Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held December 17, 1968 - February 9, 1969. Artists included in the exhibition are Peter Agostini, Calvin Albert, Peter Alexander, John Anderson, Stephen Antonakos, Richard Artschwager, Jerry Ballaine, Robert Bart, Leonard Baskin, Mary Bauermeister, Bennett Bean, John Bennett, Fletcher Benton, Tony Berlant, Ben Berns, Michael Bigger, Ronald Bladen, Varujan Boghosian, Lee Bontecou, Louise Bourgeois, Alexander Calder, Kennetth Campbell, John Chamberlain, Chryssa, Mike Cooper, Tony Delap, Walter De Maria, Deborah de Moulpied, Jose de Rivera, Mark di Suvero, Tom Doyle, Robert Engman, Peter Erskine, Herbert Ferber, Frank Gallo, William Geis III, Cristos Gianakos, John Goodyear, Robert Graham, Nancy Grossman, Robert Grosvenor, Roy Gussow, Peter Gutkin, Michael Hall, Duayne Hatchett, Alex Hay, Michael Heizer, Eva Hesse, Will Horwitt, Robert Howard, Robert Hudson, Richard Hunt, James Huntington, Daniel Larue Johnson, Donald Judd, Craig Kauffman, Ellsworth Kelly, William King, Robert Kinmont, Lyman Kipp, Gabriel Kohn, Joseph Konzal, Rockne Krebs, Gary Kuehn, Gerald Laing, Leroy Lamis, Stanley Landsman, Michael Lekakis, Joseph Levi, Les Levine, Alexander Liberman, Roy Lichtenstein, Seymour Lipton, Jim Love, Bix Lye, Sheldon Machlin, Robert Mallary, John McCracken, Ed McGowin, Walter McNamara, Clement Meadmore, James Melchert, Robert Morris, Robert Murray, Louise Nevelson, Barnett Newman, Minoru Niizuma, Claes Oldenburg, Dennis Oppenheim, Alfonso Ossorio, Harold Paris, Kenneth Price, Leo Rabkin, Carlos Ramos, James Reineking, Sam Richardson, Robert Richenburg, George Rickey, Larry Rivers, Henry Rollins, James Rosati, Bernard Rosenthal, Charles Ross, Theodore Roszak, Lucas Samaras, Fred Sandback, Alan Saret, Julius Schmidt, Roy Schnackenberg, George Segal, Jason Seley, William Sellers, Richard Serra, Robert Smithson, Kenneth Snelson, Sylvia Stone, Edvins Strautmanis, George Sugarman, Wayne Taylor, Julius Tobias, Michael Todd, Ernest Trova, Anne Truitt, William Tunberg, Dewain Valentine, Richard van Buren, Frank Lincoln Viner, Ruth Vollmer, David von Schlegell, David Weinrib, Tom Wesselmann, H. ... [details]
Poems created by Johnson from Satie's notes, originally in French, to the piano pieces that comprise "Sports and Divertissments." All texts in English. With drawings by John Furnival. [details]
"In this new book, America's most interesting and controversial writer on art clarifies the mysteries and conflicts of contemporary painting, sculpture, Happenings, kinetics, etc., and illuminates their relevance for our time. ... [details]
Survey of the work of L.A. based artists before 1980. Edited by Lyn Kienholz with contributing editors Elizabeta Betinski and Corinne Nelson. Includes appendix. "'L.A. Rising SoCal Artists Before 1980' is the first comprehensive pictorial showcase of the diverse universe of artists working in the Los Angeles area during the formative period of Los Angeles' art history. ... [details]
Issue edited by John Wilcock. Cover photo by Shunk Kender. "Young Italians : Italian Art of the Mid-Sixties," by Alan Solomon, with art by Michelangelo Pistoletto, Valerio Adami, and Laura Grisi; "Look Out, Whitey! Black Power's Gon' Get Your Mama!" by Julius Lester; "Big Brother Watches," collage by Ray Johnson, with poetry by Armand Kihl and Meher Baba; "The Sky Is Falling," by Ronald J. ... [details]
Issue edited by John Wilcock. Cover photo by Jean Pierre Laffaut for a painting by France Raysse. Essays "Don't Go to Pieces on Sunday"; "Unpublished Interviews," by Israel G. Young; "Niggers from Outer Space (Excerpts from the Novel)," by Ted Joans; "Pigs & Presidents : 3 'Nothing Wrong with American That a Good Erection Wont [sic] Cure,' " by David Mairowitz; photograph by Shunk-Kendler; "Scarecrows Vogelscheuchen," by Hannes Jahn; "Rome : Bradley Martin Reporting," by Bradley Martin; poetry by Victor Coleman, Ronald Gross, Robert Scott Mashkin, and Joey Sacks; "The All Purpose Pick-up Line," by Steve Kraus; "Making It with Archie the Artist," by Murphy; "Safe," by Walter K. ... [details]
"The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, America's oldest museum and school of fine arts, was founded in 1805. Today, the Academy boasts one of the nation's finest collections of American art and a roster of alumni representing the greatest artists this country has produced. ... [details]