles and Annea Lockwood and featured text-based and instructional performance scores by the following 25 artists, composers, and choreographers: Beth Anderon, Ruth Anderson, Jacki Apple, Barbara Benary, Sari Dienes, Nye Ffarrabas (participating as Bici Forbes), Simone Forti, Wendy Greenberg, Heidi Von Gunden, Françoise Janicot, Alison Knowles, Christina Kubisch, Carol Law, Annea Lockwood (also included as Anna Lockwood), Mary Lucier, Lisa Mikulchik, Ann Noël (included as Ann Williams), Pauline Oliveros, Takako Saito, Carolee Schneemann, Mieko Shiomi, Elaine Summers, Carole Weber, Julie Winter, and Marilyn Wood. ... [details]