Edité par Jeffrey Deitch., New York, 1975
Langue: anglais
Vendeur : Paule Leon Bisson-Millet, Beilstein, Allemagne
Edition originale
EUR 600
Autre deviseQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierSoftcover. Etat : Sehr gut. Vito Acconci, Laurie Anderson, Eleanor Antin, John Jack Baylin, Lynda Benglis, Terry Berkowitz, Joseph Beuys*, Christian Boltanski*, Jonathan Borofsky, Chris Burden*, Scott Burton, Colette, Chris D'Arcangelo, Fernando de Filippi*, Agnes Denes, Howard Frie (illustrateur). 1. Auflage. Lives. Artists who Deal with Peoples' Lives (Including their Own) as the Subject and/or the Medium of their Work. Organized by Jeffrey Deitch. The Fine Arts Building, New York November 29 - December 20, 1975. 280 218mm. 48 einseitige xeroxed gedrückte Blätter. Geheftet. Or.-Titelseite. illustr. mit Joseph Beuys "I Like America and America Likes Me", Foto von Caroline Tisdall. " Aside from the John Weber Gallery Invitational, a group show he curated in the summer of 1975, Lives was Jeffrey Deitch's first curatorial project. The theme of Lives was artists who deal with peoples' lives (including their own) as the subject and/or medium of their work. Lives was one of the first exhibitions to bring together the new generation of performative artists who fused life and art. In the spirit of the 1970s, Deitch not only curated the exhibition, but also produced a do-it- yourself Xerox catalog. His text was supplemented with designed pages, mostly created by the artists themselves: Vito Acconci, Laurie Anderson, Eleanor Antin, John Jack Baylin, Lynda Benglis, Terry Berkowitz, Joseph Beuys*, Christian Boltanski*, Jonathan Borofsky, Chris Burden*, Scott Burton, Colette, Chris D'Arcangelo, Fernando de Filippi*, Agnes Denes, Howard Fried, Gilbert & George*, Peter Gordon, Guerilla Art Action Group, Douglas Huebler, Ray Johnson, On Kawara, Nancy Kitchel, Bruce Kurtz, Les Levine, Anna Link, Marc Miller, Dennis Oppenheim, Adrian Piper, Marcia Resnick, Salvo*, Joanne Seltzer, Willoughby Sharp, Alan Sondheim, Alan Sonfist, Eve Sonneman, Andy Warhol*, William Wegman, Roger Welch and Hannah Wilke."*" the pages for these artists were chosen by the curator. All the other pages were either prepared by the artists themselves, or were prepared according to instructions given by the artists." Sehr gutes erhaltene Exemplar. Photos are available.
Edité par Art-Rite Publishing Co. New York, NY, 1975
Vendeur : Specific Object / David Platzker, New York, NY, Etats-Unis
EUR 109,73
Autre deviseQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panier48 pp.; 26 x 19 cm.; staple bound; black-and-white; edition size unknown; unsigned and unnumbered; offset-printed; Fall 1975 issue of Art-Rite, on Performance, edited by Edit deAk and Walter Robinson. Contents include: "Warm-Up," by David Antin; "Ralston Farina," by A.R.; "A Few Things We Know About Her," by John Howell; "Performance: A comment from Outside," by Jeremy Gilbert-Rolfe; "Performance: State of the Art in Arts," by John Howell; "Camoflage: Films by Holt & Horn," by Lucy R. Lippard; "The Chorus Line: Role, Style, Media," by Walter Robinson; "Dance: Orderly Pleasures," by John Howell; "Notes on 'Painter/Patient' Performance (Not Realized): Paris, July-August, 1975," by Diego Cortez and "Charlemagne Palestine." Cover: Joseph Beuys. References : No. 372 in "Joseph Beuys : The Multiples" by Jörg Schellmann, Dierk Stemmler, Joan Rothfuss, Peter Nisbet. Munich-New York / Cambride / Minneapolis, Germany / MA / MN : Edition Schellmann / Busch-Reisinger Museum, Harvard University / Walker Art Center, 1997, 2006, pp. 297, 477. "Artists' Magazines : An Alternative Space for Art" by Gwen Allen. Cambridge / London, MA / United Kingdom : The MIT Press, 2011, pp. 239. Very Good. 5 mm. tear to spine edge. Four small tears at edges of staple binding. 2 mm. and 1 mm. tear to top edge of recto and chipping along top edge of verso. Light yellowing of covers and pages. Contents clean and unmarked.
Edité par Art-Rite Publishing Co. New York, NY, 1975
Vendeur : Specific Object / David Platzker, New York, NY, Etats-Unis
EUR 109,73
Autre deviseQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panier48 pp.; 26 x 19 cm.; staple bound; black-and-white; edition size unknown; unsigned and unnumbered; offset-printed; Fall 1975 issue of Art-Rite, on Performance, edited by Edit deAk and Walter Robinson. Contents include: "Warm-Up," by David Antin; "Ralston Farina," by A.R.; "A Few Things We Know About Her," by John Howell; "Performance: A comment from Outside," by Jeremy Gilbert-Rolfe; "Performance: State of the Art in Arts," by John Howell; "Camoflage: Films by Holt & Horn," by Lucy R. Lippard; "The Chorus Line: Role, Style, Media," by Walter Robinson; "Dance: Orderly Pleasures," by John Howell; "Notes on 'Painter/Patient' Performance (Not Realized): Paris, July-August, 1975," by Diego Cortez and "Charlemagne Palestine." Cover: Joseph Beuys. References : No. 372 in "Joseph Beuys : The Multiples" by Jörg Schellmann, Dierk Stemmler, Joan Rothfuss, Peter Nisbet. Munich-New York / Cambride / Minneapolis, Germany / MA / MN : Edition Schellmann / Busch-Reisinger Museum, Harvard University / Walker Art Center, 1997, 2006, pp. 297, 477. "Artists' Magazines : An Alternative Space for Art" by Gwen Allen. Cambridge / London, MA / United Kingdom : The MIT Press, 2011, pp. 239. Very Good / Fine. 5 mm. tear with creasing to top left corner of recto. 2.9 cm. tear to spine edge of recto. 3.6 cm. dog-ear to bottom left corner of verso with light 1 cm. dog-ear to bottom right corner of most pages. Contents clean and unmarked.
Edité par The Fine Arts Building New York, NY, 1975
Vendeur : Specific Object / David Platzker, New York, NY, Etats-Unis
EUR 658,37
Autre deviseQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panier[45] pp.; 21.5 x 21.6 cm.; staple bound; black-and-white; edition size unknown; unsigned and unnumbered; offset-printed Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held November 29 - December 20, 1975. Organized and with an essay by Jeffrey Deitch. The pages in the catalogue were prepared by the artists themselves or according to instructions given to Deitch by the artists. Pages of deceased artists designed by Deitch. There is no page for On Kawara. Artists include Vito Acconci, Laurie Anderson, Eleanor Antin, John Jack Baylin, Lynda Benglis, Terry Berkowitz, Joseph Beuys, Christian Boltanski, Jonathan Borofsky, Chris Burden, Scott Burton, Colette, Chris D'Arcangelo, Fernando de Filippi, Agnes Denes, Howard Fried, Gilbert & George, Peter Gordon, Guerrilla Art Action Group, Douglas Huebler, Ray Johnson, On Kawara, Nancy Kitchel, Bruce Kurtz, Les Levine, Anna Link, Marc Miller, Dennis Oppenheim, Adrian Piper, Marcia Resnick, Salvo, Joanne Seltzer, Willoughby Sharp, Alan Sondheim, Alan Sonfist, Eve Sonneman, Andy Warhol, William Wegman, Roger Welch, and Hannah Wilke. "Aside from the John Weber Gallery Invitational, a group show he curated in the summer of 1975, Lives was Jeffrey Deitch's first curatorial project. The theme of Lives was artists who deal with peoples' lives (including their own) as the subject and/or medium of their work. In more simplified terms (the subtitle of the exhibition): artists who use life as their medium. Much of the most exciting new art in the mid-1970s was performative. Lives was one of the first exhibitions to bring together the new generation of artists who fused life and art with artists like Joseph Beuys and Andy Warhol who inspired this new direction. The exhibition took place in an abandoned office building on the corner of Franklin and Hudson Streets in New York City. All of the artists were invited to create pages for the xeroxed catalogue which is now a collectors item. The following excerpt from the catalogue text amplifies the theme of the show: For the "Post-Conceptual" artists in the Lives exhibition, the most fertile area of art activity has become the investigation of the artist and his environment, and as an extension, the study of people in general in their confrontation with the creative decision-making process. The forces in peoples' lives that cause art to be created, and the questions about the relationship between art and life have always been of great importance to artists, but now they have a special meaning in terms of the esthetic progression beyond Formalism and the Formalist bias of the Minimal and Conceptual movements. The most interesting recent work refers not to the object itself, but to the forces that shape creative activity. As Dennis Oppenheim sings in the song that accompanies the spastic dance of his self-portrait marionette in the Lives show, "It ain't what you make, it's what makes you do it!" -- from Jeffrey Deitch Curatorial Projects website. Includes Piper's "Six Conditions on Art Production." Good. Moderate dust soiling and yellow soiling across covers. 12.6 cm. soiling (coffee) to bottom left area of recto. 10 cm. gentle fold to bottom right corner of recto. 1.5 cm. light dust soiling to bottom right corner of bottom right corner of title page. Yellow, green, and black soiling to verso. Soiling of text block edge with light dust soiling to top left corner of verso of pages. Contents otherwise clean and unmarked.