Ray Johnson and Bill Wilson, A Book About A Book About Death
Softcover, 58 pp., offset 1/1, 160 x 200 mm
Edition of 500
ISBN 978-94-90629-01-4
Published by Kunstverein
$15.00 · out of stock
Ray Johnson wrote poetic texts and letters and integrated language and a unique system of cryptic signs into his work. Considered by many the ‘father of Mail Art’, as early as 1953 Johnson began sending highly conceptual images/texts to friends, often encouraging the recipient to ‘add to’ the work, or ‘please send to’ someone else, or ‘return to Ray Johnson’. Forming the ‘New York Correspondence School’ in 1962, Johnson established an enormous network of participants throughout the world — one that remains active even after his death. Between 1963 and 1965, Ray Johnson printed thirteen pages of his book about death with the Pernet Printing Company, 120 Lexington Avenue at 28th Street. His title, which designated the thirteen unbound pages as a book, is A Book about Death, yet also A Boop about Death and A Boom about Death.
In “A Book About A Book About Death” close friend and author Bill Wilson elaborates on each of the pages of “A Book about Death”.
Art, Bill Wilson, Culture, Distribution, Germaine Kruip, Jaan Evart, Krist Gruijthuijsen, Kunstverein, Marc Hollenstein, Maxine Kopsa, Ray Johnson, Stephen Serrato, The Mondrian Foundation
Omar the Beggar, The Panhandler’s Handbook
Softcover, 176 pp., offset 1/1, 105 x 175 mm
Edition of 500
ISBN 978-94-90629-05-2
Published by Kunstverein
$15.00 · out of stock
This publication is a reprint of the
original The Pandhandler’s Handbook which was published by Kensington Publishing Cooperation in 1977.
Omar Rockford, founder of Omar’s School for Beggars, teaches out-of-work men and women how to creatively panhandle for a living. Successful, high-income begging on the streets requires imaginative deception. Omar demonstrates hundreds of foolproof methods in this handbook. You’ve got to have a glib tongue, a sense of urgency and a believable story – also proper dress and courtesy are a must. The first few weeks can be rough, since one isn’t easily adjusted to the embarrassment of being turned down. It takes about a month to become a real pro and practice does make perfect. With this practical guide, you’ll never need to work a real job again,
Alan Abel, Art, Culture, Distribution, Jaan Evart, Kensington Publishing Cooperative, Kunstverein, Omar Rockford, Omar the Beggar, The Mondrian Foundation
Adam Pendleton, grey-blue grain
Softcover, 80 pp., offset 1/1, 120 x 180 mm
Edition of 250
ISBN 978-94-90629-06-9
Published by Kunstverein
$18.00 · out of stock
Adam Pendleton composes formal templates in which he slots information, shifting language, forms and images into an arena of artistic inquiry. Practicing extreme freedom of reference and quotation, as well as a rejection of conventional hierarchies among sources, Pendleton establishes new referential devices and displays in which he exploits the easy-psychology of biographical readings, rendering language and image both concrete and contingent. grey-blue grain comprises of a series of writings used and appropriated in previous works and performances.
Adam Pendleton, Amiri Baracka, Art, Distribution, Edward Sapir, Hugo Ball, Jaan Evart, Jean-Luc Goddard, Jena Osman, Joan Retallack, Kunstverein, Leroi Jones, Leslie Scalapino, Marc Hollenstein, Ron Silliman, Tan Lin, The Mondrian Foundation
Garamond Press, False Friends
Hardcover, 48 pp., offset 1/1, 115 x 185 mm
English, French, and Dutch
Edition of 500
ISBN 0 978-94-90629-02-1
Published by Kunstverein
$18.00 ·
Antonio Pigafetta’s questionable travelogue from 1591, titled Regnum Congo, was based upon stories from Duarte Lopez, a Portuguese explorer who supposedly visited the Congo. The travelogue introduces an odd vision of European landscape in which fantastic creatures are presented. South-African artist Ruth Sacks re-contextualizes these historical interpretations by re-appropriating them into contemporary conditions, juxtaposing the varied characteristics. Hence the logo of her fictional publishing house, Garamond Press: a fantastic animal based upon a description of one of the possible animals from Regnum Congo. The narrative of the book False Friends derives from the storyline of Edgar Allen Poe’s Murders at the Rue Morgue from 1841, generally agreed to be the first detective story ever written. This contemporary version is set in Antwerp, Belgium, and is split into three languages: Dutch (Flemish), French and English. To follow the story’s plot, one has to be fluent in all three languages.
Anne Millar, Antonio Pigafetta, Art, Design, Distribution, Duarte Lopez, Edgar Allen Poe, Fiction, Garamond Press, Jaan Evart, Kunstverein, Marc Hollenstein, Ruth Sacks, Stephen Serrato
Nedko Solakov, High Level Margins With A Catalogue
Softcover, 112 pp., offset 1/1, 200 x 165 mm
Edition of 100
ISBN 978-94-90629-04-5
Published by Kunstverein
$28.00 ·
This publications has been produced as part of the exhibition “High Level Margins With A Catalogue” by Nedko Solakov (18 September — 21 November 2010) and serves as a reading device for the stories as a reading device for the stories displayed on and around the margins of Kunstverein’s 3.5 m high ceiling.
Art, Distribution, Jaan Evart, Kunstverein, Nedko Solakov, The Mondrian Foundation