Exhibition catalogue published as an overview of performances and exhibitions held at The Kitchen in New York in 1974 and 1975. Introduction by Bruce Kurtz. Artists include: Ant Farm, Eleanor Antin, John Baldessari, Kirsten Bates, Connie Beckley, David Behrens, David Behrman, Carmen Beuchat, Scott Billingsley, Trisha Brown, Jim Burton, Jim Byrne, Peter Campus, Cornelius Cardew, Sergio Cervetti, Rhys Chatham, Peggy Cicierska, Andy Mannik, Jim Cobb, David Cort, Alvin Curran, Barbara Dilley, Juan Downey, Jean Depuy, Susan Ensley, Henry Flynt, Nova'Billy, Simone Forti, Jon Gibson, Davidson Gigliotti, Frank Gillette, Tina GIrouard, Dan Graham, Amy Greenfield, Ellen Grossman, Noel Harding, Julia Heyward, Nancy Holt, Gerard Hovagimyan, Nelson Howe, Tannis Hugill, Tom Johnson, Joan Jonas, Beryl Korot, Jill Kroesen, Shigeko Kubota, Robert Kushner, Richard Landry, Darcy Lange, Garrett List, Anna Lockwood, Alvin Lucier, Jackson Mac Low, Ingram Marshall, Michael McClard, Mike Metz, Dick Miller, Phill Niblock, Steve Paxton, Liz Phillips, Virginia Quesada, Eliane Radique, Steve Reich, Jonathan Richman, Ripert Center, Joost Romeu, Jim Rosenberg, Leon Rosenblatt, Martha Rosler, Arthur Russell, Ira Schneider, Robin Schwartz, Allen Sekula, S. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held at the Vancouver Art Gallery, Canada, February 20 - June 12, 2016. Curated by Daina Augaitis, Bruce Grenville, and Stephanie Rebick. Essays by Dawn Ades, Patrik Andersson, Isabelle Arvers, Daina Augaitis, John Baldessari, Nicolas Bourriaud, Nicholas Chambers, Francesca Coppa, Lisa Coulthard, Michael Darling, Kaat Debo, Guy Debord, Amelia Does, Marcel Duchamp, Todd Falkowsky, Diana Freundl, Amber Frid-Jimenez, Ellen Gallagher, Richard Goldstein, Inka Graeve Ingelmann, Bruce Grenville, Makiko Hara, Hannah Höch, Helen Hsu, Suzanne P. ... [details]
June 8, 1992 issue of Newsweek, edited by Maynard Parker. Contents include: "Periscope," with bureau reports by Ned Zeman and Lucy Howard; "Let the Walls Down," by Stephen Langfur; "Letters;" "Perspectives;" "Whose Values," by Joe Klein, with artwork by Barbara Kruger; "Playing on the 'V Word,'" by Howard Fineman; "First Lady Culture Clash," by Eleanor Clift; "Values in the Classroom," by Eloise Salholz with Tony Clifton in New York, Patricia King in San Francisco, Karen Springen in Chicago, Howard Manly in Atlanta and Debra Rosenberg in Boston; "A Mother's Guiding Message," Marian Wright Edelman interviewed by Eleanor Clift; "Why the Old Media's Losing Control," by Jonathan Alter; "'You in Congress, Listen Up': Sounding the alarm against those who think the country is only the sum of its special interests," by David H. ... [details]
Volume 25, Number 5 issue of "Leonardo : Journal of the International Society for the Arts, Sciences and Technology" doubling as an exhibition catalogue for the "Third Annual New York Digital Salon" held at the School of Visual Arts, New York, November 13 - 27, 1995. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held November 20, 1974 - April 1, 1975. Text by Marty Dunn, Peggy Gale, and Gary Neill Kennedy and artist's statements. Artists include David Askevold, Dana W. ... [details]
Program for series of performances staged at the Judson Memorial Church on May 22, 23, 24, 26, 27, 28 and June 3, 4, 5, 1966. Program included "Patter for Soft-Shoe Dance" by George Dennision with music by Al Carmines and choreography by Remy Charlip; "March" choreographed and danced by Jame Waring; The Mind is a Muscle" by Yvonne Rainer; "Tambourine Dance" by Waring; "Home Movies" by Rosalyn Drexler with music by Carmines and directed by Lawrence Kornfeld and paintings by Jon Hendricks; "Promenade" by Maria Irene Fornes with music by Barmines and directed by Kornfeld; "Morning Raga with Yellow Chair" choreographed and danced by Arlene Rothlein; "April and December" choreographed by Charlip and danced by Aileen Passloff; "What Happened" by Gertrude Stein with music by Carmines, directed by Kornfled and performed by Joan Baker, Lucinda Childs, Passloff, Rainer, Rothlein, Carmines, Hunt Cole, Masato Kawasaki and Burton Supree with set by Geoffrey Hendricks; "Pomegranada" by H. ... [details]
Book of photographs by Barbara Kasten. Essay by Estelle Jussim. Images accompanied by poems by Derek Walcott, Charles Wright, Daniel Halpern, Italo Calvino, Elizabeth Bishop, Czeslaw Miilosz, Robert Hass, Mark Strand, Seamus Heaney, Carlos Drummond de Andrade, John Hollander, Louise Glück, and Anthony Hecht. [details]
September 1968 issue of Form, a quarterly magazine of the arts. Edited by Philip Steadman, Mike Weaver, and Stephen Bann. Artists, writers, and other figures in the issue include John Bowlt, Thomas Bernhard, Xanti Schawinsky, and Pierre Albert-Birot, with translation by John Neves, Ruth Brandon, Barbara S. ... [details]
Packet of materials published in conjunction with exhibition "MASS," by Group Material held at Artspace, Oct 1 - Oct 18, 1986. Participating artists included in this collaborative piece are Mike Glier, Shelly Silver, Grace Graupe-Pillard, June Wilson, Josely Carvalho, Franc Palaia, Peter Hopkins, Andrea Evans, Ellen Quinn, Tom Koken, Ann Messner, Barbara Broughel, Paul Smith, Julie Wachtel, Robert Gordian, Felix Gordian, Felix Gonzalez, Sean Flynn, Margery Mailman, Mike Osterhout, Keith Rambert, Dona Ann McAdams, Alice Albert, Rachel Romero, Conrad Atkinson, Dennis Thomas, Day Gleeson, Doug Ashford, Mundy McLaughlin, Jessica Diamond, Elders Share The Arts, Peter Oertwig, Judith Croce, Barbara Ess, Charles Yuen, Marshall Collins, Angelo Bellfatto, Greg Sholette, Vincent Desiderio, Roy Rogers, Charles Lahti, Becky Howland, Michael Byron, Michael Ross, Patrice Lorenze, April Palmieri, Luis Stand, Barbara Kruger, Greg Lawrence, David Robbins, Betty Thompkins, Michael Lebron, Peter Burgess, Barbara Lipp, Rae Langsten, Herb Perr, Saul Ostrow, Martha Rosler, Anne Doran, Alan Belcher, Todd Lindsteen-Ayoung, Janet Koenig, Jennifer Bolande, Julie Ault, A. ... [details]
"The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, America's oldest museum and school of fine arts, was founded in 1805. Today, the Academy boasts one of the nation's finest collections of American art and a roster of alumni representing the greatest artists this country has produced. ... [details]