Issue number 2 of the quarterly periodical Avalanche, published Winter 1971. Cover features Bruce Nauman. Contents: "Rumbles," featuring Bas Jan Ader, John Perreault, Vito Acconci, and Paul Kos; "Interview: Bruce Nauman"; "Interview: Terry Fox"; "Klaus Rinke Retrospective"; "Documents: John Van Saun"; "Documents: Dennis Oppenheim"; "Documents: Richard Serra"; "Yves Klein," by Shunk-Kender; "King for a Day," by Bruce McLean; "112 Greene Street," by Alan Saret and Jeffrey Lew; "Mrs. ... [details]
Inaugural issue of the quarterly periodical Avalanche. Edited by Liza Bear, published by Willoughby Sharp, and designed by Boris Wall Gruphy [a pseudonym for Willoughby Sharp]. Contents include: "Rumbles," featuring James Turrell, Keith Arnatt, Douglas Davis, Luis Fernanda Benedit, Paolo Soleri, Isaac Witkin, and William Wegman; "Interview: Carl Andre;" "Interview: Jan Dibbets;" "Retrospective: Richard Long;" "Pace and Process," by Robert Morris; "Portrait: Joseph Beuys," by Skunk-Kender; "Body Works," by Willoughby Sharp; "Museums: MOCA, San Francisco;" "Galleries: Reese Palley, San Francisco;" "Discussions with Heizer, Oppenheim, Smithson," by Michael Heizer, Dennis Oppenheim and Robert Smithson. ... [details]
Set of 21 issues of the irregularly published Public Illumination Magazine, featuring texts and artwork by dozens of contributors identified solely by pseudonyms. Edited by Mike Topp. Volumes included: No. ... [details]
"In a career that spanned five decades, most of them spent in San Francisco, Bruce Conner (1933–2008) produced a unique body of work that refused to be contained by medium or style. Whether making found-footage films, hallucinatory ink-blot graphics, enigmatic collages, or assemblages from castoffs, Conner took up genres as quickly as he abandoned them. ... [details]
Catalogue raisonnée of know works by John Dogg, a pseudonym for Richard Prince and Colin de Land. Published in conjunction with Venus Over Manhattan's booth at Frieze Masters, London, October 5 - 8, 2017. ... [details]
Set of three parts documenting the exhibition one-man "Yes Art : The Cultural Miracle" held at Fitzgerald Gallery, New York, October 19 - November 6, 1965 by Robert Cenedella. Exhibition was composed of 57 individual works attributed to various artists all pseudonyms for Cenedella. ... [details]
Collaborative artist's book by Joanne Caring and Louise Lawler under the pseudonym The Roseprint Detective Club. Composed of an unprinted series of pages, except for colophon, with six loose inserts similar to fortune cookie fortunes--five of which were drafted by Caring and Lawler with the sixth being an actual fortune cookie fortune. ... [details]
"303 Gallery: 35 Years is a new hardcover publication chronicling the story of the gallery from its founding in 1984 through its history creating and mirroring developments in the New York and international art worlds, forming a portrait of the gallery as it stands in the present day. ... [details]
March 22, 1970 issue of "Screw: The Sex Review," edited by Al Goldstein. Contents include: "Jerk-off Jungle," by Matt Davidson; "Fuck Books : All the Sex That Fits, We Print," by Dan Mouer; "Orgy at Ohrbach's," by John Francis Hunter; "Eat Your Troubles Away," by Great Ray Thompson; "Global Garbage," by Jim Buckley; "Fucking without Fear : Or the Prevention of Spiro Agnew," by Diane Vanderbliss; "Homosexual Citizen : Cross My Cock and Hope to Die," by Lige and Jack; "Dirty Diversions : Commuters Run Amok in Suburbia," by Al Goldstein; "The Sex Scene," by Al Pseudonym; "Naked City," by Bob Amsel; and "Shit List," by Al Goldstein. [details]
Graphic novel rendered by Ignacio Morales–—a pseudonym for Mel Chin—about two disasters: the September 11, 1973 attack on La Moneda Presidential Palace in Santiago, Chile and the September 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon in the United States. ... [details]