Documents exhibitions from the first eight years of the New York alternative art space 112 Workshop. Entries are organized in chronological order, with textual information on the artists involved in each exhibition, as well as full page reproductions of works shown. ... [details]
Audio CD reissue of Just Another Asshole #5,which was originally issues as a 12" vinyl LP. Features 83 artists, performing 77 pieces or extracts each of 45 seconds. Edited by Barbara Ess and Glenn Branca. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held at SITE Santa Fe, Santa Fe, New Mexico, November 1, 1997 - January 25, 1998. Traveled to the Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego, California, March 23 - June 13, 1998; the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, DC, July 9 - September 23, 1998; and to the Cleveland Center for Contemporary Art, Cleveland, Ohio, November 20, 1998 - January 24, 1999. ... [details]
Essay by David Shapiro. Artists include Connie Beckley, Peter Berg, Mari Boeyen, Andre Cadere, Rosemarie Castoro, Diego Cortez, Antonio Dias, Joel Fisher, Linda Francis, Wim Gijzen, Paolo ICaro, Gerard Incandela, Bernard Joubert, Alain Middletown, Lucio Pozzie, Joanne Seltzer, Susan Smith, Eve Sonneman, Susanna Tanger, Lynn Umlauf, Krzysztof Wodiczko, and Robert Yasuda. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held January 20 - April 9, 1975. Curated by John Hanhardt, Barbara Haskell, James Monte, Elke Solomon, and Marcia Tucker. Foreward by Tom Armstrong, director of the Whitney Museum. ... [details]
Issue edited by Ingrid Sischy. Essays "Melodramatic Tactics," by Kate Linker; "Swallowing Dali," by Carter Ratcliff; "Thieves Like Us," by Judith Russi Kirshner; "Allegorical Procedures: Appropriation and Montage in Contemporary Art," by Benjamin H. ... [details]
Issue edited by Ingrid Sischy. Essays "Robert Doisneau's 'Oblique Regard,'" by Max Kozloff; "A Project by Giuseppe Penone"; "'The Other,'" by John Bernard Myers; "'Jiri Georg Dokoupil: The Imprisoned Brain," by Rainer Crone; "A Project by Robert Graham"; "Diogenes of Sinope (ca. ... [details]
Special Issue edited by Ingrid Sischy. "I am on a train moving eastward," by Mark Holborn; "For some time now, in order to write this wretched article, I have been thinking about automatons," by Eugenio Battisti; "The monster and the city have always been symbiotic," by Philip Strick; "Since the late 18th century the function of art as a form of value, and how that value was to be defined, has been anything but clear," by Sidney Tillim; "There is more of traditional beauty in Modernist art than we care to admit," by Carter Ratcliff; "ANKEBUTA, AN ANCIENT BABYLONIAN SCIENTIST, WROTE A WORK ON ARTCRITICAL PRODUCTIONS IN WHICH HE CLAIMED TO HAVE MANUFACTURED A LIVING HUMAN BEING," by Thomas McEvilley; "God made the first copy," by Glenn O'Brien; "Culture in the most fertilized substance," by Edit deAK; "At this quick and weightless moment late in the Century of Abstraction. ... [details]
Issue edited by Ingrid Sischy. Essays "A Note Concerning Francis Picabia," by Harald Szeemann; "Imagining Nowhere: Richard Tuttle's 'Monkey's Recovery,'" by Klaus Kertess; "Breaking the Contract: A Conversation with Peter Greenaway," by Stuart Morgan; "Triple Entendre," a project by General Idea; "Enchantment and Revolution - Joan Miró," by Roland Penrose; "Jack Goldstein: The Trace of Absence," by Jean Fisher; "Vija Celmins: Drawings without Withdrawing," by Kenneth Baker; "Susan Sontag's Unguided Tour," by Gary Indiana; "'Books': Frederic Tuten on 'Ranxerox,'" by Frederic Tuten; "Gulliver Speaks," by Greil Marcus; "Forum," by John Howell and Lisa Liebmann. ... [details]
Issue edited by Ingrid Sischy. Essays "The Real Experiment," by Allan Kaprow; "Triumph of Representation, a project," by Giulio Paolini; "Against the Return to Order," by Nicolas Calas; "A Project," by Sigmar Polke; "Dispensable Friends, Indispensable Ideologies: Andre Bréton's Surrealism," by Donald Kuspit; "Popcorn and Canvas," by Carrie Rickey; "Books: Frederic Tuten on 'Ranxerox' (continued)," by Frederic Tuten; "Forum," by Glenn O'Brien. ... [details]