Issue number three (of six issues published) of "It Is : A Magazine for Abstract Art," published between 1958 and 1965. Edited by P.G. Pavia. Contents include: "A Little Room for Feeling," by Hubert Crehan; "Face Front," by Sidney Geist; "Abstraction in Poetry," by Allen Ginsberg; "Editor of a Hearsay Panel," by Elaine de Kooning; "Thoughts on the Dance," by Merle Marsicano; "Drawing," by Mercedes Matter; "Spontaneity," by George McNeil; "Manifesto-In-Progress III," by P. ... [details]
A quarterly of poetry edited and published by Alan Brilliant. Dick Fass, assistant. Poems "This Desire, This Pain," by Frank J. Darlington; "Three Poems," by James Wright; "Two Poems," by Cecil Hemley; "Two Poems," by James May; "Two Poems," by Felix Stefanile; "Three Poems," by William Pillin; "Time has a Million Meanings," by Harold Briggs; "Translation from Corbiere," by Michael Benedikt; "The First Sorrow of Joseph," by Tim Reynolds; "Two Poems," by Harold Witt; "Three Poems," by Samuel Menashe; "Three Poems," by Fred Cogswell. ... [details]
Single side postcard / announcement published in conjunction with opening held April 19, [1957]. Artists include Waldemar Baranowski, Robert Beauchamp, Joann Gedney, Richard Ireland, Lester Johnson, David Lund, Marcia Marcus, Steve Montgomery, Patricia Passloff, Ray Spillenger, Peter Stander, Tom Young, Wilfrid Zogbaum, Gabriel Kohn, Mary Frank, William Creston, Joan Mathews, Allan Kaprow, Martin Bloom, Lennart Anderson, John Chamberlain, Elaine de Kooning, Vincent Pepi, Miles Karpilow, Ernest Smith, Fritz Bultman. [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held October 11 - December 7, 1952, Philadelphia Museum of Art. Traveled January 22 - March 8, 1953, Art Institute Chicago, Illinois; April 29 - September 7, 1953, Museum of Modern Art, New York. ... [details]
Program for three plays produced during the 1951-1952 season at the Living Theatre. "Desire (Trapped by the Tail)" by Pablo Picasso, directed by Judith Malina, settings and costumes by Julian Beck, choreography by Jim Smith, music by Lucille Dlugoszewski, lighting by Steven Meyer and Jack Ferris, cast includes John Ashbery and Frank O'hara in the rolls of The Two Bow-Wows and The Curtains. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show of the personal art collection of Juliana Force held at the Whitney Museum of American Art, September 24 - October 30, 1949. Text by Juliana Force, Herman More, Lloyd Goodrich, John Sloan, Guy Pène du Bois, Alexander Brook, Forbes Watson. ... [details]
Winter 1947/8 issue of the Possibilities,"An occasional review," the first in a series of 4 oriented around the topic of problems in contemporary art. Edited by Pierre Chareau, John Cage, Robert Motherwell, and Harold Rosenberg. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with survey held January 3 - February 11, 1945. Text by John Davis Hatch, Jr. and Alain Locke. Artists include: William E. Artis, Henry W. Bannarn, Richmond Barthe, Romare Bearden, Eloise Bishop, Selma Hortense Burke, William Carter, Elizabeth Catlett, Claude Clark, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Joseph Delaney, Aaron Douglas, Fred C. ... [details]
Anthology of critical essays by André Breton. Artists, philosophers, and other figures mentioned in the text include André Breton, Corneille Agrippa, Guillaume Apollinaire, Apulee, Louis Aragon, Alexander Archipenko, Hans Arp, Gaston Bachelard, Honoré de Balzac, Hans Bellmer, Bleuler, Umberto Boccioni, Jérôme Bosch, Constantin Brancusi, Georges Braque, Victor Brauner, Bettina Brentano, Jean-Paul Brisset, Charles de Brosses, Robert Browning, Giordano Bruno, Alexander Calder, Leonora Carrington, Blaise Cendrars, Paul Cezanne, Marc Chagall, Giorgio de Chirico, Cimabue, Joseph Cornell, Piero di Cosimo, Georges Courteline, Charles Cros, Salvador Dali, Paul Delvaux, André Derain, Denis Diderot, Oscar Dominquez, Enrico Donati, Isidore Ducasse, Marcel Duchamp, Raymond Duchamp-Villon, Eckhardt, Albert Einstein, Paul Eluard, Max Ernst, Serge Essenine, Joachim de Flore, Théodore Flournoy, Jean Fouquet, Charles Fourier, Esteban Frances, James George Frazer, Sigmund Freud, von der Gabelentz, Alberto Giacometti, Giotto, Goethe, Arshile Gorky, Mathias Grunewald, Gutenberg, David Hare, S. ... [details]