Ginny Cook and Kim Schoen, MATERIAL 3
Softcover, 96 pp. + insert, offset 2/1, 160 x 270 mm
Edition of 500
ISBN 978-0-9801441-2-3
Published by MATERIAL Press
$15.00 ·
MATERIAL exists as a platform for the artist’s voice. Each issue brings together a different group of artists who write, as well as a new collaboration with a graphic designer. During the production of this third issue, our designer Zak Jensen put forth the idea of concatenation — the act of linking together, or the state of being joined (
It was caused by an improbable concatenation of circumstances) (there was a connection between eating that pickle and having that nightmare)
(the joining of hands around the table).
Concatenation (c.1600, from L.L. concatenatus, pp. of concatenare “to link together,” from com- “together”+ catenare, from catena “a chain”) seemed an appropriate word for our editorial method. An unlikely assemblage of texts becomes connected through this process; uncanny linkages emerge. Wyeth appears twice. Performances interact. In this issue: voices that duel, voices that parrot, voices that hypothesize, translate, and meditate, voices that speak simultaneously. As Roland Barthes writes, we have assembled these textual events, as “pleasure in pieces; language in pieces; culture in pieces,” to build upon one another into something new.*
*Roland Barthes, The Pleasure of the Text, trans. Richard Miller (New York: Hill and Wang, 1975), p. 51
CONTRIBUTORS
Farrah Karapetian, Paul Zelevansky, Renee Petropoulous, Nate Harrison, James Welling, Natalie Häusler, Harold Abramowitz, Shana Lutker Stephanie Taylor, Alice Könitz, Frank Chang, and Emily Mast.
Alice Konitz, Andrew Wyeth, Art, Catherine Guiral, Concatenare, Criticism, Daniel Lucas, Design, Distribution, Dorit Cypis, Emily Mast, Farrah Karapetian, Frank Chang, Ginny Cook, Harold Abramowitz, James Welling, John Stezaker, Jonathan Miles, Kim Schoen, MATERIAL Press, Natalie Häusler, Nate Harrison, Olivier Richon, Paul Zelevansky, Quentin Walesch, Renee Petropoulous, Richard Miller, Roland Barthes, Shana Lutker, Stephanie Taylor, Theory, Thomas Lawson, Typecraft Wood & Jones, Typography, Wendy Schoen, Zak Jensen
Outpost Journal 2, Baltimore
Softcover, 64 pp. + insert, offset 4/4, 9 x 12 inches
Edition of 500
ISBN 978-0-9836082-1-9
Published by Outpost Journal
$15.00 ·
Outpost is an annual print publication on art, design and community action from cities that have been traditionally underexposed beyond their local contexts. Each beautifully produced and visually engaging issue of Outpost focuses on a single urban location and comes packaged with a limited edition print by an artist from the featured city. Outpost is a journey into the creative heart of a place, and via features like “Secretly Famous” (profiles of the most infamous artsy locals), guerrilla engagements with tourist attractions, historical explorations, mapping projects, and deep dives into artist collectives and organizations, Outpost exposes the myriad ways in which unique local communities arise through creative collaboration and production.
Exploratory and playful, critical with a sense of levity, and inspired by hand-drawn maps, flags, totem poles, poorly pixelated iPhone photos, moody landscapes, and the spirit of adventure, Outpost is dedicated to strengthening ties between communities and spreading new ideas about how creative culture can change our world.
Aja Blanc, Alex Kwartler, Anusha Venkataraman, Architecture, Art, Boddan Mohora, Bogdan Mohora, Caitlin Cunningham, Carly Ptak, Clay Rockefeller, Culture, Dan Deacon, Design, Distribution, Elizabeth Evitts Dickinson, Gary Kachadourian, Gillian Kiley, James Rieck, Jay Peter Salvas, Jeanne Vaccaro, John Bohl, Jori Ketten, Kyla Fullenwider, Laure Drogoul, Lesser Gonzalez Alvarez, Loring Cornish, Luke T. Baker, Maggie Lange, Manya Rubinstein, Matthew Williams, Mike Taylor, Outpost Journal, Patrick Casey O'Brien, Pete Oyler, Peter Blasser, Phoebe Jean, Phoebe Jean Dunne, Rachel Monroe, Seth Adelsberger, Shaun Flynn, Twig Harper
Amir Zaki, Eleven Minus One
Softcover, 122 pp., offset 4/4, 9 x 9 inches [26 x 36 inches unfolded]
Edition of 500
ISBN 978-0-26172-2-9
Published by LAXART
$75.00 ·
For this project,
Amir Zaki carefully reconstructed and reinterpreted, in virtual 3D space, several photographs from a series made in the mid-1980’s by Swiss artist duo Peter Fischli and David Weiss. Their photographs depict precariously balancing temporary sculptures that they intentionally constructed in a slap-dash manner. Their photographs of these sculptures were casually shot in their studio using unprofessional lighting and equipment. Through these photographs of temporary sculptural constructs made of household detritus, Fischli and Weiss subvert the idea of sculpture as a heroic manifestation of a unique and masterfully constructed object. Their work privileges the document over the sculpture, which Zaki interprets as an ironic inverse of the ubiquitous professional photographic documentation of the ‘serious’ sculpture found in so many art books and journals. In Zaki’s adaptation of their work, there is a re-inversion at play as he privileges the sculpture again, but only as a 3D virtual non-object in order to destabilize their relationship. This has manifested as a series of short photorealistic animation loops and a foldout book based on the eleven different ways that a cube can be unfolded. Working with this methodology allowed Zaki to further interrogate the conventions and limitations of photography by exploring depictions of ‘real’ space, but without the restraints of actual physics or forces such as gravity. Zaki is interested in the perversion of using Fischli and Weiss photographs of quickly made, throw-away sculptures as a source to create an incredibly laborious photorealistic virtual 3D scene that can be explored from all angles, both through photographic and orthographic projections. In this project Zaki has also fetishized the sculptures by making them virtual, stylized and idealized. He has resurrected these sculptures and placed them in a world where they need not ever ‘fall’ (fail). In the animations Zaki has created, the sculptures simply spin, teeter or gyrate indefinitely. In the photographs Zaki has rendered for the book, the sculptures hover in a perfect orthographic projection space, surrounded by a black void.
The book is a complex foldout design that is quite difficult to describe in text. It is ten double-sided square pages. Each page spread unfolds into unique configurations of six squares that represent all sides of a cube. The images on each unfolded page spread depict 3D digital recreations of photographs from the series Equilibres by Swiss artist duo Peter Fischli and David Weiss. When fully unfolded, the book opens up to approximately 27 x 36 inches. It is an interactive object, and can be folded and unfolded in multiple ways, creating grids, cubes, and unfolded boxes, each creating a unique experience and juxtaposition of images. It is important to recognize the book in terms of a limited edition or a multiple. It is also more of an object with sculptural qualities and a tactile nature than a ‘book’ in the traditional sense.
Amir Zaki, Art, David Weiss, Distribution, Eighth Veil, Greenblatt-Wexler, LAXART, Peter Fischli, Photography, Sculpture
der:die:das:, Issue g like glühbirne (light bulb)
Softcover, 92 pp., offset 4/1, 200 x 270 mm
English and German
Edition of 1000
ISSN 1663-2508
Published by der:die:das:
$20.00 ·
Some words on, and images of, glühbrine (light bulb). Featuring: Joseph Beuys, Big Zis, Lorenz Cugini, Vilem Flusser, Robert Gober, Colin Guillemet, Christina Hemauer, Roman Keller, Veronique Hoegger, et al.
Aleli Leal, Anne Schwalbe, Art, Big Zis, Christina Hemauer, Colin Guillemet, Culture, der:die:das:, Distribution, Flurina Rothenberger, Isabelle Krieg, Jeff Wall, Jens Lubbadeh, Joseph Beuys, Judith Wyder, Katharina Hohmann, Katharina Rippstein, Lorenz Cugini, Lukas Zimmermann, Photography, Robert Gober, Roman Keller, Sculpture, Sherrie Levine, Stefan Mauck, Tobias Madison, Veronique Hoegger, Vilem Flusser
C Magazine 114, Men
Softcover, 64 pp., offset 4/1, 210 x 295 mm
Edition of 2200
ISSN 1480-5472
Published by C Magazine
$7.50 ·
Issue 114, Men, includes essays by Ken Moffatt on male shame, Kerry Manders on Chris Ironside’s Mr. Long Weekend, Dan Adler on Ian Wallace’s Monochrome Series, an interview with Tobaron Waxman by Shawn Syms, and Ann Marie Peña in conversation with Yinka Shonibare. C Magazine 114 also includes Lezbros for Lesbos, an artist project by Logan MacDonald and Jon Davies, exhibition reviews of Michael Flaherty, A.K. Burns, Christoph Schlingensief, Attila Richard Lukacs, Althea Thauberger and Andrea Zittel, and book reviews.
A.K. Burns, Althea Thauberger, Andrea Zittel, Ann Marie Peña, Art, Attila Richard Lukacs, C Magazine, Chris Ironside, Christoph Schlingensief, Culture, Dan Adler, Distribution, Ian Wallace, Jon Davies, Ken Moffatt, Kerry Manders, Logan MacDonald, Michael Flaherty, Shawn Syms, Tobaron Waxman, Yinka Shonibare
Charlie White, Spilling Hot Gossip
Poster, 100 lb matte coated paper, offset 2/0, 18 x 24 inches
Edition of 500
Unsigned, unnumbered
Published by Oslo Kunstforening
$12.00 ·
Collaboration with
Charlie White and design of poster/take away for the exhibition
Spilling Hot Gossip a selection from
The Girl Studies at
Oslo Kunstforening.
“Portraiture has always been motivated by two competing and overlapping desires: the desire to record, and the desire to be recorded. Artists Katy Grannan and Charlie White have examined this tension, exploring concepts of identity and subjectivity in a world increasingly dominated by media representations of the ideal self. The Sun and Other Stars presents two bodies of work that map the fragility and resilience of individuality in contemporary Western culture.
Grannan’s unflinching portraits capture adult subjects along the sun-struck boulevards of the American West, transforming them from obscurity to individuality with pathos and candor. White’s series of blonde teenage girls frames the popular and tyrannical appetite for celebrity with a deadpan lack of sentimentality. These two photographic series, accompanied by Grannan’s first film project and White’s new animation and personal collections of mass-culture ephemera, provide a visual vocabulary for an examination of the human subject and the encumbering effect of desire and aspiration.”
— Britt Salvesen, The Sun and Other Stars: Katy Grannan and Charlie White
Art, Britt Salvesen, Charlie White, Distribution, Jonathan Maghen, Katy Grannan, Oslo Kunstforening, Photography, Posters, Textfield, Typography
William Rauscher and John Moeller, On Acid
A Field Guide to Altered States
Softcover, 100 pp., offset 4/3, 200 x 265 mm
Edition of 1000
ISBN 978-0-615-53398-8
Published by CCC
$15.00 ·
On Acid presents a radically subjective re-edit of the history of drug experience, following the emergence of drugs as a technology and modernity’s conflicted obsessions with altered states. Tracing a path beginning with philosopher Benjamin Blood’s 1874 pamphlet ‘The Anesthetic Revelation and the Gist of Philosophy’ which declares the existence of a ‘majesty and supremacy unspeakable’ observable only after being dosed by nitrous oxide,
On Acid assembles texts and images that draw a line connecting archival works by William James, Antonin Artaud, Timothy Leary, and various modernist explorers, to the practice of contemporary artists such as Rodney Graham, Francis Alÿs, Jonah Freeman and Justin Lowe. Removed from the familiar cultural contexts of Haight-Ashbury and Grateful Dead psychedelia,
On Acid is in itself an experimental program, a recursive acidic process that mirrors the deconstructive relations to counterculture cultivated in contemporary art. The book concludes with a series of new conversations with Freeman and Lowe, Hamilton Morris and Arik Roper.
TEXTS
Francis Alys, Antonin Artaud, Benjamin Blood, Philip K. Dick, Rodney Graham, Brion Gysin, Dr. Albert Hofmann, Jim Hogshire, Aldous Huxley, International Federation for Internal Freedom, William James, Timothy Leary, Marcia Moore, William Rauscher, Alan Watts.
IMAGES
Brian Aldiss, Francis Alys, Carol Bove, Syd Barrett, Mathieu Briand, Krystle Cole, Jonah Freeman and Justin Lowe, Allen Ginsberg, John Giorno, Rodney Graham, Brion Gysin, Carsten Holler, Henri Michaux, John Moeller, Arik Roper, Sandoz Laboratories, Ettore Sottsass, Klaus Weber.
INTERVIEWS
Justin Lowe and Jonah Freeman, Hamilton Morris, Arik Roper.
Alan Watts, Aldous Huxley, Allen Ginsberg, Antonin Artaud, Arik Roper, Art, Benjamin Blood, Brian Aldiss, Brion Gysin, Carol Bove, Carsten Höller, CCC, Criticism, Culture, Distribution, Dr. Albert Hofmann, Ettore Sottsass, Francis Alys, Hamilton Morris, Henri Michaux, International Federation for Internal Freedom, Jim Hogshire, John Giorno, John Moeller, Jonah Freeman, Justin Lowe, Klaus Weber, Krystle Cole, Marcia Moore, Mathieu Briand, Philip K Dick, Philosophy, Psychedelia, Rodney Graham, Sandoz Laboratories, Syd Barrett, Theory, Timothy Leary, William James, William Rauscher
der:die:das:, Issue f like fernglas (binocular)
Softcover, 96 pp., offset 4/1, 200 x 270 mm
English and German
Edition of 1000
ISSN 1663-2508
Published by der:die:das:
$22.00 ·
Some words on, and images of, fernglas (binocular). Featuring: Merry Alpern, Big Zis, Tobias Brücker, Sophie Calle, Anne-Catherine Eigner, Ingo Giezendanner, Charles Negre, Niklaus Rüegg, Paul Scheerbart, Kohei Yoshiyuki, et al.
Aleli Leal, Anne-Catherine Eigner, Art, Big Zis, Carl Zeiss, Charles Negre, Christophe Jaberg, Culture, der:die:das:, Distribution, Hin Van Tran, Ingo Giezendanner, Kathrin Kogl, Kohei Yoshiyuki, Konrad Colombo, Lisa Austmann, Luzia Rink, Martin Horn, Merry Alpern, Nadja Aebi, Niklaus Rüegg, Pascal Christoph Tanner, Paul Scheerbart, Paulina Velasco Silva, Photography, Priscila de Souza Gonzaga, Sonja Zagermann, Sophie Calle, Susan Karrais, Tobias Brücker, Veronique Hoegger
Sveinn Fannar Jóhannsson, A Narrow Scene of Hypothetical Circumstances
Hardcover, 84 pp., offset 4/4, 210 x 300 mm
English and Norwegian
Edition of 600
ISBN 978-82-997894-4-8
Published by Teknisk Industri AS
$42.00 ·
In the book project A Narrow Scene of Hypothetical Circumstances we access a visual universe revolving around dismembered pieces of familiar objects. Sketches, pictures and materials are united into a steady flow of everyday examination, in which apparent contradictions — painstaking exactitude and violence, empathy and calculation — bubble away beneath the surface. Rearrangement, representation and repression melt together on the border between construction and collapse, with an elegant sense of seriousness. The works are supplemented with texts by Friedrich Tietjen, Caroline Ugelstad, Leif Magne Tangen and Christopher Muller.
Art, Caroline Ugelstad, Carsten Humme, Christopher Müller, Distribution, Friedrich Tietjen, Jorg Schutze, Leif Magne Tangen, Martin Kraetke, Photography, Sculpture, Sveinn Fannar Jóhannsson, Teknisk Industri AS, Till Gathmann
Doniella Davy, Z-Girl and the Snake Charmer
Edited and Designed by Daniel Wagner
Softcover, 44 pp. with inserts, mimeograph 2/2, 5.5 x 8.5 inches
Edition of 100, numbered
Published by The Kingsboro Press
$11.00 ·
A semi-follow-up to Hippie Photos and Surfer Man, Los Angeles-based photographer Doniella Davy’s imprint Z-Girl and the Snake Charmer returns to the voyeuristic photo-based narrative format to weave a two part story of a woman in trouble and the mysterious “snake charmer”.
Art, Culture, Daniel Wagner, Distribution, Doniella Davy, Photography, The Kingsboro Press
Good Morning 1, Joanne Oldham
Edited by Sammy Harkham
Softcover, 48 pp., offset 4/1, 6.5 x 9 inches
Edition of 500
Published by Family
$12.00 ·
Joanne Oldham has quietly been making art in a range of mediums for several decades. Though mostly known for a scattering of Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy releases, including the iconic cover for I See a Darkness, the vast majority of this prolific artist and writer’s work has never been seen outside of her circle of family and friends. Intensely personal, warm, and often terrifying, her art is playful and mysterious, existing in a space of constant conflict. The debut issue of Good Morning dedicates the entire issue to a selection of work done over the last 25 years showcasing Oldham’s unique vision. Collages, paintings, drawings, as well as excerpts from Oldham’s memoir of growing up in the south in the 1950s are included, as well as biographical notes written by the artist herself.
Aron Conway, Culture, Distribution, Family, Good Morning, Illustration, Joanne Oldham, Joe Oldham, Sammy Harkham, Will Oldham
P & Co., Joan
Newspaper, 16 pp., web offset 1/1, 11 x 17 inches [17 x 22 inches unfolded]
Edition of 500
Published by P & Co.
free* ·
*free copy with each order
P & Co. is a community broadsheet published biannually and co-edited by Aram Moshayedi, Carter Mull, and Jesse Willenbring.
A. L. Steiner, Alex Israel, Aram Moshayedi, Art, Carlos Callejo, Carol Bove, Carter Mull, Chris Cechin, Darren Bader, Distribution, Erika Vogt, Fabian Marti, Florian Maier-Aichen, Gabriela Jauregui, Jesse Willenbring, Joan Didion, Joan Miro, John C Van Dyke, John C Welchman, John Divola, Jonas Wood, Kate Fowle, Katy Siegel, Math Bass, Meghan Weinstein, Michael Ned Holte, Michal Wolinski, MIke Zahn, Nathan Hylden, Sandra de la Loza, Steven Rodriguez, Susan Morgan, Tony Cokes, Travis Diehl, Walter Benjamin Smith
Myung Feyen, A Book About Some People And Time
Softcover, 126 pp., offset 2/2, 170 x 240 mm
Edition of 500
ISBN 978-90-77713-48-8
Published by Myung Feyen
$33.00 ·
When you meet Myung Feyen, you are never quite sure at what point everyday life spills over into art. Her letters arrive in archaic envelopes, handwritten or typed on an old fashioned typewriter on paper salvaged from an archive or a bankrupt stationery store. Such a letter becomes a unique ‘object’, a piece of graphic design. Her texts, however intentionally mundane, are meticulously crafted, often with an unexpected poetical twist. A correspondence regarding an upcoming appointment can easily turn into a small collection of poetry or visual art.
Such a correspondence cannot be distinguished from the projects, which she presents as works of art. She has a collection of passport photographs of people who have played an important role in her life in some way, accumulated since her early youth. She takes photographs of her parents on every occasion she meets them, keeping the photos in an archive along with the date they were taken. For years she has been making lists of everybody who has come over to visit her. She also creates diagrams of this information — strange calendars drawn on the walls of exhibition spaces. She collects water and sand of places she or her friends have visited. These samples are packed and kept in a standard uniform method and then documented. Bit by bit, an atlas containing the voyages of Myung Feyen and her friends comes into being.
Art, Carvalho Bernau, Design, Distribution, Guy Harries, Kai Bernau, Malcolm Sutton, Michael van Hoogenhuyze, Myung Feyen, Susana Carvalho