Catalogue of editions produced by Multiples, Inc. between 1965 and 1971 with order form. Artists include Cecile Abish, Josef Albers, Peter Alexander, Richard Anuskiewicz, Billy Apple, Arakawa, Arman, Richard Artschwager, Mary Bauermeister, Herbert Bayer, Larry Bell, Billy Al Bengston, Ilya Bolotowsky, Lee Bontecou, Dan Christensen, Christo, Chryssa, Cruz Diez, Allan D'Arcangelo, Alan Davie, Gene Davis, Niki de Saint Phalle, Sonia Delaunay, Jim Dine, Jean Dupuy, Jean Dubuffet, Fred Eversley, Dean Fleming, Lucio Fontana, Helen Frankenthaler, Karl Gerstner, Joseph Goode, Philip Guston, Auguste Herbin, Charles Hinman, David Hockney, Robert Indiana, Robert Creeley, Jasper Johns, Allen Jones, William Katz, Ellsworth Kelly, Nicholas Krushenick, Gerald Laing, Le Parc, Sol LeWitt, Roy Lichtenstein, Richard Lindner, René Magritte, Marisol, Mayumi Miyawaki, Robert Morris, Barnett Newman, Kenneth Noland, Claes Oldenburg, Edouard Paolozzi, Karl Pfahler, Larry Poons, Robert Rauschenberg, Ad Reinhardt, Bridget Riley, Larry Rivers, Edward Ruscha, Fred Sandback, Tony Smith, Robert Smithson, Soto, Saul Steinberg, Wayne Thiebaud, Ernest Trova, Vasarely, Andy Warhol, Jack Youngerman, Larry Zox and others. ... [details]
Fourth of five editions of the exhibition / collection landmark catalogue designed by Wolf Vostell. Unusually paginated, approximately 500 pages consisting of 32 pages printed on thin styrofoam sheets with contributions by Gert von der Osten, Peter Ludwig, Horst Keller, and Evelyn Weiss, followed by hundreds of pages printed on brown paper, interspersed with portraits of each featured artist printed and / or screenprinted [?] on acetate sheets, graph paper, and illustrated with tipped-in color plates. ... [details]
Inagugeral issue of the Journal of Contemporary Art, a periodical featuring interviews with artists. Published and edited by Philip Pocock and John Zinser. Includes interviews between: Anthony Kosner and Arakawa; John Zinsser and Ross Bleckner; Ethan Spigland and Daniel Buren; Judy Glantzman and Sarah Charlesworth; Philip Pocock and Jack Goldstein; Klaus Ottmann and Jeff Koons; Philip Pocock and Stephen Lack; Jonathan Seliger and David Reed; Jonathan Seliger and Will Mentor; and Klaus Ottmann and Wolfgang Laib. [details]
Double sided postcard with image of" Untitled 2" from ""No!" Says the Signified" a portfolio of 6 lithographs. [details]
Artist's project by Ira Joel Haber, artist and employee of Norbert J. Prager Associates, a company that dealt with mailed surveys. Haber asked 27 artists to check two sets of numbers "to share with them my immediate environment in some of its visual and process forms. ... [details]
Press release published in conjunction with screening of Arakawa's film "Why Not (A Serenade of Eschatological Ecology), a feature film by Arakawa, February 11 - 17, 1970. Written and directed by Arakawa, featuring Mary Window, music by Ichiyangi, and narration by Madeline Gins. [details]
Prospectus for a portfolio of 6 lithographs with collage and silkscreen by Arakawa published by Multiples Inc, and Graphic Studio in 1973. Includes a full color postcard of each print in the portfolio as well as a price-list, housed in a printed and tri-folded sheet of folder. [details]
Artist designed folded poster / announcement published in conjunction with show held November 1 - November 27, 1969. [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held in July 1971. Organized by Jorge Glusberg. Artists include Vito Acconci, Eleanor Antin, Arakawa, Sue Arrowsmith, David Askevold, Walter Ave, John Baldessari, Manuel Barbadillo, Robert Barry, Otto Beckmann, Luis Benedit, Mel Bochner, Christian Boltanski, Ian Breakwell, Eugen Brikcius, Stuart Brisley, Stanley Brouwn, Donald Burgy, Don Celender, Jürgen Claus, James Collins, Christo, Agnes Denes, Mirtha Dermisache, Antonio Dias, Geniy Dignac, Gregorio Dujovny, David Dye, Stano Filko, Barry Flanagan, Terry Fox, Dr. ... [details]
Exhibition brochure published in conjunction with show held at The Whitney Museum of Art, Downtown at Federal Reserve Plaza, New York, July 29 - September 23, 1988. Texts by Michael Waldron, Tom Hardy, and Ingrid Periz. ... [details]