Collection of four John McLaughlin documents including a typewritten biography of the artist [1960], a two-page typewritten artist's statement by McLaughlin (referenced in the biography) also from 1960, and two copies of the text of articles written on the work of McLaughlin: "John McLaughlin, Retrospective 1946 - 1975," by Fidel Danieli, Artweek, September 21, 1975 (mimeographed); and "John McLaughlin, Hard Edge and American Painting," by John Coplans, Artforum, Vol. ... [details]
Second volume from a series of artist's book by Margia Kramer reproducing F.B.I. documents on the actor Jean Seberg acquired through a Freedom of Information Act request. "In response to my petition, the F. ... [details]
First volume from a series of artist's book by Margia Kramer reproducing F.B.I. documents on the actor Jean Seberg acquired through a Freedom of Information Act request. "In response to my petition, the F. ... [details]
Issue three of Sissy Boy, a zine by Charlie Welch, featuring black-and-white photographs, illustrations and text on white paper. Single hole punched and bound by a zip tie. "SISSY BOY was first introduced in 1994 and is a bastard child of the Queer Action Figures collective (NYC). ... [details]
Artist's book by Ruscha featuring black-and-white photographs of palm trees against white backgrounds captioned with their locations. [details]
Martha Rosler sent out this black-and-white photograph to friends and artist colleagues on her mailing list in [1977] as part of her "From Our House to Your House" (1974-1978) series.
"Four of the five cards in the series depict Rosler awkwardly situated in a kitchen: In the first, dressed in California (and performance) white, she is squeezed between stove and refrigerator, next to a big plaster chili peper, while the text reads '5 4" By 128 Pounds At Home In Kitchen.
...
[details]
Martha Rosler sent out this black-and-white photograph to friends and artist colleagues on her mailing list in [1975] as part of her "From Our House to Your House" (1974-1978) series.
"Four of the five cards in the series depict Rosler awkwardly situated in a kitchen: In the first, dressed in California (and performance) white, she is squeezed between stove and refrigerator, next to a big plaster chili peper, while the text reads '5 4" By 128 Pounds At Home In Kitchen.
...
[details]
Single sided handbill of Robert Smithson's short essay, "The Lamentations of the Paroxysmal Artist," 1961. [details]
Artists' book by Ed Ruscha featuring black-and-white photographs of album covers alongside the album(s) themselves against white backgrounds. Photographs by Jerry McMillan. Reference: "The Works of Edward Ruscha," Hudson Hills Press, New York, in association with the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, 1982, pp. ... [details]
Set of seven styrofoam cups imprinted with texts by Jenny Holzer from her Truisms series. Cups read: "STUPID PEOPLE SHOULDN'T BREED," "THE BREAKDOWN COMES WHEN YOU DON'T CONTROL YOURSELF AND WANT THE RELEASE OF A BLOODBATH," "YOU ARE SO COMPLEX THAT YOU DON'T ALWAYS RESPOND TO DANGER," "YOU ARE TRAPPED ON THE EARTH SO YOU WILL EXPLODE," "YOU CAN'T SEE OR TASTE MANY OF THE THINGS THAT KILL YOU NOW," "IF YOUR'RE CONSIDERED USELESS NO ONE WILL FEED YOU ANYMORE," and "TRUE FREEDOM IS FRIGHTFUL. ... [details]