Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with survey held January 3 - February 11, 1945. Text by John Davis Hatch, Jr. and Alain Locke. Artists include: William E. Artis, Henry W. Bannarn, Richmond Barthe, Romare Bearden, Eloise Bishop, Selma Hortense Burke, William Carter, Elizabeth Catlett, Claude Clark, Eldzier Cortor, Ernest Crichlow, Joseph Delaney, Aaron Douglas, Fred C. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held at Tate Modern, London, July 12 - October 22, 2017. Traveled to Crystal Bridges, Bentonville, February 3 - April 23, 2018; Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, September 7, 2018 - February 3, 2019; The Broad, Los Angeles, March 23 - September 1, 2019; de Young Museum, San Francisco, November 9, 2019 - March 15, 2020; and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, April 19 - July 19, 2020. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show "Artists & Prints: Masterworks from The Museum of Modern Art, Part I," held November 20, 2004 – March 14, 2005. Essay by Deborah Wye. Additional texts by Starr Figura, Judith Hecker, Raimond Livasgani, Harper Montgomery, Jennifer Roberts, Sarah Suzuki, and Wendy Weitman. ... [details]
Catalogue from 1985 offering for rental and sale 200 video programs by 85 independent producers of experimental video as well as back issues of Video Data Banks publication "Profile." Artists include Vito Acconci, Chantal Akerman,Max Almy, Laurie Anderson, Carl Andre, Eleanor Antin, Betty Asher, Dore Ashton, Alice Aycock, Myrna Bain, John Baldessari, Jennifer Bartlett, Gregory Battcock, Romare Bearden, Billy Al Bengston, Joseph Beuys, Dara Birnbaum, Louise Bourgeois, Stan Brakhage, Joan Brown, Roger Brown, John Cage, Judy Chicago, Christo, Chuck Close, A. ... [details]
Collection of sixteen stories written in response to Rita McBride's installation "Particulates," at the Dia Art Foundation, New York, October 17, 2017 - June 2, 2018. Introduction by Alexis Lowry. Texts by Nalo Hopkinson, Elizabeth Bear, Karen Lord, Ken MacLeod, Nicola Griffith, Minister Faust, Samuel Delany, Annalee Newitz, Kameron Hurley, Mark von Schlegell, Daniel Jose Older, Vandana Singh, Victor Lavalle, Sofia Samatar and Gina Ashcroft. ... [details]
"Internationally recognized for her visually elegant, thought-provoking video art, Mary Lucier was a sculptor, photographer, and performance artist before she turned to video in 1973. In Mary Lucier, the first book published on Lucier's work, Melinda Barlow brings together a selection of Lucier's previously unpublished writings and drawings along with essays, reviews, interviews, and photographs of her ephemeral installations and performances to create an absorbing portrait of one of America's most accomplished video pioneers. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held January 20 - April 9, 1975. Curated by John Hanhardt, Barbara Haskell, James Monte, Elke Solomon, and Marcia Tucker. Foreward by Tom Armstrong, director of the Whitney Museum. ... [details]
Edited by Betsy Sussler. Essays "Constance DeJong, I.T.I.L.O.E.," by Richard Beckett, "Michael McClard, The Naked Eye," by Betsy Sussler; "Interview," by Paul Bowles; "Un Tour d'Hoizon," by Richard Armstrong; "The White Shirt," by Burt Barr; "Evening," by Barry Yourgrau; "Harry at Work, A Scenes from Harry's Story," by Michael Alfie; "My First Poem," by Peter Scheldahl; "Summer 1980," by Luc Sante; "Clinton Street," by Fred Brathwaite and Olivier Mosset; "Some Photographs and Brain," by Jane Warrick; "Is It Hemingway or Is It Memorex," by Glenn O'Brien; "The Shoestore in Caborca. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held at the Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford University, Stanford, California, October 8, 2003 - January 18, 2004. Traveled to the Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, February 21 - May 9, 2004; to the North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh, June 6 - August 29, 2004; to the Philbrook Museum of Art, Tulsa, Oklahoma, February 6 - April 24, 2005; the Saint Louis Art Museum, June - August 2005; and the Frist Center for Visual Arts, Nashville, Tennessee, September 15 - January 8, 2006. ... [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]