Flyer / announcement published to promote events held between 13th and 14th Streets and 6th and 5th Avenues, New York City, on April 18, 1969. Participating artists included Vito Hannibal Acconci, Terence Anderson, Arakawa, Gregory Battcock, Matthew Benedict, Michael Brownstein, Scott Burton, James Lee Byars, Rosemarie Castoro, Eduardo Costa, Bill Creston, Larry Fagin, Madeline Gins, John Giorno, Bobbi Gormley, Tom Gormley, Dan Graham, Katherine Greef, Stephen Kaltenbach, Joseph Kosuth, Leandro Katz, Alcides Lanzy, Lucy Lippard, Rosemary Mayer, Ben Patterson, John Perreault, Lil Picard, Adrian Piper, H Alexander Roberts, Marjorie Strider, Mr. ... [details]
Issues 1 - 7 of Scrap from total of 8, published in New York City and edited by Anita Ventura and Sidney Geist between 1960 - 1962. Issue One, contents include : "A Review of Sculpture this Season," by Sidney Geist ; "Report from the Club" featuring Gabriel Laderman, Neil Mallow, Wolf Kahn, Lester Johnson, Harold Cohen, Louis Finklestein, Paul Georges, Sidney Geist, Landes Lewitin, and E. ... [details]
"This book does not aim at being an objective and general analysis of the phenomenon of art or life, but is rather an attempt to flank (both art and life) as accomplices of the changes and attitudes in the development of their daily becoming. ... [details]
"Avalanche" magazine was founded by Willoughby Sharp and Liza Béar shortly after they met in 1968. At the time, Sharp was a New York-based art historian and independent curator, and Béar an underground magazine editor who had recently moved to New York from London. ... [details]
Avalanche magazine was founded by Willoughby Sharp and Liza Béar shortly after they met in 1968. At the time, Sharp was a New York-based art historian and independent curator and Béar an underground magazine editor who had recently moved to New York from London. ... [details]
A history of the ground breaking periodical written by it's editors, Willoughby Sharp and Liza Bear. From 1970 - 1976 Sharp and Bear put together a lively magazine that featured interviews, reviews, overviews and photo-documentation of some of the most important art of the period -- from Vito Acconci to Lawrence Weiner incorporating Carl Andre, Joseph Beuys, Robert Smithson, Richard Serra, Bruce Nauman, Jackie Winsor, Dennis Oppenheim, William Wegman, Terry Fox, and many others as well. ... [details]
Issue edited by Liza Beár. This issue focuses on a series of events presented at 112 Greene Street as the Video Performance exhibition. Contents "Joseph Beuys: Public Dialogue," a transcript of the first hour of Beuys' first U. ... [details]
Collaborative artists' book edited by Aleksandra Mir and Tim Griffin, with contributions by 150 artists. "Bad reviews of 150 artists who submitted their worst reviews for reprint. Beginning in the 1960s and including translations from thirteen languages, this collaborative project makes for the broadest historical and geographical survey of severe Art Criticism, its shifting form, nature, and impact, by those directly subjected to it--the artists. ... [details]
Extensive book of critical texts by and about Sol LeWitt edited by Adachiara Zevi including "Sol LeWitt in Two and Three Dimensions" by Zevi; "Texts by Sol LeWitt," which includes LeWitt's texts "I Find it Difficult to Write a Statement. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published as a scroll within a printed two-part cardboard box in conjunction with show held February 2 - 29, 1964. Introduction by John W. Weber, texts by Walter Hopps. Artists included: Kurt Schwitters, Marcel Duchamp, Louise Nevelson, Joseph Cornell, Robert Rauschenberg, H. ... [details]