Ara Peterson, Untitled 2004-2010
Softcover, 68 pp., offset 4/4, 6.75 x 9.25 inches
Edition of 500
ISBN 978-0-9825936-5-3
Published by Seems
$25.00 ·
Ara Peterson’s arresting three-dimensional objects fall somewhere between painting, sculpture and architecture. The somewhat outmoded practice of a ‘bas-relief’ comes to mind, but this type of ornamentation doesn’t fully capture the voluptuousness of these structures, which are as much about optical clairvoyance as they are about process. Indeed, each piece results from a series of labor-intensive operations, beginning with the synthesis of wave formations that translate the artist’s initial mental image into a basic form. This is an impressionistic use of algorithms to determine the cutting of wooden slats, which are then hand-painted and assembled into unique volumes that are perhaps most simply described as passageways into new visual intensities.
— Franklin Melendez
Ara Peterson, Art, Distribution, Franklin Melendez, J.W. Turner, Sculpture, Seems
Richard Misrach, Destroy This Memory
Hardcover, 140 pp., offset 4/4, 11.75 x 15.25 inches
Edition of 2000
ISBN 978-15971116-3-8
Published by Aperture
$65.00 ·
Richard Misrach’s
Destroy This Memory is an affecting reminder of the physical and psychological impact of Hurricane Katrina. Rather than simply surveying the damage, Misrach — who has photographed the region regularly since the 1970s, most notably for his ongoing
Cancer Alley project — found himself drawn to the hurricane-inspired graffiti: messages scrawled in spray paint, crayons, chalk, or whatever materials happened to be on hand. At turns threatening, desperate, clinical, and even darkly humorous, the phrases he captured — the only text that appears in the book — offer unique and revealing human perspectives on the devastation and shock left in the wake of this disaster.
Destroy This Memory presents previously unpublished and starkly compelling material, all of which Misrach shot with his 4 MP pocket camera. Created between October and December 2005, this haunting series of images serves as a potent, unalloyed document of the raw experiences of those left to fend for themselves in the aftermath of Katrina.
Aperture, Art, Cancer Alley, Criticism, DAP, Katrina, New Orleans, Photography, Politics, Richard Misrach
Piero Golia, Desert Interviews or, how to jump off the roof and not hit the ground
Softcover, 100 pp., offset 4/1, 148 x 210 mm
Edition of 2000
ISBN 978-3-03764-106-4
Published by JRP|Ringier
$28.00 ·
Piero Golia founded in 2005, with his long-time friend Eric Wesley, the Mountain School of Arts, an educational structure that rapidly became a new spot on the cultural map of the city of Los Angeles.
This book, composed of discussions between artists, presents a kind of report on this unique “institution:” teaching methods, academic syllabus, and students’ selection are here explained with metaphors, compared with artistic interaction, and equaled to performances. Not unlike Golia’s work itself, the development of the school and its program follow a poetic of the gesture, of the instant, and of actions recalling Fluxus, Gino de Dominicis’ or Paul McCarthy’s works.
As a career’s start, Piero Golia successfully convinced a woman to have his portrait and the words “Piero My Idol” tattooed on her back (tattoo, 2001); soon after, following an invitation to the Tirana Biennale, he rowed across the Adriatic Sea in the opposite direction to migratory movement to reach Albania (”Going to Tirana,” 2000). And, on January 14, 2005, Golia vanished from New York City leaving no documented proof of his whereabouts; he traveled from a place to another, crossing borders without a trace, for resurfacing only on the morning of February 7 at the Royal Academy of Arts in Copenhagen for a unique lecture about his adventurous trip. He now lives in Los Angeles, a place that blurs the boundaries between reality and fiction, making it the perfect setting for his exploration into the process of myth-making and his ironic outlook on contemporary society.
Andrew Berardini, Art, DAP, Education, Emilie Renard, Eric Wesley, Fluxus, Gino de Dominicis, John Armleder, JRP|Ringier, Lisa Mark, Los Angeles, Mountain School of Arts, Paul McCarthy, Piero Golia, Pierre Huyghe, Richard Jackson, Royal Academy of Arts in Copenhagen, Tirana Biennale
Boris Groys and Andro Wekua, Wait to Wait
Hardcover, 160 pp., offset 4/1, 135 x 196 mm
English and German
Edition of 2000
ISBN 978-3-03764-021-0
Published by JRP|Ringier, CK editions
$28.00 ·
An
unequal pair from the ranks of philosophy and contemporary art were brought to the table for debate. The celebrated Russian philosopher Boris Groys, and the young international artist from Georgia Andro Wekua, discussed their shared experiences in the Soviet system, the conditions governing production in contemporary art today, and the sensitivities of a generation of artists born in the 1970s, taking Wekua’s two large installations
Wait to Wait and
Get Out of My Room as examples.
Phenomena such as loneliness, doubles, repetitions, mirror images, and waiting are the central themes of this conversation, illustrated by pictures of the two installations and several collages by Wekua.
Andro Wekua, Art, Boris Groys, Christoph Keller, CK editions, Criticism, DAP, Galerie Peter Kilchmann, Gladstone Gallery, Interviews, JRP|Ringier, Philosophy, Theory
Harald Szeemann, Individual Methodology
Softcover, 240 pp., offset 2/1, 160 x 230 mm
Edition of 2000
ISBN 9783905829099
Published by JRP|Ringier
$25.00 ·
We owe our idea of the contemporary exhibition to Harald Szeemann — the first of the jet-setting international curators. From 1961 to 1969, he was Curator of the Kunsthalle Bern, where in 1968 he had the foresight to give Christo and Jeanne-Claude the opportunity to wrap the entire museum building. Szeemann’s groundbreaking 1969 exhibition When Attitudes Become Form, also at the Kunsthalle, introduced European audiences to artists like Joseph Beuys, Eva Hesse, Richard Serra and Lawrence Weiner. It also introduced the now-commonplace practice of curating an exhibition around a theme. Since Szeemann’s death in 2005, there has been research underway at his archive in Tessin, Switzerland. An invaluable resource, this volume provides access to previously unpublished plans, documents and photographs from the archive, along with important essays by Hal Foster and Jean-Marc Poinsot. There is also an informative interview with Tobia Bezzola — curator at the Kunsthauz Zurich and Szeemann’s collaborator for many years. Two of Szeemann’s most ambitious exhibitions are presented as case studies: Documenta V (1972) and L’Autre, the 4th Lyon Biennial (1997). A biography, an illustrated chronology of Szeemann’s exhibitions and a selection of his writings complete this exhaustive survey.
Art, Criticism, DAP, Florence Derieux, Hal Foster, Harald Szeemann, Jean-Marc Poinsot, JRP|Ringier, Theory, Tobia Bezzola
Manuel Raeder, Bom Dia, Boa Tarde, Boa Noite (
Manuel Raeder Agenda 2011)
Softcover, 128 pp. + 4/1 insert, offset 1/1, 140 x 160 mm
Edition of 1000
Agenda/calendar/notebook 2011
Published by Manuel Raeder
$29.00 ·
Agendas are an ongoing project that Manuel Raeder has been doing since 2003. The idea of this series of time storage devices, is to focus on questioning different methods of how we organize, in a personal or none personal way our time. Formats, sizes and distributions systems vary each year.
A whole year compiled in one book, with the following contributions: Manuel Raeder (January), Carla Zaccagnini (February), Mariana Castillo Deball (March), Daniel Steegmann (April), Manuel Raeder (May), Eran Schaerf (June), Bojan Sarcevic (July), Manuel Raeder (August), Rodolfo Samperio (September), Amanda Haas (October), Amalia Pica (November), Adriana Lara (December), Manuel Goller (January).
Adriana Lara, Agenda, Amalia Pica, Amanda Haas, Art, Bojan Sarcevic, Carla Zaccagnini, Daniel Steegmann, Distribution, Eran Schaerf, Manuel Goller, Manuel Raeder, Mariana Castillo Deball, Rodolfo Samperio
Florian Dombois and Eran Schaerf, palaver
Stapled, 80 pp., digital 4/1, 210 x 297 mm
English and German
Edition of 1000
ISBN 978-3-033-02145-7
Published by Kunsthalle Bern
$15.00 ·
If artistic research is characterized by the fact that essential aspects of the research results manifest in the work of art, one can ask: What is a space that is discussed in the examples of artistic research results? In what constellation meet artists, experts, audiences and the work of art? How will the research be negotiated? The publication palaver documents and shares preliminary solutions to this problem of space and was released on as part of the test event, Long Night of the palaver at the Kunsthalle Bern. Concept by Florian Dombois and Eran Schaerf; Design by Manuel Raeder.
Distribution, Eran Schaerf, Eva Meyer, Florian Dombois, Gunnar Voss, Kunsthalle Bern, Manuel Raeder, Mirjam Thomann, Phillipe Pirotte
Mono.Kultur 25, Dave Eggers
Poster and wrap-around cover, offset 3/3, 150 x 200 mm [700 x 1000 mm unfolded]
Edition of 5000
ISSN 1861-7085
Published by Mono.Kultur
$9.00 ·
Dave Eggers is a busy man: not only an appraised author since his biographic debut novel ‘A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius’, Eggers also founded the highly successful literary magazine The Believer, single-handedly revived the short story with his publishing imprint McSweeney’s, founded permanent writing workshops for disadvantaged youth all across America, and recently scripted the acclaimed Hollywood productions ‘Away We Go’ by Sam Mendes and ‘Where the Wild Things Are’ by Spike Jonze. In short: Eggers is the man who will leave no stone unturned to lure you back to the printed page. His unique tone of writing provides the perfect soundtrack to the confusion and disillusionment of his generation, oscillating wildly between hyperactive optimism and lethargic melancholy. With mono.kultur, Dave Eggers talked about the rendez-vous of fiction and life, how to be political on eye level and why there’s never been a better time for literature than now.
Dave Eggers, Distribution, Eva Gonçalves, Kai von Rabenau, Mono.Kultur, Patrick Klose, Sam Cate-Gumpert, Spike Jonze
C Magazine 108, Money
Softcover, 64 pp., offset 4/1, 210 x 295 mm
Edition of 2200
ISSN 1480-5472
Published by C Magazine
$7.50 ·
C Magazine issue 108
Money includes an artist project by Abbas Akhavan, where he has inserted a sheet of imitation gold leaf in each of 2,200 copies of C Magazine. Also available are 25 special limited edition magazines with gold leaf, signed and numbered by the artist.
Feature articles in issue 108 include Economies of Faith, by Richard Ibghy and Marilou Lemmens, looking at works by Mark Boulos, Melanie Gilligan and Olivia Plender that explore the relationship between the workings of the market and the spiritual belief, and Documents of Self-Administration: A Conversation with Vincent Bonin, by Adam Lauder, about the exhibition Documentary Protocols at the Leonard & Bina Ellen Gallery. This issue also includes interviews with British artist Spartacus Chetwynd, by David Lillington, and Canadian artist Divya Mehra, by Natasha Bissonauth.
Reviews include Shannon Anderson on Anselm Kiefer’s Palmsonntag at the Art Gallery of Ontario; Saelen Twerdy on Projections: Music Video at Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal; Kenneth Hayes on Group ABS at Gallery Siz in Rijeka, Croatia; Vanessa Nicholas on Rivane Neuenschwander’s A Day Like Any Other at the New Museum; Heather Diack on Annie MacDonell’s Beside the Midnight Lake at Katharine Mulherin Contemporary Art Projects; Rebecca Weisman on Guy Ben-Ner: Thursday the 12th at Mass MoCA; Jill Glessing on Fernando Sánchez Castillo: National Episodes and Óscar Muñoz: Becoming Air at Círculo de Bellas Arte, Madrid; Michael Birchall on the 6th Berlin Biennale; and Evan Webber on Jon McCurley: Fashion Blog — Clothes for President.
Abbas Akhavan, Adam Lauder, Annie MacDonell, Anselm Kiefer, Art, C Magazine, David Lillington, Distribution, Divya Mehra, Evan Webber, Fernando Sánchez Castillo, Guy Ben-Ner, Heather Diack, Jill Glessing, Jon McCurley, Katharine Mulherin, Kenneth Hayes, Marilou Lemmens, Mark Boulos, Melanie Gilligan, Michael Birchall, Money, Natasha Bissonauth, Olivia Plender, Óscar Muñoz, Rebecca Weisman, Richard Ibghy, Rivane Neuenschwander, Saelen Twerdy, Shannon Anderson, Spartacus Chetwynd, Vanessa Nicholas, Vincent Bonin
Richard Lidinsky and Jonathan Maghen, PALS (Coming Soon)
Océ print/poster, 1/0 on pink paper, 20 x 28 inches [21 x 29 inches framed*]
Edition of 3 + 2 proofs, numbered
Published by Textfield
$123.00 ·
Collaboration with Richard Lidinsky and design of poster/edition for the exhibition
PALS.
Pals (full title: Pals for Life / Life for Pals) is a teleplay about the dialectics of friendships under the strain of artistic endeavor. Shot principally in January 2011 at the Actual Size gallery in Los Angeles’ Chinatown, the approx. 34-minute video — told from the point of view of a traditional studio audience television program — revels in the angst and emotion of 4 friends/lovers who must install their respective art works in the presence of frenemies large and small. Each Pal is named after a specific human being, though the story implies that these pals are simple archetypes from a vast universe of narcissistic micro-movements.
*PALS (Coming Soon) print/poster ships unframed; trim size is an exact fit for this frame.
Art, Cats, Culture, Distribution, Exhibitions, Jonathan Maghen, Michael Wells, Natascha Snellman, Orson Cat, PALS, Performance, PJ Risse, Posters, Richard Lidinsky, Textfield, Tyler Jamison, Typography, Wilson Chang
Elmar Bambach, Martin Fengel, Jörg Koopman, Julia Marquardt and Birgit Vogel, Ort
Softcover, 56 pp., offset 4/1, 240 x 325 mm
Edition of 500
ISBN 978-3-00-032613-4
Published by Bücher & Hefte
$18.00 ·
A publication is published, accompanying the exhibition
Ort at Rathausgalerie, Kunsthalle.
Photographs by Miriam Bäckström, Bennie Baumann, Linus Bill, Stefan Burger, Rudolf Cohen, Michael Danner, Paul Gerhard Diez, Uschi Huber, Iski Behörde, Geraldine Jeanjean, Mårten Lange, Peter Langer, M + M, Richard Mosse, Andreas Neumeister, Taiyo Onorato & Nico Krebs, Peter Piller, Johannes Schwartz, Heidi Specker & Theo Deutinger, Erik van der Weijde, Matthias Ziegler. Texts by Simon Bieling and Swantje Grundler.
Andreas Neumeister, Art, Bennie Baumann, Birgit Vogel, Bücher & Hefte, Distribution, Ein Magazin über Orte, Elmar Bambach, Erik Van Der Weijde, Geraldine Jeanjean, Heidi Specker, Iski Behörde, Johannes Schwartz, Jörg Koopman, Julia Marquardt, Linus Bill, M + M, Marten Lange, Martin Fengel, Matthias Ziegler, Michael Danner, Miriam Bäckström, Nico Krebs, Ort, Paul Gerhard Diez, Peter Langer, Peter Piller, Photography, Rathausgalerie, Richard Mosse, Rudolf Cohen, Simon Bieling, Stefan Burger, Swantje Grundler, Taiyo Onorato, Theo Deutinger, Uschi Huber