The A.R.T. Library Program distributes books on art and culture free of charge to public institutions nationwide. Public libraries, schools, prisons, and reading centers that self-define as underserved are welcome to place unrestricted orders.

Marlene Dumas: Myths and Morals

Marlene Duma, Claire Messud

Myths & Mortals documents a selection of paintings—debuted in the spring of 2018 at David Zwirner, New York—ranging from monumental nude figures to intimately scaled canvases that present details of bodily parts and facial features. Several nearly ten-foot-tall paintings focus on individual figures, including a number of male and female nudes and a seemingly solemn bride, whose expression is obscured behind a floor-length veil. Like the Greek gods and goddesses, the figures in these paintings are at once larger than life and overwhelmingly human. The smaller-scale paintings—referred to by the artist as “erotic landscapes”—present a variety of fragmentary images: eyes, lips, nipples, or lovers locked in a kiss. Evident across all of these works is the artist’s uniquely sensitive treatment of the human form and her constantly evolving experimentation with color and texture.

Alongside these paintings, Dumas presents an expansive series of thirty-two works on paper originally created for a Dutch translation of William Shakespeare’s narrative poem Venus & Adonis (1593) by Hafid Bouazza (2016). Myths & Mortals is accompanied by new scholarship on the artist by Claire Messud and a text by Dumas herself.

Maja Lisa Engelhardt: The Second Day, The Seen and the Unseen

Maja Lisa Engelhardt

Maja Lisa Engelhardt is a Danish painter best known for her abstractions. Inspired by the landscapes of her childhood home in the coastal region of Zealand in Denmark, Engelhardt channels her memories of a difficult childhood and her Christian spirituality to create loosely geometric, cumulus paintings. There is often a bright white or dark mass in the center of her canvases, portraying an inner light, or darkness, which hints at representation without ceding qualities of abstraction. “I hope that my images are universal and metaphysical visions of light, air, soil and ocean,” the artist has said. “These are abstract snapshots instead of concrete illustrations of biblical acts." Born on May 2, 1956 in Frederiksberg, Denmark, she grew up on the Odsherred peninsula with abusive parents and two younger sisters. After graduating from the Funen Art Academy in 1980, she moved to a suburb of Paris, where she began her career and received immediate recognition. Engelhardt’s works are in the collections of the Ball State Museum of Art in Muncie, Indiana and the National Gallery of Denmark in Copenhagen, among others. The artist lives and works in Paris, France.

This is a catalog of her work, produced by Elizabeth Harris Gallery and printed by Narayana Press in Denmark.

MALE: from the collection of Vince Alett

Vince Aletti

MALE features photographs and artifacts from the collection of the renowned photography critic, curator, and collector Vince Aletti. Amassed over the last 30 years, the collection features a blend of anonymous and iconic imagery from the present back into the 19th century. This visual cacophony distinguishes Aletti’s taste and appetite as a collector. He surrounds himself with his collection in his apartment, but for the first time, in February 2008, Aletti assembled a selection of images at White Columns in New York. A sampling from this public display is featured in MALE along with a gatefold documenting the collection as it is installed in his home.

Collier Schorr, contemporary artist and author, has contributed a 2,500-word essay on the history of homosexual imagery and the impact viewing Aletti’s collection had on her as an image maker. In “A Male is a Male as well as being a Male,” she states, “Aletti’s collection — as seen in his book, in his home and in an exhibition space — creates a Cosmos: at once a microcosm of gay male life, a personal fantasy, and the infinite, enveloping World. The collection is not concerned with the Unique. There is no sense of one-upmanship, each new picture is not there to be better than the last. There is no holy grail.”

Carol Bove: Ten Hours

Carol Bove

Characterized by compositions of various types of steel, Bove’s ongoing series of “collage sculptures,” begun in 2016, amalgamates theoretical and art-historical influences across time periods and disciplines. To create these lyrical and abstract assemblages, Bove pairs fabricated tubing that has been crushed and shaped at her studio with found metal scraps and a single highly polished disk. Luminous color is applied to parts of the composition, transforming the steel—more commonly associated with inflexibility and heft—into something that appears malleable and lightweight, like clay, fabric, or crinkled paper.

Bove’s new works are smaller in scale and elaborate on the “collage sculptures,” with more complex forms that twist, fold, and bend into postures that belie their material construction. She manipulates steel to varying degrees, rendering gentle folds in some, and extreme, almost anthropomorphic contortions in others. Their contrasting textures—matte, glossy, or rough—create a further sense of visual play, heightening the surface tension throughout.

Harold Ancart: Traveling Light

Laura McLean-Ferris, Bob Nickas, Harold Ancart

Ancart often paints subjects that naturally invite contemplation, such as the horizon, clouds, flowers, flames, and icebergs. His newest body of work captures the experience of landscape seen in motion or from a distance: trees blurred while driving past, a far-off inky-black sea, an evocative Martian mountain range. Recalling René Magritte, Egon Schiele, Gustav Klimt, and Piet Mondrian, who approached this subject matter in distinct ways, Ancart blurs form and color, figure and ground, and figuration and abstraction.

Reproduced here in magnificent foldouts, two multipanel canvases situate the viewer between a mountainscape and a seascape, both monumental in scale. Ancart segments the seascape with a stark horizon line, dividing sky and ocean. Like other comparable motifs within the artist’s oeuvre, the vividly colored cloudy sky functions in an anthropomorphic way, alluding to the endless possibilities and personalities of organic forms.

Including an interview with the artist by Bob Nickas, this catalogue offers insight into Ancart’s frank reflections on painting, writing, nature, and more. The publication also features a new essay by Laura McLean-Ferris. Taken together, the works in Traveling Light meditate on the expansive possibilities of painting.

In Numbers

Andrew Roth, Phil Aarons

In Numbers is a survey of serial publications produced by artists from around the world dating from 1955 to the present day. Amid historical groundswells like the rise of the little press in the 1960s, the correspondence art movement of the early 1970s, and the DIY culture of zines in the '80s and early '90s, professional artists seized on the format of magazines and postcards as a site for a new kind of art production. In large part, these are young artists operating at the peripheries of mainstream-art cultures or established artists looking for an alternative to the marketplace. These are not publications that feature news items, criticism, or reproductions of artworks, but are themselves artworks, often collaborative and idiosyncratic. This survey then is the first to define a neglected art form that is neither artists’ book nor ephemera, but is entirely its own unique object.

The survey begins with Wallace Berman’s Semina and continues through Joe Brainard’s C Comics, Eleanor Antin’s 100 Boots, Robert Heinecken’s modified periodicals, the magazine of the Japanese Provoke group, Art-Language, Raymond Pettibon’s Tripping Corpse, Hans-Peter Feldmann’s Ohio, and contemporary examples such as North Drive Press and Continuous Project. Approximately 60 publications are surveyed in total. The diversity of the list is reflected in the backgrounds of the producing artists and in the wide range of techniques, nationalities, and media; the survey does not attempt to be exhaustive, but simply to define the genre’s contours and identify certain thematic threads. In Numbers documents the history of each publication (its inception, production, distribution, and significance) together with a thorough bibliography. In addition, several longer essays and interviews by experts, such as Clive Phillpot, Nancy Princethal, Vince Aletti, William S. Wilson, and Neville Wakefield, will complement the individual entries to provide a historical context and overview.

100 Fanzines / 10 Years of British Punk 1976-1985

This publication reproduces covers of 100 British punk fanzines from the Mott Collection and features two essays: “Glue Was All Over My Fingers” by Toby Mott and “We Are the Writing on the Wall” by Victor Brand.

The zine is mass-produced graffiti, a love letter to an anonymous public, a black-and-white shout into the wilderness. As a product, it goes hand in hand so perfectly with the autochthonous priorities of the punk movement that it seems in retrospect almost inevitable. The youth of the United Kingdom — under- and unemployed, adrift and disillusioned in the aftermath of ‘60s utopianism — were the writing on the wall in the mid-1970s. The kids of punk weren’t all right: Punk was the return of the repressed. Even if they were only talking to themselves, they could express themselves without censorship through music and grainy, handwritten pamphlets.

Ana and Carl and some other couples

Nicolás Guagnini, Leigh Ledare

The 2014 exhibition “Ana and Carl and some other couples” presented a printout of an article published in the New York Times on February 12, 1988, detailing Carl Andre’s acquittal on the charges that he pushed his wife, Ana Mendieta, to her death from the window of their 34th-floor apartment in Greenwich Village. The exhibition also included 126 books, cut through with circular holes, one to four inches in diameter. Embedded within these holes, at varying depths, was imagery extracted from 1960s and 1970s pornography magazines, exhibiting a variety of positions and possibilities within human sexual interaction — a catalogue of fetishes.

To coincide with the exhibition, PPP Editions has published Ana and Carl and some other couples in an edition of 126 copies. Bound without covers and printed on perforated paper, each of the 126 original book-collages is paired on every double-page spread with a centered black circle, which expands in diameter as the book progresses until it fully covers the final pages in solid black. The multiple mappings of these holes suggest the camera coming at the viewer, who finally is absorbed within a larger circle that eventually exceeds the bounds of the book. Each edition is signed and numbered in white marker by the artists and housed in a black glassine wrapper affixed with a wafer seal.

Sound Box Set
(8 books)

This Box Set is a collection of books that address the uses of music in contemporary art. It features works by artists such as Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Lee Bul, Ragnar Kjartansson, and Martin Wilner, as well as an art history book unpacking how rhythm informs science in the 18th and 19th centuries. Touching on themes from performance to time and from recording to media, this Box Set sheds light on a sonic connection in the A.R.T. Library Program catalog.

This Box Set is recommended for a general readership interested in exploring sound, music, and the visual arts.

Revisionist Art: Thirty Works by Bob Dylan

Lucy Sante, Bob Dylan

In Revisionist Art, Bob Dylan offers silkscreened covers of popular magazines from the last half century that somehow escaped history’s notice. As Luc Sante says in his introduction to this collection, they seem to emanate, “from a world just slightly removed from ours--a world a bit more honest about its corruption, its chronic horniness, its sweat, its body odor.” Art critic B. Clavery provides a history of Revisionist Art, from cave drawings, to Gutenberg, to Duchamp, Picasso, and Warhol. The book also features vivid commentaries on the work, (re)acquainting the reader with such colorful historical figures as the Depression-era politician Cameron Chambers, whose mustache became an icon in the gay underworld, and Gemma Burton, a San Francisco trial attorney who used all of her assets in the courtroom. According to these works, history is not quite what we think it is.

Born in the State of FLUX/us

Benjamin Patterson

Benjamin Patterson: Born in the State of FLUX/us is a retrospective of the artist's career, which now spans nearly fifty years. The exhibition includes both early and recent work that range from annotated scores and books to painting and sculpture. As a founding member of Fluxus–a loose and international collective of artists who infused avant-garde practices of the day with humor and anarchic energy–Patterson helped revolutionize the artistic landscape at the advent of the 1960s and usher in an era of new and experimental music.

The Form of Becoming: Embryology and the Epistemology of Rhythm, 1760–1830

Janina Wellmann

The Form of Becoming offers an innovative understanding of the emergence around 1800 of the science of embryology and a new notion of development, one based on the epistemology of rhythm. It argues that between 1760 and 1830, the concept of rhythm became crucial to many fields of knowledge, including the study of life and living processes.

The book juxtaposes the history of rhythm in music theory, literary theory, and philosophy with the concurrent turn in biology to understanding the living world in terms of rhythmic patterns, rhythmic movement, and rhythmic representations. Common to all these fields was their view of rhythm as a means of organizing time — and of ordering the development of organisms.

Janina Wellmann, a historian of science, has written the first systematic study of visualization in embryology. Embryological development circa 1800 was imagined through the pictorial technique of the series, still prevalent in the field today. Tracing the origins of the developmental series back to seventeenth-century instructional graphics for military maneuvers, dance, and craft work, The Form of Becoming reveals the constitutive role of rhythm and movement in the visualization of developing life.

Live Audio Essays

Lawrence Abu Hamdan

Live Audio Essays presents transcripts from performances and films by Lawrence Abu Hamdan, an artist known for his political and cultural reflections on sound and listening.

Abu Hamdan’s intricately crafted and heavily researched monologues are at times intimate, humorous, and entertaining, yet politically disquieting in their revelations. Using personal narratives, anecdotes, popular media, and transcripts rooted in historical and contemporary moments, the artist leads the reader through his investigations into crimes that are heard but not seen. These live audio essays turn our focus to acoustic memories, voices leaking through walls and borders, the drone of warfare, cinematic sound effects, atmospheric noise, the resonant frequencies of buildings, the echoes of reincarnated lives, and the sound of hunger.

Live Audio Essays collects seven iconic works, which were originally presented as performances, films, or video installations from 2014 through 2022. Featured pieces include Contra Diction (Speech Against Itself), Walled Unwalled, After SFX, Natq, A Thousand White Plastic Chairs, Air Pressure, and the newly-completed The 45th Parallel.

All the texts were transcribed and edited with the artist and are available here in a single volume for the first time.

To Music

Ragnar Kjartansson

In his performances, which often extend over several weeks or months, the Icelandic artist Ragnar Kjartansson explores not only his own physical and psychological limits and the themes of early performance art, but also the artist's status and the different images of his role. For his installation "The Schumann Machine" (2008), created for Manifesta 7, he spent several hours every day for two weeks singing the 1840 song cycle Dichterliebe by Robert Schumann. A characteristic feature of his performances are the many melancholy but also absurdly comical moments.

This book, now in its second printing, unites for the first time all of Kjartansson's works related to music from 2001 to 2012. It includes contributions by Philip Auslander, Heike Munder, Markús πór Andrésson and a conversation between Edek Bartz and Ragnar Kjartansson.

Maja Lisa Engelhardt: The Sixth Day, Genesis 26-30

Maja Lisa Engelhardt

Maja Lisa Engelhardt is a Danish painter best known for her abstractions. Inspired by the landscapes of her childhood home in the coastal region of Zealand in Denmark, Engelhardt channels her memories of a difficult childhood and her Christian spirituality to create loosely geometric, cumulus paintings. There is often a bright white or dark mass in the center of her canvases, portraying an inner light, or darkness, which hints at representation without ceding qualities of abstraction. “I hope that my images are universal and metaphysical visions of light, air, soil and ocean,” the artist has said. “These are abstract snapshots instead of concrete illustrations of biblical acts." Born on May 2, 1956 in Frederiksberg, Denmark, she grew up on the Odsherred peninsula with abusive parents and two younger sisters. After graduating from the Funen Art Academy in 1980, she moved to a suburb of Paris, where she began her career and received immediate recognition. Engelhardt’s works are in the collections of the Ball State Museum of Art in Muncie, Indiana and the National Gallery of Denmark in Copenhagen, among others. The artist lives and works in Paris, France.

This is a catalog of her work, produced by Elizabeth Harris Gallery and printed by Narayana Press in Denmark.

Yayoi Kusama: The Journal

Yayoi Kusama

The Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama’s kaleidoscopic environments have captured the imaginations of millions of museum and gallery visitors around the world. Her quintessential polka dots, organic shapes, and optical environments that become hypnotic, merging concepts of flatness and depth, presence and absence, and beauty and the sublime. The paintings on the cover and endpapers of Kusama’s first Artist Journal provide the perfect motivation for any creative pursuit.

Sunshine Hotel

Mitch Epstein

Featured spread—containing photographs of one woman at the border wall in Nogales, Arizona, in 2017, and another, Lorin Linder, at California's Lockwood Animal Rescue Center in 2013—is from Mitch Epstein: Sunshine Hotel, published by Steidl and editor Andrew Roth's PPP Editions. Spanning Epstein's entire career, 1969 to 2018, this beautifully printed, 12.25 x 12-inch clothbound volume contains almost 200 color and black-and-white images, half of which have never been published before. Intuitively sequenced by Roth, it is the ultimate overview of this pioneering American photographer's work, touching on all of his important series and themes.

William Eggleston: The Outlands, Selected Works

William Eggleston

The Outlands, a series of photographs taken by Eggleston between 1969 and 1974, establishes the groundbreaking visual themes and lexicon that the artist would continue to develop for decades to come. The work offers a journey through the mythic and evolving American South, seen through the artist’s lens: vibrant colors and a profound sense of nostalgia echo throughout Eggleston’s breathtaking oeuvre. His motifs of signage, cars, and roadside scenes create an iconography of American vistas that inspired a generation of photographers. With its in-depth selection of unforgettable images—a wood-paneled station wagon, doors flung open, parked in an expansive rural setting; the artist’s grandmother in the moody interior of their family’s Sumner, Mississippi home—The Outlands is emblematic of Eggleston’s dynamic, experimental practice. The breadth of work reenergizes his iconic landscapes and forms a new perspective of the American South in transition.

Accompanying the ninety brilliant Kodachrome images and details, a literary, fictional text by the critically acclaimed author Rachel Kushner imagines a story of hitchhikers trekking through the Deep South. New scholarship by Robert Slifkin reframes the art-historical significance of Eggleston’s oeuvre, proposing affinities with work by Marcel Duchamp, Dan Graham, Jasper Johns, and Robert Smithson. A foreword by William Eggleston III offers important insights into the process of selecting and sequencing this series of images.

Maja Lisa Engelhardt: The Fifth Day, Genesis 20-23

Maja Lisa Engelhardt

Maja Lisa Engelhardt is a Danish painter best known for her abstractions. Inspired by the landscapes of her childhood home in the coastal region of Zealand in Denmark, Engelhardt channels her memories of a difficult childhood and her Christian spirituality to create loosely geometric, cumulus paintings. There is often a bright white or dark mass in the center of her canvases, portraying an inner light, or darkness, which hints at representation without ceding qualities of abstraction. “I hope that my images are universal and metaphysical visions of light, air, soil and ocean,” the artist has said. “These are abstract snapshots instead of concrete illustrations of biblical acts." Born on May 2, 1956 in Frederiksberg, Denmark, she grew up on the Odsherred peninsula with abusive parents and two younger sisters. After graduating from the Funen Art Academy in 1980, she moved to a suburb of Paris, where she began her career and received immediate recognition. Engelhardt’s works are in the collections of the Ball State Museum of Art in Muncie, Indiana and the National Gallery of Denmark in Copenhagen, among others. The artist lives and works in Paris, France.

This is a catalog of her work, produced by Elizabeth Harris Gallery and printed by Narayana Press in Denmark.

Some of the People, All of the Time

David Levine

David Levine’s Brooklyn Museum exhibition “Some of the People, All of the Time” was cited by the New York Times as one of the 10 best shows of 2018. The exhibition included a series of new photographic prints as well as a curated selection of object’s from the Museum’s collection. Its centerpiece was a new monologue, written by Levine and delivered by a rotating cast of actors, on the theory and practice of the fake crowd and the possibility of becoming a “real person.” The project, which earned Levine a 2018 Guggenheim Fellowship, was also featured in Art in America and Cultured, and the monologue text was published in n+1.

Modeled after INSTEAD, a radical New York-based publication from the late 1940s, Levine’s broadside presents a unique printing of this monologue alongside a select number of images from the exhibition.

CRASS 1977 - 1984

Crass embodied the anarcho-punk aesthetic of the late ‘70s: They privileged politics over musicianship, substance over form, and above all independence over profitability. The group lived together in an open community and used much of the proceeds from their music to support other political causes and organizations and to promote other small punk bands, such as Poison Girls, Conflict, and Flux of Pink Indians, through their independent record label. The group was also remarkable for its multimedia approach, incorporating films, zines and books of essays and poetry — all with the distinct, coherent visual imprimatur of artist Gee Vaucher — into their activities.

Crass played four concerts in New York in the summer of 1977, at small, unexpected venues such as the Puerto Rican Club and the Polish Club. This exhibition represents the first opportunity since that brief visit for New Yorkers to experience the unique visual and aural mayhem that is Crass’s trademark. The material featured in this exhibition spans the high period of Crass’s endeavors, from 1978 to 1984, and constitutes a special segment of the
Mott Collection. In addition to his own artistic activities as part of the Grey Organization, collector and curator Toby Mott spent much of his youth diligently collecting and preserving the artifacts of the punk movement in Britain. Major portions of his collection were featured in the exhibition “Loud Flash: British Punk on Paper” at MUSAC in Léon, Spain, in March 2010 and more recently at Haunch of Venison Gallery.

Maja Lisa Engelhardt: The Fourth Day, A Plant of Light

Maja Lisa Engelhardt

Maja Lisa Engelhardt is a Danish painter best known for her abstractions. Inspired by the landscapes of her childhood home in the coastal region of Zealand in Denmark, Engelhardt channels her memories of a difficult childhood and her Christian spirituality to create loosely geometric, cumulus paintings. There is often a bright white or dark mass in the center of her canvases, portraying an inner light, or darkness, which hints at representation without ceding qualities of abstraction. “I hope that my images are universal and metaphysical visions of light, air, soil and ocean,” the artist has said. “These are abstract snapshots instead of concrete illustrations of biblical acts." Born on May 2, 1956 in Frederiksberg, Denmark, she grew up on the Odsherred peninsula with abusive parents and two younger sisters. After graduating from the Funen Art Academy in 1980, she moved to a suburb of Paris, where she began her career and received immediate recognition. Engelhardt’s works are in the collections of the Ball State Museum of Art in Muncie, Indiana and the National Gallery of Denmark in Copenhagen, among others. The artist lives and works in Paris, France.

This is a catalog of her work, produced by Elizabeth Harris Gallery and printed by Narayana Press in Denmark.

Sweet Home Yokosuka

Ishiuchi Miyako

Sweet Home Yokosuka revisits Ishiuchi’s three early works that in retrospect may be considered as a trilogy. Together, the photographs manifest a personal document primarily of her hometown Yokosuka, a place of compromised identity, accommodating two large American Naval bases since the late 1940s.

Apartment documents both exteriors and interiors of new and old dwellings, generally focusing on the buildings themselves not their inhabitants. They are in some respects anthropomorphic portraits of the architecture: The repairs on the walls are like veins, and the cracking and peeling of old paint are like the scars on aging skin. Yokosuka Story describes Ishiuchi’s wanderings in her native city, confronting locations that although changed, still hold the memories of her childhood. Endless Nights documents the popular “love hotels,” as abandoned; the physical structure of the places themselves and their furnishings, stairways, corridors and empty beds echo the intimate stories that unfolded there.

What is most compelling about this work is not necessarily what Ishiuchi photographed or the seductive rendition of reality into black and white, but rather how she conceptualized the act of picture-taking. Ishiuchi was less interested in finding her unique vision, more comfortable “using” the medium as a means to confronting herself and her past. This methodology was reinforced by the ideas discussed among her peers from the Provoke movement, Moriyama, Takanashi and Taki Koji, who questioned whether the photographic medium was capable of capturing any version of empirical truth.

“I sense that a numbing and mysterious pain raced through Ishiuchi with every snap of the shutter, as though she was killing something. What she was killing was the guts of our country, not just in Yokosuka but everywhere in Japan. No matter how beautiful the façade, behind it you can always find something festering and lifeless. How will Ishiuchi’s confessional poem, reverberating from within, speak to the future?” — Nishikawa Miwa.

Ishiuchi Miyako represented Japan in the 2005 Venice Biennale. Her photographs are included in the collections of SF MoMA, MFA Houston, the Getty Museum, ICP, to name but a few.

Cinema Box Set
(8 books)

This Box Set offers a selection of art books related to film and moving images. Some titles feature artists who approach film as a medium for their creative production, while others present artists who challenge traditional norms and systems of cinematic media. Together, these books show how contemporary artists use film to articulate ideas of duration, motion, media, and technology.

This Box Set is recommended for a general readership interested in the intersection of film and the visual arts.

Trinh T. Minh-ha: The Twofold Commitment

Trinh T. Minh-ha

The Twofold Commitment is an artist book by filmmaker, writer, and theorist, Trinh T. Minh-ha. While contextualizing the wider scope of her filmmaking practice, this publication centers on Trinh’s feature film Forgetting Vietnam (2015), which takes up one of the myths surrounding the creation of Vietnam: a fight between two dragons whose intertwined bodies fell into the South China Sea and formed Vietnam’s curving, S-shaped coastline. Commemorating the fortieth anniversary of the end of the Vietnam War, the film draws inspiration from ancient legend to stage an ongoing, contemporary conversation between land and water, creating a third space for historical and cultural re-memory.

The book features the film’s lyrical script, along with rhythmically distributed cinematic stills. Expanding on this central focus is a series of conversations between Trinh and film and sound scholars Patricia Alvarez Astacio and Benjamín Schultz-Figueroa; Erika Balsom; Lucie Kim-Chi Mercier; Domitilla Olivieri; Stefan Östersjö; Irit Rogoff; and Xiaolu Guo. These conversations date from 2016 to 2022 and are accompanied by an index of key concepts in the artist’s work.

Bruce Conner: 2000 BC

Joan Rothfuss, Kathy Halbreich, Bruce Jenkins, Peter Boswell

Bruce Conner (1933-2008) first came to prominence in the late 1950s as a leader of the assemblage movement in California. Conner had close ties with poets of the San Francisco Renaissance (particularly Michael McClure) as well as with artists such as Wallace Berman, George Herms, Jess and Jay DeFeo. Conner's use of nylon stockings in his assemblages quickly won him notoriety, and saw his work included in Peter Selz's classic 1961 Art of Assemblage show at MoMA. Around this time, Conner also turned to film-making, and produced in swift succession a number of short films that helped to pioneer the rapid edit and the use of pop music among independent film-makers. Conner's innovative editing techniques and decidedly dark vision of American culture laid the foundation for later Hollywood directors such as Dennis Hopper (a friend and collaborator of Conner's, who frequently acknowledged his influence) and David Lynch. A long overdue and significant addition to the understanding of twentieth-century American art and cinema, 2000 BC:

The Bruce Conner Story Part II represents the most comprehensive book to date on Conner's work from the 1950s to the present. The authors elucidate Conner's work in film, assemblage, drawing, printmaking, collage, and photograms, as well as his more ephemeral gestures, actions, protests and escapes from the art world. This beautifully designed clothbound monograph is a landmark publication for anyone interested in contemporary art, film, culture and the Beat era.

The Singles 1999 - Now

Áda Ruilova

New York-based artist Áda Ruilova's videos combine classical cinematic devices with a distinctively low-tech sensibility, quick cuts and rhythmic, jarring soundtracks to create works that exist in the space between sound and image. Drawing equally from B-movie aesthetics and classic montage cinema, Ruilova creates dark, moody narratives that ruminate on psychology and memory. Ruilova is part of a generation of artists who employ media in innovative ways with a do-it-yourself aesthetic, often drawing upon contexts–from cinema to music to popular culture–that exist outside the art world. This catalogue was published in conjunction with the Aspen Art Museum's 2008 exhibition, which surveyed work Ruilova made since 1999; it was her first solo museum presentation. The catalogue contains several essays, along with color stills and written descriptions of each video.

Between Artists: Thom Andersen / William E. Jones

Thom Andersen, William E. Jones

In this frank and provocative conversation, Thom Andersen and William E. Jones explore an expansive number of topics in relation to their respective film and art practices, among them: the advent of HD technology; experimental filmmakers and their strategies; Los Angeles; ''militant nostalgia;'' Jesus as revolutionary; the limitations of the art world; art criticism; gay culture; William Morris; and ''the Reagans at church.''

Part of the Between Artists series.

Dennis Oppenheim: Body to Performance 1969-73

Nick Kaye, Amy van Winkle Oppenheim, Dennis Oppenheim

A comprehensive view of Dennis Oppenheim’s radical art practices during this explosive five-year period.

Dennis Oppenheim was a pioneer in the fields of earthworks, conceptual art, body art, and performance. This monograph follows the studio practice, public performance works, and gallery and museum shows that took place between 1969–1973 with documentation of conceptual performance works in slide, film, video, and photographic form exhibited alone or as a component of installations. A special emphasis will be how works such as Arm and Wire, 1969; Reading Position for Second Degree Burn, 1970; and Wishing Well, 1973, are made with diverse mediums and modes of work in which the idea and act of time-based performance is central.

Gerhard Richter: New York 2023

Gerhard Richter

This highly anticipated catalogue, accompanying Gerhard Richter’s first exhibition with David Zwirner, presents Richter’s last paintings along with his recent explorations in drawing, printing, and sculpture.

“[His last paintings] can feel almost like exquisite texts to be read. . . . Their freshness and spontaneity feels like a new beginning.” —Roberta Smith, The New York Times

Known for his abstract and realist paintings, Gerhard Richter has pursued a diverse and influential practice characterized by a decades-long commitment to the medium and its formal and conceptual possibilities. This remarkable book celebrates the breadth of Richter’s newest bodies of work and archives a historical moment in the artist’s career.

Full-color plates and installation views showcase a selection of the artist’s final works on canvas—made just before he announced his retirement from oil painting in 2017—alongside an expansive suite of new drawings made with ink, graphite, and colored pencil on paper, a remarkable series of chromatic inkjet prints titled mood, and a stunning glass sculpture that debuted at the exhibition in New York. A newly commissioned essay by Dieter Schwarz, one of the foremost experts on Richter’s oeuvre, illustrates the artist’s path toward his newest bodies of work. Schwarz describes Richter in his studio, revealing the creative process behind his iconic practice.

Diane Arbus: Documents

Diane Arbus

Through an assemblage of articles, criticism, and essays from 1967 to the present, this groundbreaking publication charts the reception of the photographer’s work and offers comprehensive insight into the critical conversations, as well as misconceptions, around this highly influential artist.

Best known for her penetrating images exploring what it means to be human, Diane Arbus is a pivotal and singularfigure in American postwar photography. Arbus’s black-and-white photographs demolish aesthetic conventions and upend all certainties. Both lauded and criticized for her photographs of people deemed “outsiders,” Arbus continues to be a lightning rod for a wide range of opinions surrounding her subject matter and approach. Critics and writers have described her work as “sinister” and “appalling” as well as “revelatory,” “sincere,” and “compassionate.” Through an assemblage of articles, criticism, and essays from 1967 to the present, Diane Arbus Documents charts the reception of the revolutionary photographer's work.

Illuminating fifty years of evolution in the field of art criticism, Documents provides a new template for understanding the work of any formidable artist. Organized in eleven sections that focus on major exhibitions and significant events emerging from Arbus’s work, as well as on her methods and intentions, the sixty-nine facsimiles of previously published articles and essays––an archive by all accounts––trace the discourse on Arbus, contextualizing her inimitable oeuvre. Supplemented by an annotated bibliography of more than six hundred entries and a comprehensive exhibition history, Documents serves as an important resource for photographers, researchers, art historians, and art critics, in addition to students of art criticism and the interested reader alike.


Paperwork: A Brief History of Artists’ Scrapbooks

Andrew Roth, Alex Kitnick

The scrapbook has long been used as a storehouse for memories — to preserve a lock of hair, a sentimental piece of correspondence, a magazine clipping, or a beloved snapshot. Finding a historical precedent in the 17th-century commonplace book, in which bits of scripture might be jotted down alongside literary quotations and recipes, the scrapbook evolved into a highly crafted visual record, a diary not just of thoughts, but also of things. Artists began to engage with the scrapbook in earnest in the postwar period, using the page as variously as the canvas, albeit on a smaller scale. As the title Paperwork suggests, this book explores how contemporary artists have used the scrapbook to forge an intimate artistic identity, in opposition to the bureaucratic, administrative papers that provide official identification.

If the conventional scrapbook originally was a place to store memories, the artist’s scrapbook often trades in nascent ideas, both visual and textual, which may or may not grow into a more finished work. Such books allow an informal view into the process of thinking that goes before making; the collecting that comes before facture. William S. Burroughs and Brion Gysin (whose three exceptional scrapbooks form the backbone of this exhibition) used oversize books to intertwine visual ideas and threads of stories: news clippings and shards of advertisements woven among watercolor paintings and excerpts from manuscripts — arrangements which fed into Burroughs’s dreams and back out into his cut-up narratives. Other artists, such as Al Hansen, carried small notebooks for organizational jottings, quick sketches, and humorous musings, making collages on the fly and tucking away daily detritus for safekeeping. Richard Prince collected tear sheets from magazines in plastic portfolios, archiving his images of biker chicks and catalog models for later use. Carolee Schneemann kept long-running scrapbooks, documenting both her domestic life and her burgeoning artistic career.

But the scrapbook can also be a finished work itself, in which the tightly conceived and carefully constructed sheets form a complete whole. Isa Genzken’s I Love New York, Crazy City is one such example: made during a year she spent in New York in the mid-1990s, the book is a madcap conglomeration of color snapshots, faxes, and letters affixed to the pages with electrical tape. The French artist Jean-Michel Wicker makes byzantine scrapbooks, often excising pages from store-bought notebooks at the gutter and taping in replacement patchworks of found images, Internet printouts, and hand-lettered phrases. A classic scrapbook purportedly made by Ray Johnson when he was a teenager features kitsch images of babies, puppies, and western landscapes; it was later repurposed in an edition by Brian Buczak, who xeroxed particular spreads, creating degenerated Pop facsimiles.

Paperwork illustrates three to four spreads from these scrapbooks, among others, and includes two essays: “Patterns and Scraps” by Alex Kitnick and “Glue and Cum” by Richard Hawkins, plus fully annotated descriptions of each scrapbook by Claire Lehmann.

Carol Bove: Collage Sculptures

Carol Bove

Exploring the recent sculptural innovations of prominent contemporary artist Carol Bove

Carol Bove: Collage Sculptures presents an extensive look into the contemporary artist’s work over the past five years and her ongoing exploration of scale, color, material, and artistic traditions of the twentieth century.

Bove’s recent work engages the conceptual concerns of mid-century sculpture, such as spontaneity, industrial materials, and the potential of painted sculpture. However, within this space of familiar sculptural traditions, Bove has discovered new approaches that lead to places previously unknown. Bove’s “collage sculptures” are created from scrap metal and stainless steel that has been carefully worked into sinuous forms and are frequently painted. Considering the hard rigidity of the steel, the works possess an appearance of almost impossible softness, as if steel could become as pliable as clay. Such works range from small pedestal sculptures to large, imposing compositions. Bove’s interest in scale and how a viewer’s understanding of an artwork shifts depending on its context are explored through a selection of small works from the collection of the Nasher Sculpture Center.

Published by the Nasher Sculpture Center, the catalogue features beautiful reproductions of Bove’s work and an introduction as well as an essay by curator Catherine Craft on the development of the collage sculptures and their relationship to other artists and traditions of modern sculpture. Also included is an essay by Lisa Le Feuvre that explores Bove’s complex work by means of a thematic alphabet related to the artist’s interests.


Katherine Bernhardt: Why is mushrom growing in my shower?

Suzanne Hudson, Katherine Bernhardt

“Bernhardt has always been impressive for her ability to combine the immediate, seductive properties of paint with the infectious humor of topical pop culture.” —Hyperallergic

Bernhardt’s boundless visual appetite has established her as one of the most exciting painters working today. Thinking about the relationship between art, objects, and commerce, Bernhardt spotlights iconic motifs of cartoons and cultural symbols. Colors and lines bleed and pool together, revealing Bernhardt’s brisk and improvisational process. Monumental in size, subject matter, and vibrancy, her works demand attention.

Expanding on the exhibition at David Zwirner, London, in 2022, this catalogue includes additional paintings and works on paper in which Bernhardt develops her ongoing body of work. With many details of paintings, this significant publication gives the artist’s work ample space to play. Suzanne Hudson’s essay considers Bernhardt’s work from an art-historical perspective and explores the artist’s work and life.


Last Turn, Your turn: Robert Rauschenberg and the Environmental Crisis

Robert Rauschenberg

At the 1991 United Nations Earth Summit Committee inaugural ceremony, Robert Rauschenberg unveiled a new painting, Last Turn, Your Turn which included the groups pledge and became the official picture of the UN conference. Since that time, with the continuing degradation of the environment, Rauschenberg continued to produce paintings and other works of art relating to the environmental issues.

This is the catalog of an exhibition of some of those works, held at the Jacobson Howard Gallery in New York City in 2008. Fourteen works in color, including the original Last Turn, Your Turn, with extensive information on Rauschenberg's life and works, and his continuing involvement in efforts to save our planet's environment.

Maja Lisa Engelhardt: The Eighth Day, Depths and Surface

Maja Lisa Engelhardt

Maja Lisa Engelhardt is a Danish painter best known for her abstractions. Inspired by the landscapes of her childhood home in the coastal region of Zealand in Denmark, Engelhardt channels her memories of a difficult childhood and her Christian spirituality to create loosely geometric, cumulus paintings. There is often a bright white or dark mass in the center of her canvases, portraying an inner light, or darkness, which hints at representation without ceding qualities of abstraction. “I hope that my images are universal and metaphysical visions of light, air, soil and ocean,” the artist has said. “These are abstract snapshots instead of concrete illustrations of biblical acts." Born on May 2, 1956 in Frederiksberg, Denmark, she grew up on the Odsherred peninsula with abusive parents and two younger sisters. After graduating from the Funen Art Academy in 1980, she moved to a suburb of Paris, where she began her career and received immediate recognition. Engelhardt’s works are in the collections of the Ball State Museum of Art in Muncie, Indiana and the National Gallery of Denmark in Copenhagen, among others. The artist lives and works in Paris, France.

This is a catalog of her work, produced by Elizabeth Harris Gallery and printed by Narayana Press in Denmark.

Rirkrit Tiravanija: a Lot of People

Ruba Katrib, Yasmil Raymond, Jody Graf, Kari Rittenbach

Accompanying the first US survey and largest exhibition to date dedicated to Thai artist Rirkrit Tiravanija, Rirkrit Tiravanija: A LOT OF PEOPLE traces four decades of Tiravanija’s multifaceted practice. Spanning rarely seen early works from the 1980s through recent projects, the publication covers Tiravanija’s experimentations with installation, film, works on paper, ephemera, sculpture and participatory works. Designed by Tiffany Malakooti, the publication features over 400 images—many of which are published for the first time—as well as 23 newly commissioned texts. Longform essays by exhibition curators Ruba Katrib and Yasmil Raymond, as well as scholars Jörn Schafaff, David Teh and Mi You, dive into key aspects of Tiravanija’s work, providing historical context. These texts are complemented by 18 short reflections from artists, thinkers and collaborators who have been key interlocutors with Tiravanija over the years.

Walter Chappell: Vintage Photographs 1954-1978

Walter Chappell

This is an exhibition catalogue reproducing ten black-and-white photographs in tri-tone, all taken between 1954 and 1978, culled predominantly from a small group of photographs that survived the 1963 fire that destroyed most of Chappell’s prints and negatives.

Includes a poem by Robert Creeley, composed for Chappell in 1973, and “Time Lived,” an essay by Peter Bunnell, curator of photography at the Princeton Art Museum. Bunnell succinctly reviews Chappell’s work by stating that “Chappell has always believed firmly in the duality of the corporeal and the spirit … The fundamental principle in [his work] is that the tenuous connection to photographic reality is not severed. Each subject is re-presented in such a way that our perceptual limitation is expanded. Each image suggests an inner reality, a kind of scar of the past, a reflection of an act or event once lived.”

Photography Box Set
(10 books)

This Box Set presents a selection of books that showcase generative uses of photography as an artistic medium. It includes titles exploring photography’s role in challenging injustices, capturing everyday life, and advancing social movements. Other titles foreground how artists use this technology to interrogate the status and nature of photographic "truth" and the ways that images uphold social norms.

This Box Set is recommended for a general readership.

Blithe Air: Photographs of England, Wales, and Ireland

Elizabeth Matheson

This is a book of full-page black-and-white photographs, reproduced in 300-line screen extended-range duotone by The Stinehour Press. Designed by Elizabeth Matheson and John Menapace (to whom the book is also dedicated.) It includes a text, "Illuminations & Pyrotechnic Display," by Jonathan Williams.

Each of Elizabeth Matheson's images bestows upon the eye rare evidence of clear focus. They receive and select, reflect; yet seem to bring their scene before us instantly. And what is beheld is literally 'held'-held in the preciousness of light, and its transportations. Ireland, England, Wales are poised in 'Blithe Air', black and white particles, ionized, vivid, and refreshing.

So firmly yet gently grasped, the things seen surprise and touch us. Statuary, hippo, wader, shadow, sofa, seaside, horse. The eye is deposited, always answering the need to care, and be cared for. Whose eye? Hers? Ours? Her lead is so subtle, that as we follow these compositions, their natural consequence convinces us that we ourselves are their vital creator.

Overland: Photographs by Victoria Sambunaris

Victoria Sambunaris

Overland is a catalogue from the title exhibition of 14 large, color photographs by Victoria Sambunaris from the Lannan Collection. Each year, for the last ten years, Victoria Sambunaris has set out from her home in New York to cross the United States by car, alone, with her camera. Her photographs capture the expansive American landscape and the manmade and natural adaptations that intersect it. The images celebrate the intersection of civilization, geology and natural history, particular to the United States, featuring trains in Texas and Wyoming, trucks in New Jersey and Wisconsin, the oil pipeline in Alaska, uranium tailings in Utah, and a unique view of Arizona's Petrified Forest. Combined, they present a sparse and vast landscape, dotted by human intervention that is distinctly American.

Victoria Sambunaris received her MFA from Yale University in 1999. She is a recipient of the 2010 Aaron Siskind Foundation Individual Photographer’s Fellowship and the 2010 Anonymous Was a Woman Award. Her work is held in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, the National Gallery of Art, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and the Lannan Foundation. Her work, Taxonomy of a Landscape, was exhibited at the Museum of Contemporary Photography in January of 2013.

The Last Picture Show: Artists Using Photography 1960-1982

Photography has become an increasingly pervasive medium of choice in contemporary art practice and is even employed at times by artists who do not necessarily consider themselves to be photographers. How did this come to be? The Last Picture Show will address the emergence of this phenomenon of artists using photography by tracing the development of conceptual trends in postwar photographic practice from its first glimmerings in the 60s in the work of artists such as Bernd & Hilla Becher, Ed Ruscha and Bruce Nauman, to its rise to art-world prominence in the work of the artists of the late 70s and early 80s including Sherrie Levine, Richard Prince and Cindy Sherman. Intended as a major genealogy of the rise of a still-powerful and evolving photographic practice by artists, the checklist will include a wide array of works examining a range of issues: performativity and photographic practice; portraiture and cultural identity; the formal and social architectonics of the built environment; societal and individual interventions in the landscape; photography's relationship to sculpture and painting; the visual mediation of meaning in popular culture; and the poetic and conceptual investigation of visual non-sequiturs, disjunctions and humorous absurdities. Bringing together a newly commissioned body of scholarship with reprints of important historical texts, The Last Picture Show seeks to define the legacy that has produced a rich body of photographic practice in the art world today. Walker Art Center, 2003 8.2 x 10 inches, 304 pp., color illustrations Hardcover, ISBN 978-0935640762

The New Yokoo Times

Tadanori Yokoo

A 20-page newspaper published to coincide with the 2001 exhibition. Formatted after the pages of the New York Times, The New Yokoo Times is a spoof on current affairs seen through the filter of an altered consciousness, with a distinct absurdist bent. In one collage titled “Who Cares” featured on the Editorials/Letters page, we view an image of a seascape. Large in the foreground is a group of 19th-century Japanese women lounging in striped swimming suits, adrift in a boat. Behind (and heading straight for them) is a group of American tourists in leisure wear, packed into a speedboat on a fishing expedition. And in the distance, yet a third vessel, an antique clipper is speeding across the frame through shark-infested waters towards a swimmer dashing by as if in a race. The headlines read: “Managing the Yokoo Incident,” “The Battle Over Money in Heaven,” “Gravel Sushi,” and “A Time of Testing.” The texts are appropriated from the New York Times and various Japanese tabloids.

Repose

Amelia Zhou

In her debut book Repose, Amelia Zhou poses the question, “How do I perform or not perform?” Weaving together poems, fiction, and lyric essay, Repose follows an unnamed woman grappling with the limits of the self on the everyday stage of labor and routine, charting her emergent modes of resistance. She is already steps ahead, deftly shifting between worker and dancer, roving through the haunted space in which a performance has just ended, the ruins of a house, or a skyscraper aflame. Seeking the edges of form—where it exceeds itself, where it breaks down—Repose offers a narrative of girlhood invigorated by the mutual possibilities of dreaming and defiance.

Amelia Zhou works with writing and movement, with an interest in exploring their various intersections as they arise in forms such as poetry, prose, or performance. In 2021 she was awarded Gold Prize at the Creative Future Writers’ Awards (UK) and was a recipient of the Ultimo Prize (Australia), both for prose. Her work has been published most recently in Overland, LUMIN Journal, and Ambit; exhibited at Orleans House Gallery; with further writing in numerous UK and Australian publications. She holds a MA in Creative Practice from Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music & Dance (2020) and is an incoming PhD student in English at the University of Cambridge. Born and raised in Sydney, Australia, she now lives in London.

Dafne Phono

Nour Mobarak

Nour Mobarak’s Dafne Phono is an adaptation of the first opera, Dafne, composed and written by Jacopo Peri and Ottavio Rinuccini in 1598. Drawing on the myth of Daphne and Apollo from Ovid’s Metamorphoses—a story of unrequited love, patriarchal possession, conquest, and transformation—Mobarak’s multimedia and multispecies reimagining splinters the opera’s Italian libretto. Alongside English and Greek versions, it is translated into some of the world’s most phonetically complex languages—Abkhaz, San Juan Quiahije Eastern Chatino, Silbo Gomero, and !Xoon—and Ovid’s original Latin. In this process, the narrative—and an artifact of Western culture—is dismantled, metabolized, and rendered into unruly utterances that shape the sensorium as much as they do the capacity for sense-making. These voices are given material form by a cast of mycelium sonic sculptures whose rhizomatic compositions and broadcasted recordings resemble the formation and mutation of language over time, reconstituting speech into a new, polyphonic body politic, composed of voices whose striking, poetic utterances transfix and transcend meaning.

With a preface by the artist, libretti, and an essay by Anahid Nersessian.

Taming The Beast

Jeannine Falino, Martha J. Fleischman

This is a monograph on American metalsmith Earl Krentzin, who created small scale sculptures and theatrical settings in silver which are full of whimsy and humor. Earl Krentzin (1929–2021) was a virtuoso silversmith who poured his considerable talents into figurative sculpture, creating whimsical theatrical settings in silver with a wry humor. He was an anomaly in the world of modern craft, having more in common with the 16th-century goldsmith Benvenuto Cellini than with his 20th-century peers. This first full scale monograph on the artist offers the breadth of Krentzin's engaging creations, which he based on his love of toys, movement, and the mechanical arts. Readers will find humor and pathos in his theatrical settings and verisimilitude in every tiny detail, set amidst the burgeoning crafts scene in Detroit. All will discover a modern master who used amusements and daydreams to unlock the imagination.

Viscidity

Boris Mikhailov

The photographs featured in Viscidity by Boris Mikhailov were completed and sequenced in Kharkov in 1982 but only now published as a book. Reproduced at their original scale, we have added translations from the Russian to English. In addition, the book features “I was walking through a field,” an original bilingual essay by Mikhailov illuminating the history of the work and written specially for this edition.

One of three early and critical image-text works, Viscidity was completed after Horizontal Pictures and Vertical Calendars (1978-1980) and shortly before Unfinished Dissertation (1984). As Mikhailov states: “At first the texts tautologically repeated what was visible in the image, as though they were simply drawing attention to the photograph (the first book)… gradually the texts changed and became poetic and deeper (the second book)… then I added quotations in addition to my own reflections on photography (the third book).”

Viscidity was produced during a time of “deep political stagnation. Nothing is happening — nothing at all is interesting … There was a kind of certainty that society was at the threshold of something unknown, something everyone was anticipating. Many people felt this way.”

Mikhailov is best known for provocative self-portraits and politically charged color photographs, from the earliest works in Red Series (1968–75) to the gut wrenching yet seductive images of the homeless in the Soviet Union, published in Case Studies (Scalo, 1999). A prolific and experimental artist, Mikhailov’s work rests naturally beside the most respected conceptual artists of his generation. Photographs from Viscidity have been exhibited widely throughout his career, most importantly in 2004 in the critically acclaimed exhibition and accompanying catalogue at the Serralves Museum in Portugal by Margarita and Victor Tupitsyn, Verbal Photography: Ilya Kabakov and Boris Mikhailov and the Moscow Archive of New Art.

The Sweet Flypaper of Life (softcover)

Roy DeCarava, Langston Hughes, Sherry Turner DeCarava

Hughes’s heart-warming description of Harlem in the late 1940s and early 1950s is seen through the eyes of one grandmother, Sister Mary Bradley. As she guides the reader through the lives of those around her, we imagine the babies born, families in struggle, children yet flourishing. We experience the sights and sounds of Harlem as seen through her learned and worldly eyes, expressed here through Hughes’s poetic prose. As she states, “I done got my feet caught in the sweet flypaper of life and I’ll be dogged if I want to get loose.” DeCarava’s photographs lay open a world of sense and feeling that begins with his perception and vision. The ruminations go beyond the limit of simple observation and contend with deeper meanings to reveal these individuals as subjects worthy of art. While Hughes states “We’ve had so many books about how bad life is, maybe it’s time to have one showing how good it is,” the photographs bring us back to this lively dialogue and a complex reality, to a resolution that stands with the optimism of the photographic medium and the certainty of DeCarava’s artistic moment.

In 1952 DeCarava became the first African American photographer to win a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship. The one-year grant enabled DeCarava to focus full time on the photography he had been creating since the mid-1940s and to complete a project that would eventually result in The Sweet Flypaper of Life, a moving, photo-poetic work in the urban setting of Harlem. DeCarava compiled a set of images from which Hughes chose 141 and adeptly supplied a fictive narration, reflecting on life in that city-within-a-city. First published in 1955, the book, widely considered a classic of photographic visual literature, was reprinted by public demand several times. This fourth printing, the Heritage Edition, is the first authorized English-language edition since 1983 and includes an afterword by Sherry Turner DeCarava tracing the history and ongoing importance of this book.

Rose Wylie: Which One

Rose Wylie

Inspired by film, pop culture, and the history of fashion, Wylie harnesses a union of high and low culture with a bold technique of mark making. Her unique practice of material overlay and erasure creates fantastic compositions. Playing with the conceptual tensions between formal and informal aesthetics, Wylie also employs the visual elements of text as crucial details in her paintings.

With beautiful swiss binding, this monograph compiles work from five exhibitions at David Zwirner, offering an impressive view of Wylie’s most recent work. Giving insight to Wylie’s feminist and rebellious impulses, Judith Bernstein writes an accompanying text on how she relates to Wylie’s ambitious and playful energy. This publication also features a foreword by Nicholas Serota and new essays by David Salle and Barry Schwabsky, in addition to an enlightening interview between the artist and Hans Ulrich Obrist.

Copied

Claire Lehmann

This is an exhibition for Copied, held by Andrew Roth from May 7 to June 20, 2014.

In the traditional matrix of an original and a copy, proximity to the touch of the maker’s hand is everything. The assumption here is that an original work—imbued directly with the value of its maker’s labor—accumulates value, while a copy of the work is bereft of its singular emanations, though it may serve as a vehicle to distribute its ideas. Or, to leave aside economic terms and look to philosophical ones, at one time it was widely held that originary Form was ideal, transcendent, and celestial, whereas the copy (its terrestrial version) must be limited, even degraded, by its material nature. Presently, we tend to think of this binary in reverse: an immaterial copy derived from existing form—digital pixels or coded information calculated from material instantiation—persists untainted, capable of generating nearly identical physical manifestations. Such dematerialization of information has changed the ease with which certain types of copies can be made; even as Walter Benjamin famously mourned mechanical reproduction’s leaching away of aura, he also recognized the emancipatory potential of such technologies, particularly the “revolutionary use value” that widely distributed images might possess.

Josh Smith: Emo Jungle

Josh Smith

Josh Smith: Emo Jungle looks at the artist’s vigorous repetition of particular motifs, illuminating his approach to painting as an exploratory medium for image production. Published on the occasion of Smith’s critically acclaimed first exhibition at David Zwirner, this catalogue features a new body of work that marks an important evolution for the artist. In these paintings, Smith sets the stage for a new mode of self-reflective commentary on image making, acknowledging that “the meaning perhaps arises in the making.”

A new essay by curator Bob Nickas treats the Reaper, Turtle, and Devil figures from Emo Jungle as ciphers through which to understand Smith’s work. Nickas demonstrates how these new paintings re-stage and personalize the artist’s more abstract earlier works and illuminates the ways in which repetition functions within Smith’s practice. With more than one hundred illustrations, this book serves as the ideal introduction to Smith’s disruptive oeuvre.

something else press Box Set
(6 books)

Founded by Dick Higgins in 1963 in New York City, something else press was an influential publisher of texts and artworks by artists associated with Fluxus, an international 1960s art movement that emphasized process and collaboration rather than finished objects of art. This Box Set offers five titles originally published by the press alongside the recent publication, A Something Else Reader, edited by Higgins and published by Primary Information. This collection offers a firsthand encounter with the pioneering work of this historic publisher and a glimpse into the vital scene of art publishing in 1960s and 70s New York.

This Box Set is recommended for a general readership.

Typewriter Poems

Peter Finch, Alison Bielski, Paula Claire, Thomas A. Clark, Bob Cobbing, Michael Gibbs, John Gilbert, dsh, Philip Jenkins, Andrew Lloyd, Peter Mayer, Cavan McCarthy, Edwin Morgan, Will Parfitt, Marcus Patton, I.D. Pedersen, Alan Riddell, John J. Sharkey, Meic Stephens, Charles Verey, J.P. Ward, Nicholas Zurbrugg

Co-published with Second Aeon Publications, Typewriter Poems gathers together twenty-two practitioners of the art of the typewriter poem–which relies on the limitations imposed by the machine to produce its form–in this slim volume of experimental letters. Featuring the work of British poets Thomas A. Clark, Bob Cobbing, Michael Gibbs, and many others.

Bio-Music

Manford L. Eaton

This pocket-sized edition reprints articles originally published in the experimental music journal Source that relate to the creation of music through human brain alpha waves. The introduction defines bio-music as “the term used by ORCUS research to describe a class of electronic systems that use biological potentials in feedback loops to produce powerful, predictable, repeatable, physiological / psychological states that can be controlled in real time.” The research on employing sensory stimulation towards the creation of time-rhythmic sequences is imbued with an utopian desire to create art that reaches towards a deeper human consciousness.

The Book of Hours and Constellations

Eugen Gomringer, Jerome Rothenberg

Best known as a founder of concrete poetry, Eugen Gomringer concentrates the visual element of his poems in geometrical structures. In his own words, Gomringer has noted, “Of all poetic structures based upon the word, the constellation is the simplest. It disposes of its groups of words as if they were clusters of stars. The constellation is a system, it is also a playground with definite boundaries. The poet sets it all up. He designs the play-ground as a field of force and suggests its possible workings. The reader accepts it in the spirit of play, then plays with it.”

Maja Lisa Engelhardt: The Third Day, Parallelism

Maja Lisa Engelhardt

Maja Lisa Engelhardt is a Danish painter best known for her abstractions. Inspired by the landscapes of her childhood home in the coastal region of Zealand in Denmark, Engelhardt channels her memories of a difficult childhood and her Christian spirituality to create loosely geometric, cumulus paintings. There is often a bright white or dark mass in the center of her canvases, portraying an inner light, or darkness, which hints at representation without ceding qualities of abstraction. “I hope that my images are universal and metaphysical visions of light, air, soil and ocean,” the artist has said. “These are abstract snapshots instead of concrete illustrations of biblical acts." Born on May 2, 1956 in Frederiksberg, Denmark, she grew up on the Odsherred peninsula with abusive parents and two younger sisters. After graduating from the Funen Art Academy in 1980, she moved to a suburb of Paris, where she began her career and received immediate recognition. Engelhardt’s works are in the collections of the Ball State Museum of Art in Muncie, Indiana and the National Gallery of Denmark in Copenhagen, among others. The artist lives and works in Paris, France.

This is a catalog of her work, produced by Elizabeth Harris Gallery and printed by Narayana Press in Denmark.

untitled anonymous

Vince Aletti

untitled sequences a group of snapshots culled from Vince Aletti’s collection of found photographs. Also included are a number of pictures made by photographers at physique studios from the 1950s onward. Among the most accomplished and distinctive are Bob Mizer (Athletic Model Guild), Bruce Bellas (Bruce of Los Angeles), Don Whitman (Western Photography Guild), Chuck Renslow (Kris), and Walter Kundzicz (Champion).

anonymous presents a suite of images by an unidentified photographer culled from an archive of over 300 black-and-white 2-1/4 inch contact prints and one binder with images and negatives affixed to a dozen loose sheets. To accompany this group, Aletti has written a 1,500-word essay reflecting on their significance, placing them within the history of Times Square imagemakers and questioning the motivation of the photographer himself.

Liu Ye: The Book Paintings

Liu Ye

The Chinese artist Liu Ye’s meticulous, colorful canvases convey his love of literature in the first publication dedicated to his paintings of books.

Beijing-born painter Liu Ye (b. 1964) investigates the intersections of history and representation through a distinct vocabulary that transcends time and place, evoking distinct conceptual and emotional registers of meaning. Carefully balanced and lushly rendered, his works encompass a diverse range of aesthetic and cultural sources, from literary and artistic inspirations to his family and pets. In this new publication devoted to his book paintings, the artist examines the book as both a physical object and cultural totem. Playing with geometry and perspective, Liu creates extraordinary and disorienting portraits of this most familiar subject.

Liu’s Book Painting series, begun in 2013, depicts close-up views of books that are turned open to reveal empty pages, an approach that emphasizes the object’s form over its content. Rendering books’ material structure—endpapers, binding, spine—in sensual detail, these paintings indicate an obsession with the book as an object and a lifelong love of literature. Liu’s father was a children’s book author who introduced him to Western writers at a young age, fueling his curiosity and imagination. Many of the books in Liu’s father’s collection were banned in Cultural Revolution–era China and the artist read them secretly throughout his childhood. This formative experience figures in his popular Banned Books series and in his book paintings in general.

Published on the occasion of a solo exhibition presented at David Zwirner, New York, in 2020, this catalogue includes new writing by the acclaimed poet Zhu Zhu, who traces the evolution of the book form in Liu’s work, as well as an interview with the artist by Hans Ulrich Obrist.


Liu is known for his precise, deftly rendered representational paintings. Drawn from contemporary culture and old master painting, his wide-ranging visual touchstones include Piet Mondrian, Miffy the Bunny, Balthus, and Rogier van der Weyden. In this new publication devoted to his book paintings, the artist examines the book as both a physical object and cultural totem. Playing with geometry and perspective, Liu creates extraordinary and disorienting portraits of this most familiar subject.

Liu’s Book Painting series, begun in 2013, depicts close-up views of books that are turned open to reveal empty pages, an approach that emphasizes the object’s form over its content. Rendering books’ material structure—endpapers, binding, spine—in sensual detail, these paintings indicate an obsession with the book as an object and a lifelong love of literature. Liu’s father was a children’s book author who introduced him to Western writers at a young age, fueling his curiosity and imagination. Many of the books in his father’s collection were banned in Cultural Revolution–era China and the artist read them secretly throughout his childhood. This formative experience figures in his popular Banned Books series and in his book paintings in general.

Published on the occasion of a solo exhibition presented at David Zwirner New York in 2020, this catalogue includes new writing by the acclaimed poet Zhu Zhu, who traces the evolution of the book form in Liu’s work, as well as an interview with the artist by Hans Ulrich Obrist.

Juan Munoz: Seven Rooms

Juan Munoz

A comprehensive look into the fascinating life and enduring legacy of Juan Muñoz and his enigmatic installations

“Walking between these figures feels like an interruption; being a spectator is itself a performance. They seem to know more than we do, about the status of being an artwork and the place of the viewer. The joke, if there is one, is on us.” —The Guardian

Muñoz’s revolutionary oeuvre evokes emotional narratives through sculpture, installation, drawing, writing, and sound. Situating viewers between his work and among one another, he creates an intimacy between art and its audience. Muñoz thought deeply about art history and, in particular, the tradition of Spanish painting. Before his untimely death at the age of forty-eight, he produced an extensive, powerfully evocative body of work that uniquely explores the narrative and philosophical possibilities of art.

Published on the occasion of the exhibition at David Zwirner, New York, in 2022, this catalogue provides an expansive overview of Muñoz’s career from the 1980s onward. In an accompanying text, the art historian and curator Guillaume Kientz contextualizes Muñoz’s influences within the art-historical canon. The acclaimed writer Siri Hustvedt contributes a thoughtful response to the artist’s iconic Conversation Piece. In an imagined interview between Muñoz and himself, Maurizio Cattelan further propels the artist’s momentum and potential in the time before his death. Also featured is a never-before-published interview between Muñoz and the art historian Michael Brenson that took place in 2000.

Maja Lisa Engelhardt: The Seventh Day, Genesis 2: 1 - 4

Maja Lisa Engelhardt

Maja Lisa Engelhardt is a Danish painter best known for her abstractions. Inspired by the landscapes of her childhood home in the coastal region of Zealand in Denmark, Engelhardt channels her memories of a difficult childhood and her Christian spirituality to create loosely geometric, cumulus paintings. There is often a bright white or dark mass in the center of her canvases, portraying an inner light, or darkness, which hints at representation without ceding qualities of abstraction. “I hope that my images are universal and metaphysical visions of light, air, soil and ocean,” the artist has said. “These are abstract snapshots instead of concrete illustrations of biblical acts." Born on May 2, 1956 in Frederiksberg, Denmark, she grew up on the Odsherred peninsula with abusive parents and two younger sisters. After graduating from the Funen Art Academy in 1980, she moved to a suburb of Paris, where she began her career and received immediate recognition. Engelhardt’s works are in the collections of the Ball State Museum of Art in Muncie, Indiana and the National Gallery of Denmark in Copenhagen, among others. The artist lives and works in Paris, France.

This is a catalog of her work, produced by Elizabeth Harris Gallery and printed by Narayana Press in Denmark.

Without Sanctuary: Lynching Photography in America

James Allen, John Lewis, Leon F. Litwack, Hilton Als

“Many people today, despite the evidence, will not believe―don't want to believe―that such atrocities happened in America not so very long ago. These photographs bear witness to . . . an American holocaust."

–John Lewis, US Congressman

The Tuskegee Institute records the lynching of 3,436 Black Americans between 1882 and 1950. Many times, a photographer was present to capture these events. Without Sanctuary preserves these harrowing, death-marked depictions, saving them so that we may recognize the terrorism unleashed on America’s African American community. Editor James Allen, an American antique collector, includes nearly 100 images of lynchings in America from his own collection, including battleground cases such as the 1911 murders of Laura and Lawrence Nelson in Okemah, Oklahoma the lynching of Rubin Stacy in Fort Lauderdale, Florida in 1935, and the infamous 1915 execution of Jewish factory manager Leo Frank in Marietta, Georgia. These images are accompanied by Allen’s own notes, as well as texts from the late US congressman and civil rights leader John Lewis, the late slavery and Reconstruction historian Leon Litwack, and writer and theater critic Hilton Als, professor at University of California in Berkeley and Columbia University. Now in its 17th printing, Without Sanctuary remains a singular testament to the camera’s ability to make us remember what we often choose to forget.

James Allen (born 1954) is an American collector best known for his vast collection of photographs of lynchings in America. Some of his collected items are now located in the Smithsonian and the High Museum of Art.

Leon Litwack (1929–2021) was a professor of American History at the University of California in Berkeley from 1964 to 2007. He specialized in the Reconstruction Era and the aftermath of slavery in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. His 1979 book Been in the Storm So Long won the Pulitzer Prize for History, the Francis Parkman Prize and the National Book Award.

Hilton Als (born 1960) is a writer and theater critic. He holds professorial positions at the University of California in Berkeley and Columbia University, and serves as a staff writer and theater critic for the New Yorker. In 2017 he won the Pulitzer Prize for criticism. Als has also curated several group art exhibitions including Forces in Nature at Victoria Miro Gallery and Alice Neel: Uptown at David Zwirner Gallery.

John Lewis (1940–2020) became involved in the Civil Rights movement when he was still a teenager. He was introduced to both Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Jr., and participated in the 1960 Nashville sit-ins as well as the 1961 Freedom Rides. As chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) from 1963 to 1966, he was one of the “Big Six” civil rights leaders who coordinated the March on Washington. He represented Georgia’s 5th District in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1987 until his death in 2020.

She Follows No Progression: A Theresa Hak Kyung Cha Reader

Juwon Jun, Rachel Valinsky, Sam Cha, Marian Chudnovsky, Jesse Chun, Una Chung, Anton Haugen, Irene Hsu, Valentina Jager, Juwon Jun, Youbin Kang, Eunsong Kim, Youna Kwak, Jennifer Kwon Dobbs, Andrew Yong Hoon Lee, Jennifer Gayoung Lee, Sujin Lee, Florence Li, Serubiri Moses, Jed Munson, Yves Tong Nguyen, Wirunwan Victoria Pitaktong, Brandon Shimoda, Caterina Stamou, Megan Sungyoon, Teline Trần, Soyoung Yoon

She Follows No Progression reflects on the plurality of Theresa Hak Kyung Cha (1951–1982)’s work and legacy, collecting essays, personal narratives, poems, conversations, letters, and the extratextual in a reader that attests to Cha’s genre-bending vision and political imagination. The writers, artists, scholars, organizers, and educators collected here, each unique in their voice and method, multiply approaches to language, colonial history, migration, and time in dialogue with Cha’s unequivocally interdisciplinary practice. Their contributions traverse subjects from Asian American studies to literary history, translation, film theory, and experimental poetics, while attending to the gaps between these fields and the intractable entanglements of race, class, and gender that underlie them. She Follows No Progression echoes Cha’s appeal for a liberatory horizon emergent from all that we are affixed to in the present.

She Follows No Progression is published on the occasion of the 2022 program,
The Quick and the Dead: Theresa Hak Kyung Cha Edition. The Quick and the Dead is a yearlong, multiphase project that highlights the life, work, and legacy of a deceased writer by bridging their work to that of contemporary practitioners. In its third year, the program focused on Theresa Hak Kyung Cha.

This Roundtable, participated in by the Wendy's Subway editors, provides a informative discussion about the making of this Reader.

'71-NY

Daido Moriyama

In 1971, Moriyama accompanied his friend and celebrated graphic artist Tadanori Yokoo on a trip to New York for one month. He shot over 2000 half-frame negatives that he contact printed upon his return to Tokyo. A small selection of ten images from the series appeared in the Japanese photographic periodical Asahi Camera in 1972, and in 1974, he created his landmark photocopy book Another Country in New York reproducing a mere 80 photographs. The contact sheets were then put into storage and only recently revisited.

To coincide with the 2002 exhibition, Andrew Roth in association with PPP Editions has published ’71-NY, a hefty, bilingual edition printing 210 reproductions in 428 pages.

Cyanide and Sin: Visualizing Crime in 50s America

Will Straw

Cyanide and Sin offers a broad history of the true-crime magazine in America with an emphasis on its visual content during the 1950s. With 196 color illustrations, Will Straw, a scholar teaching in the Communications Department at McGill University in Montreal, Canada, has written a 12,000-word essay that traces the stylistic and conceptual evolution of the crime-magazine genre. He catalogues specific photographers and key designers who were regular contributors to the various magazines.

Many of the images reproduced both within these magazines and on their covers were setup reenactments of crimes, some fictive, others real. Often, the images are accompanied by campy headlines such as: Death Crashes A Party, Love Me or Die!, He Was Too Hot To Cool Down.

There have been numerous publications on the history of pulp and crime fiction. Cyanide and Sin is the first book to look at the impact of the visuals used to accompany these stories.

As Straw writes: “Crime lent itself readily to some of the most powerful impulses within modern image-making. It gave photographers drawn to social marginality subjects with which to avoid the sentimentality that too easily clings to images of the poor or downtrodden. Crime photography has served as the basis for transgressive violations of good taste, and for romantic glorifications of the doomed life. The images assembled in true crime magazines over their 80 year history have moved ceaselessly between what photographic historian Allan Sekula calls the honorific and repressive functions of photography. Images celebrating an extravagant individuality, for instance, have sat alongside others calling for citizen complicity in the enforcement of state power.”

Anni Albers: Notebooks

Anni Albers

A superb facsimile of the only known notebook of legendary artist Anni Albers, this publication offers insight into the methodology of a modern master.

Beginning in 1970, Anni Albers filled her graph-paper notebook regularly until 1980. This rare and previously unpublished document of her working process contains intricate drawings for her large body of graphic work, as well as studies for her late knot drawings. The notebook follows Albers's deliberations and progression as a draftsman in their original form. It reveals the way she went about making complex patterns, exploring them piece by piece, line by line in a visually dramatic and mysteriously beautiful series of geometric arrangements.

An afterword by Brenda Danilowitz, Chief Curator of The Josef and Anni Albers Foundation, contextualizes the notebook and explores the role studies played in the development of her work.

Nate Lowman

Nate Lowman

A stunning, focused document of Nate Lowman’s work from the past four years

“Brewing the good, the bad, and the ugly of consumerist modern life in his masterful paintings, Lowman draws a portrait of the times that is equally mischievous and somber.” —BOMB Magazine

With an archive of source material amassed and processed over time, Lowman creates slippery, layered images that transform visual referents found in the news, media, and art history. In this volume, Lowman plays with cataclysmic imagery that probes the tensions between the everyday and the extreme, presence and absence, and violence and representation. In his vibrant paintings of digitally rendered hurricane imagery and crime scene photography cataloging the aftermath of the October 2017 mass shooting in Las Vegas, he considers the physicality of his medium in connection to the chaos of his subject matter.

Spotlighting Lowman’s exhibitions at David Zwirner in London and New York along with other recent work, this monograph includes a text by Lynne Tillman that provides a unique perspective across all bodies of Lowman’s oeuvre. In an interview with Andrew Paul Woolbright for The Brooklyn Rail, Lowman discusses his engagement with representation and meaning, twentieth-century gestural and pop art, slow painting, and American violence.


Othello

William Shakespeare, Fred Moten, Chris Ofili

In the twelve etchings Ofili has produced to illustrate this play, Othello is depicted with tears in his eyes, which flow below various scenes visualized in his forehead. Ofili asks us to see in Othello the great injustices that still plague the world today. These images add feeling to Shakespeare’s words, and together they form their own hybrid object—something between a book and a visual retelling of the tragedy. With a foreword by the renowned critic Fred Moten, this edition is the first of its kind and puts Othello’s blackness and interiority front and center, forcing us to confront the complex world that ultimately dooms him.

Midsummer Night's Dream

William Shakespeare, Marcel Dzama, Leslie Jamison

Inspired by Ovid’s Metamorphoses, Shakespeare’s celebrated romantic comedy intertwines multiple narratives under the influence of transformation and witchcraft. The play is often staged with actors wearing animal masks, an aspect that appeals particularly to Dzama, whose work is characterized by the fusion of human and animal, fantasy and reality.

As the second title in David Zwirner Books’s Seeing Shakespeare series, this book revisits this ultimate fairy tale through the eyes of a contemporary artist who feels a special affinity for its imagery.

Social Forms: A Short History of Political Art

Christian Viveros-Fauné

In Social Forms: A Short History of Political Art, renowned critic, curator, and writer Christian Viveros-Fauné has picked fifty representative artworks—from Francisco de Goya’s The Disasters of War (1810–1820) to David Hammons’s In the Hood (1993)—that give voice to some of modern art’s strongest calls to political action. In accessible and witty entries on each piece, Viveros-Fauné paints a picture of the context in which each work was created, the artist’s background, and the historical impact of each contribution. At times artists create projects that subvert existing power structures; at other moments they make artwork so powerful it challenges the very fabric of society. Whether it is Picasso’s Guernica and its place at the 1937 Worlds Fair, or Jenny Holzer’s Truisms (1977–1979), which still stop us in our tracks, this book tells the story behind some of the most important and unexpected encounters between artworks and the real worlds they engage with.

Never professing to be a definitive history of political art, Social Forms delivers a unique and compelling portrait of how artists during the last 150 years have dealt with changing political systems, the violence of modern warfare, the rise of consumer culture worldwide, the prevalence of inequality and racism, and the challenges of technology.

Promo: Fashion Publications from the '80s and '90s

Hilton Als, Vince Aletti, Andrew Richardson

PROMO is an exhibition and a book.

Andrew Roth will present a collection of ephemeral publications produced by the key international fashion houses in the ‘80s and ‘90s, including: Yohji Yamamoto, Comme des Garçons, Versace, Sisley, and Calvin Klein. Many of these publications introduced a new generation of fashion photographers such as Nick Knight, Paolo Roversi, Terry Richardson, and Bruce Weber. They were sent out or given away to a predetermined audience who generally perused and tossed them.

The concept of targeting clientele through the promotional publication comes into vogue in the mid-’80s with the catalogues created by art director Marc Ascoli and graphic designer Peter Saville for the Japanese fashion designer Yohji Yamamoto. These are extravagant book objects. They are created by a full production team consisting of: photographer, stylist, make-up artist, art director, and graphic designer. A highlight of this production team was the 64-page book issued in 1992 titled E-Z GO. It features stock photos, appropriated imagery from videos of British painter Bruce McClean and his studio, and the occasional model draped in Y’s designs.

To follow suit, Rei Kawakubo’s company Comme des Garçons issues Six (as in the sixth sense). The sumptuously printed, oversize unbound magazine issued irregularly from 1988-1991 (eight numbers in all) features works by contemporary and historical image-makers and designers with a quirky non-literal edit. For example, the table of contents for Six Number 4, from 1989, reads: Robert Frank, Arthur Elgort, Josef Koudelka, Saul Leiter, Peter Lindbergh, Mike and Doug Starn, and Issey Miyake.

PROMO, the book, published by Andrew Roth to accompany the exhibition, features essays by Hilton Als on Rei Kawakubo’s Six; Vince Aletti on Bruce Weber’s ephemeral publications; and an interview by Andrew Richardson with the British graphic designer Peter Saville. The book is issued in a limited edition of 150 copies.

The Tempest

William Shakespeare, Rose Wylie, Katie Kitamura

Likely the last play written entirely by Shakespeare, The Tempest brings together various themes the Bard explored in his prior plays, including magic, revenge and forgiveness, order and society, and nature versus art. The shipwreck and remote island, the spirits, and the dukes and their children offer rich material for Wylie’s works on paper and canvas.

As the third title in David Zwirner Books’s Seeing Shakespeare series, this book pairs a complex narrative with equally layered works by a contemporary artist who approaches the play and art making from a unique perspective. Also included is an introduction by the writer Katie Kitamura.

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