The Book Trust Prospectus
Edited by Benjamin Critton, Harry Gassel, Brendan Griffiths, Zak Klauck and Mylinh Nguyen
Softcover, 160 pp., offset 1/1, 4.25 x 7 inches
Edition of 500
ISBN 978-1-928570-15-8
Published by IFS, Ltd.
$19.10 ·
The Book Trust, a site-specific publication and installation, was originally presented at the NY Art Book Fair, 5–7 November, 2010. During those days, the semi-fictional
Investment Futures Strategy, Ltd., comprised of five graduate students from the Department of Graphic Design at the Yale University
School of Art, offered an original publication for trade in a series of barters executed by its authors.
The Trust and the accompanying Book Trust Prospectus address matters of micro-economy and distribution, as well as prescribed versus perceived value. The project suggests a new currency specific to the setting of the Book Fair, a context in which a distinct set of commodities is exchanged by like-minded vendors in a finite space and time. It is only in this setting that a book could be posited as capital — a literal stand-in for the money that commonly exchanges hands at the Fair. Perceived worth is thus no longer dictated by edition or price, but instead by a trader’s subjective notion of the values they assign each book.
Over the three days of the Fair, the book, produced in a fixed quantity of 500, varied in value as each negotiation determined and redetermined its worth in the marketplace. With each transaction, the Prospectus assumed the value of the book for which it was exchanged. The traded commodities now comprise The Book Trust — a value-appreciating book bank. By trading with IFS, Ltd., participants acquired a single theoretical share of the bank, the Prospectus acting as a document of that transaction. In framing the project in a format similar to that of a stock exchange, IFS, Ltd. hopes that the Trust emphasizes the tenuous, abstract value of the book: as a designed object, as a medium for content, as a traded commodity, and as a symbol of participation in the project itself.
Prospectus
The Book Trust Prospectus is, in non-equal parts: a local currency, a stock prospectus for The Book Trust, an exploration into the nature of small-scale publishing and its presence at the NY Art Book Fair (R. Giampietro), a survey of precedented alternative currencies (B. Critton), a platform for hyperbolic re-representations of anonymous fiat money (R. Rozendaal), a foray into corporate branding and rebranding (Metahaven et al.), a proposal for a time-based repurposing of existing banknotes (N. Hirsch & Z. Kyes), an analysis of the current state of [art] book-publishing and -design (L. v. Deursen et al.), a venue for research into non-essential commodity futures like tulips and Beanie Babies™ (H. Gassel), a profile of independent art book vendors (Golden Age), and a podium for experimentation with anti-counterfeiting guilloché renderings (B. Griffiths & Z. Klauck). It is the story of its own making and financing as well as an evaluation of the context in which it was made and financed. The Prospectus is a 160-page, perfect-bound, one-colour book, offset-printed in an edition of five hundred by GHP printing in West Haven, Connecticut, USA.
Alexander Rives, Art, Benjamin Critton, Brendan Griffiths, Business, Design, Distribution, Golden Age, Harry Gassel, IFS Ltd., Linda van Deursen, Metahaven, Mylinh Nguyen, Nikolaus Hirsch, Rafael Rozendaal, Rob Giampietro, The Book Trust, Typography, Yale University School of Art, Zak Klauck, Zak Kyes
Arthur Pollock, Arthur Pollock
Hardcover with dust jacket, 184 pp., offset 1/1, 9 x 11 inches
Edition of 500
ISBN 978-0-983-66980-7
Published by Unpiano Books
$30.00 ·
Arthur Pollock has worked as a photojournalist for over fifty years, both freelance and on staff for several major news outlets. His professional career began in Hammond, IN and Lowell, MA in the nineteen sixties as he documented day-to-day street level stories of the time, and cut his teeth in those towns in the midst of an economic downturn and a cultural revolution. Hired on staff at the Boston Herald in the early nineteen eighties, he worked in the field for over ten years on many important features and was the recipient of numerous awards before becoming Assistant Photo Editor at the end of the decade.
This monograph is the first attempt at chronicling his enormous body of work and contains a cross-section of material from his early days on the streets, all the way up until the early nineteen nineties.
While he may echo the understatement of a news scribe, Pollock’s work clearly pays special homage to the artistry of those iconic shutter artists, Diane Arbus and the legendary New York street lensman of the 30s and 40s, Weegee. Indeed, every picture does tell a story. And in this unique collection, there are hundreds of stories… wonderfully told.
— Peter Gelzinis
Arthur Pollock, Boston Herald, Culture, Diane Arbus, Distribution, Jesse Pollock, Ken Light, Mark Kaiser, Peter Gelzinis, Photography, Unpiano Books
Brendan Fowler, Cancelled
Softcover, 60 pp., offset 4/1, 7 x 10 inches
Edition of 1000
Published by 100% Biz
$20.00 ·
Cancellation for me is this dynamic act: it is at once violent, an attack, an endgame to a struggle, but at the same time the mega opener. In the place of something cancelled there is only opportunity, only potential… For example, an event is cancelled, you have the night free; tour is cancelled, you have two weks to stay at home and work in your studio and sleep in your own bed and not lose money; exhibition is cancelled, now look at all of this time and material you have floating around… The bottom line is canceling as negating, as a way to remove to create potential, to create space. So after working for a while with the graphice of a literal “CANCELLED” stencil image, it was like, how do you cancel that? How does that get further negated?
— Brendan Fowler
100% Biz, Asher Penn, BARR, Brendan Fowler, Distribution, One Hundred Percent Biz, Rental Gallery
Joo Hwang, Temporary Storages
Softcover, 96 pp., offset 4/4, 180 x 240 mm
English and Korean
Edition of 1000
ISBN 978-89-94027-17-3
Published by mediabus
$25.00 ·
Temporary Storage (2009-2010) is a record of buildings that appear in and disappear from our landscape. The project Temporary Storage asks “what do buildings mean to us?” Buildings are never merely tools; they themselves become the environment we live in having significant influences on the way we form relationships with our surroundings. The temporary storage has become a part of landscape and acts as more than the functions they serve. Often perceived as hostile intruders to the surrounding environment, through them we see perversion and severance of the relation between men and the structures. Such phenomena are caused by the intensification of the separation of man and nature, man and civilization, and man and his fellows that began with the industrial contest.
— Joo Hwang
In her latest work, Joo Hwang examines the prefabricated temporary storage facilities that cluster alongside fields or in the shadow of newly erected residential towers on the urban edges. As presented here, these are some of the most mysterious albeit unremarkable structures on the road of commodity circulation. Her methodology appears simple: a simple cataloging of structures and site. She uses photography’s capacity for sustained description and accumulation, however, to build, over time, a document with considerable analytic force.
— Robert Sember
Art, Distribution, Eun Jeong Lee, Hyoun Youl Joe, Joo Hwang, Joongdong Logistics, Ju Hui Judy Han, Lee Sun Ryong, mediabus, Photography, Robert Sember, The Book Society
Art & Seoul Magazine 2
Softcover, 36 pp., offset 4/4, 210 x 275 mm
Insert: booklet, 20 pp., offset 4/4, 148 x 210 mm
English and Korean
Edition of 1000
Published by Art & Seoul
$10.00 · out of stock
Art & Seoul is a biannual, bilingual, arts and culture magazine which highlights the work of artists and designers from Korea through interviews, essays, profiles, and various collaborative projects.
Andreas Duschek, Art, Art & Seoul, Culture, Design, Distribution, Fashion, Go Daegun, Kam Donghwan, Marie Tae McDermott, Nakion, Nikki S Lee, Nina Ahn, Patrick Tsai, Photography, Teo Lee, Yoo Byungseo
C Magazine 111, Libraries
Softcover, 60 pp., offset 4/1, 210 x 295 mm
Edition of 2200
ISSN 1480-5472
Published by C Magazine
$7.50 ·
Issue 111 Libraries includes features by Adam Lauder on Performing the Library; Jen Hutton on Dexter Sinister; David Senior on the Whole Earth Catalogue; Randy Lee Cutler on Reading; Pandora Syperek on ILLUMINnations: the 54th Venice Biennale; Jenifer Papararo on Frances Stark: I’ve Had it and a Half at The Hammer Museum, and an artist project by Read-in. Issue 111 also includes reviews of: Rabih Mroué: The Inhabitants of Images at Prefix ICA; Song Dong: Waste Not at the Vancouver Art Gallery; Gina Badger: Mongrels at Issue Project Room; Adel Abdessemed: The Future of Décor at OCAD Professional Gallery; Chris Curreri: Something Something at University of Toronto Art Centre; The Birds and the Bees at Oakville Galleries; The Domestic Queens Project at FOFA Gallery, Concordia, and Wim Botha: All Around at Galerie Jette Rudolf. Also included is a review by the 2011 C New Critics Competition winner Kari Cwynar on Models for Taking Part at Presentation House Gallery.
Adam Lauder, Adel Abdessemed, Art, C Magazine, Chris Curreri, David Senior, Design, Dexter Sinister, Distribution, Frances Stark, Galerie Jette Rudolf, Gina Badger, Hammer Museum, Jen Hutton, Jenifer Papararo, Kari Cwynar, Libraries, Pandora Syperek, Rabih Mroué, Randy Lee Cutler, Read-in, Song Dong, Whole Earth Catalogue, Wim Botha
Jonathan Maghen, No More Reality (the poster)
Silkscreen poster/print, 1/0, 19 x 35 inches
Printed on archival Kromekote ultra high-gloss 14 pt cover stock
Edition of 25 + 2 proofs, unnumbered
Published by Textfield
$25.00 ·
The poster/print,
No More Reality (the poster), was produced for the temporary bookshop and exhibition
No More Reality, July 21 — August 25, 2011, which featured the works of Phil Chang, Arthur Ou, Eduardo Sarabia, and Anna Sew Hoy.
The bookshop and exhibition (and poster) title have been appropriated from the Philippe Parreno work, No More Reality (the demonstration), 1991, which is a four-minute video of children demonstrating, and chanting the slogan and title (“No More Reality”). The poster, illustrated by Darius Maghen, is based on a sign held by one of the children in the original Parreno work.
Anna Sew Hoy, Arthur Ou, Darius Maghen, Distribution, Eduardo Sarabia, Jonathan Maghen, Los Angeles, New York, Phil Chang, Philippe Parreno, Sun An, Textfield
MacGregor Harp and Victor Hu, MS Sans
Softcover, 84 pp., offset 1/1, 6 x 8 inches
Edition of 500
Published by Cheap Art America
$5.00 ·
A celebration of the mundane. MS Sans invites thirteen contributors to explore the potential of the typeface Microsoft Sans.
“Each glyph feels as if constructed from rigid individual bits expressing no empathy for the bows and straights of the other. Compare these letterforms to the negative spaces of its progenitor Helvetica; whence MS Sans borrowed its original file name, helv.tff. Inspect closely how the stems of the lowercase b, d, g, p, and q bend not to their respective bowls. O, daughters and sons of the New House what brother of Arial is this? What absent father’s nose is present in this numeral 1? And to whose crooked grandmother do we blame thine unspinely 8? Yet take no offense. Similar results manifest when a gaze is exercised on your humble narrator.”
— Stewart Smith
Anthony Salvador, Art, Cheap Art America, Chris Palazzo, Culture, Design, Distribution, GUNMAD, Jeremy Landman, Jiminie Ha, MacGregor Harp, Microsoft, MS Sans, Nicolas Borel, Project Projects, Sam Farfsing, Samuel Banziger, Stewart Smith, Typography, Victor Hu
Public Fiction 1, The Church Issue
Softcover, 64 pp., offset 2/1, 8 x 10 inches
Night Papers insert: Newspaper, 12 pp., web offset 1/1, 11 x 17 inches
Edition of 1000
ISBN 978-0-615-49712-9
Published by Public Fiction
$12.00 ·
Public Fiction is a quarterly based in Los Angeles and with Los Angeles as subject. This is the church issue.
Public Fiction takes form in print and space. The physical space, a storefront in Highland Park, gives a site to experiment with the topic at hand in real-time.
Adam Overton, Art, Chiara Giovando, Claire Cronin, Corey Fogel, Culture, Distribution, Diva Dompe, Erin Perry, Jeffrey Deitch, Jesse Fleming, Lauren Mackler, Los Angeles, Maja D'Aoust, Margaret Wappler, Owl Eyes, Public Fiction, Ron Rege Jr, Sophia Dixon Frydman, Trinie Dalton
Azita Rasoli and Marshall Rake, They 3
Softcover, 40 pp., mimeograph 1/1, 130 x 210 mm
Edition of 100
Published by They Magazine
$10.00 ·
They Magazine is a dialogue between literature and art. Each issue has a unique design and features stories from different authors centered around one unifying thought.
They 3 features short stories from Dallas Clayton, Cian O’Day, Reeves Wiederman, Arna Bontemps Hemenway, Jason Parham and Aaron Lake Smith.
Aaron Lake Smith, Arna Bontemps Hemenway, Art, Azita Rasoli, Cian O'Day, Dallas Clayton, Design, Distribution, Fashion, Jason Parham, Literature, Marshall Rake, Reeves Wiederman, They
Martine Syms and Marco Kane Braunschweiler, Reference Work
Softcover, 98 pp., mimeograph 2/1, 5.5 x 8.5 inches
Edition of 250, numbered
Published by Golden Age and the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago
$15.00 · out of stock
Reference Work is a conceptual business textbook.
As stated by Syms “Reference Work is the text I wish we had read prior to opening our business Golden Age. It contains original essays from Marco Kane Braunschweiler and I, the syllabus from the only business class we ever took, summaries from our favorite business books and a collection of resources that we’ve found helpful over the past four years. The book may be interpreted as sarcastic or irreverent, but I hope readers will notice our sincerity. It is difficult trying to enter the business world as a right brain thinker, not because those skills aren’t essential, but because that world is structured around hard metrics and art is difficult to quantify. Reference Work is intended to demystify some of the day-to-day operations of a cultural business and expand the definition of commercial success.”
The text was edited by Zachary Kaplan. The book was published with the assistance of the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago on the occasion of We Are Here: Art & Design Out of Context, an exhibition curated by James Goggin.
Alfredo Ruiz, Art, Bob Brodsky, Culture, Design, Golden Age, James Goggin, Marco Kane Braunschweiler, Martine Syms, MCA, Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, Scott Reinhard, Zachary Kaplan
der:die:das:, Issue e like eis (ice)
Softcover, 96 pp., offset 4/4, 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, eis (ice).
Alban Kakulya, Aleli Leal, Andres Lutz, Art, Barbara Signer, Basil Rogger, Big Zis, Christian Knorr, Culture, der:die:das:, Distribution, Fashion, Florian Ammann, Francis Alys, Gabriela Weidmann, Hans-Ruedi Rohrer, Helve Leal, Hin Van Tran, Irving Penn, Isa Hesse-Rabinovitch, Jon Mathieu, Melanie Matthieu, Michael Bodenmann, Michael Etzensperger, Michael Hunziker, Nadja Aebi, Nicole Bachmann, Nina Langosch, Olafur Eliasson, Pascal Christoph Tanner, Photography, Remo Stoller, Sport, Stefan Jaggi, Veronique Hoegger