Single sheet typewritten poem by Dick Higgins titled "mice all over the place." The poem reads: "and how are some of the ways / you go upstairs?" Written by Higgins on his farm in [Barton, VT] on November 15, 1971. [details]
Typewritten performance script by Dick Higgins titled "Snake in the Grass: a variation on Concretion Number Eight" by Dick Higgins written in [1963]. [details]
Invitation to "Sidney's [Felsen] 70th Birthday," held September 3, 1994. [details]
Signed and dated print executed using a rubber stamp with title phrase, ART MADE WITH A RUBBER STAMP AND SIGNED BY JOSEPH KOSUTH, in black capital letters. [details]
Folded poster / announcement published in conjunction with two installations by Les Levine: "'Body Colour' (A Place)," in the lounge of Loeb Student Center, New York University, New York, which opened January 20, 1969 ; and "Process of Elimination," an installation in a vacant lot on Wooster Street, New York City, begun on January 20th, 1969 and on view for 30 days. [details]
Press release issued by Christo and Jeanne-Claude announcing that permission had finally been granted on January 22, 2003 by Mayor Michael Bloomberg for the artists to realize "The Gates" in Central Park. ... [details]
Issues 1, 2 and 3 of Sissy Boy, a ''''zine by Charlie Welch, featuring black-and-white photographs, illustrations and text. "SISSY BOY was first introduced in 1994 and is a bastard child of the Queer Action Figures collective (NYC). ... [details]
Artist's book by M.M. Lum [Mary Lum] featuring the altered text of a book on psychoanalytic treatment, transforming it through drawing, collage and variable mark making into a book of philosophy, abstraction and visual poetry. [details]
Artist's book by Paul Heimbach in which he divides an excerpt from Sören Kierkegaard's "Either/Or: Part I" by letter and punctuation, printing each on transparent paper and maintaining their location on the page. ... [details]
Artist's book about the politicization of homosexuality as a political wedge by Republicans in the 1980s and early 1990s. "Public figure's homophobic quotes gleaned from print sources are revealed by flipping-out portraits of those quoted, shadowed by kissing boys. ... [details]