Large-scale exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show "The Love of Art Comes First: Art & Project at the Kröller-Müller Museum," held at Kröller-Müller Museum, Netherlands, September 30, 2023 - February 25, 2024. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held September 9 - October 29, 2022. Text by show's curator Nora Bohlmann. [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with The Future Fields Commission in Time-Based Media of Martine Sym's multichannel video installation "Neural Swamp," held at Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Turin, Italy, November 5, 2021 - March 27, 2022. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show "Nine Stepping Stones," held at David Kordansky Gallery, Los Angeles, January 23 - March 6, 2021. Edited and with an introduction by Stuart Krimko. ... [details]
Issue 6 of Bricolage Magazine, a zine featuring drawings and text by Tom Sachs and Mark Gonzales. [details]
Artist's book by Ed Ruscha featuring rough sketches and notes from his sketchbook. Edited by Ruscha's son, Eddie Ruscha. [details]
Compendium of all three published issues of Black Phoenix, a journal published in the United Kingdom between 1978 and 1979. Edited and published by Rasheed Araeen and Mahmood Jamal. Contributions by Rasheed Araeen, Mahmood Jamal, Guy Brett, Kenneth Coutts-Smith, Ariel Dorfman, Eduardo Galeano, N. ... [details]
Issue 1 of 125 Newbury Free Press, published in conjunction with the inaugeral exhibition, "Wild Strawberries," held at 125 Newbury, New York, September 30 - November 19, 2022. Edited by Oliver Schultz. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held at Konrad Fischer Galerie, Berlin, April 29 - August 27, 2022. Traveled to Konrad Fischer Galerie, Dusseldorf, May 11, 2022 - February 24, 2023. ... [details]
Monograph of photographs by Rhona Bitner. Foreword by Iggy Pop. Texts by Natalie Bell, Greil Marcus, and Jon Hammer with an afterword by Jason Moran. Includes biographies and a locations list. "Prompted by the closing of New York's famed CBGB, Rhona Bitner embarked on a thirteen-year journey to photograph 403 venues across twenty-six states and eighty-nine cities—the studios, concert halls, arenas, high schools, bars, ballrooms, prisons, and fields where the most memorable songs were inspired, recorded, performed, and listened to. ... [details]