"This comic-book is a collaboration between Matt Mullican and Lawrence Weiner, published by Mai 36 Galerie, Lucerne and Yves Gevaert, Brussels in September 1991." -- from publication's last interior page. [details]
Exhibition catalogue / quasi catalogue raisonné published in conjunction with show held at Deichtorhallen Hamburg, September 2 - October 30, 1994. Texts by Zdenek Felix, Stefan Germer, Claus Pias and Katerina Vatsella. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with shows held at Mai 36 Galerie, Zurich; Galerie Daniel Blau, Munich; and Brooke Alexander, New York in 2000. Includes a checklist of the exhibition. [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held December 1 - 29, 1984. Excerpted text by Germano Celant. Includes a checklist of the exhibition, a biography and a bibliography. [details]
Authorized reprint of an article about Matt Mullican by Kathy O'Dell originally printed in the January 1988 issue of Art in America. [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held at Josh Baer Gallery, New York, May 24 - June 29, 1991. Curated and with an introduction by Douglas Blau. Artists incude Jack Barth, Troy Brauntuch, David Deutsch, Barbara Ess, Matt Mullican, Mark Tansey, Oliver Wasow, Michele Zalopany and Michael Zwack. [details]
Three volume exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with Documenta IX held in Kassel, Germany, June 13 - September 9, 1992. Texts by Jan Hoet, Denys Zacharopoulos, Bart de Baere, Pier Luigi Tazzi, Claudia Herstatt, Joyce Carol Oates, Jacques Roubaud, Cornelius Castoriadis, Heiner Müller, Paul Robbrecht, Hilde Daem. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held April 27 - July 7, 1985. Curated and with an introduction by Ned Rifkin. Artists included Gary Falk, Ken Feingold, Marian Galczenski, Jenny Holzer, John Knight, Manual, Matt Mullican, Tad Savinar, and Al Souza. ... [details]
This book is the fantastic. It's the compelling story of artist Jack Goldstein (1945-2003) and some of his classmates at CalArts, who in the early 1970s went to New York and led the transition from conceptualism to Pictures art, utilizing images from television, movies and other media with which they had grown up with. ... [details]
Publication on the art of the late 80s defined by Germano Celant as "Unexpressionism." Essay by Celant. "The contemporary is a fleeting and moribund presence. Its manifestations occur before our very eyes, and yet our eyes are unable to control or define them, just as words are incapable of describing them in time, at the same time. ... [details]