With A Bao A Qu Reading When Attitudes Become Form. Maria Fusco. New Documents.

Posted in writing on December 12th, 2013
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With A Bao A Qu Reading When Attitudes Become Form. Maria Fusco. New Documents.

Experimenting with the form and register of contemporary art writing, With A Bao A Qu Reading When Attitudes Become Form reconfigures the seminal artist’s book / catalog When Attitudes Become Form (1969). Originally edited by Harald Szeemann to accompany the Kunsthalle Bern exhibition of the same name, When Attitudes Become Form brought together new tendencies in the art of its time, including arte povera, conceptual art, and post-Minimalism, to conceive curatorial practice as a linguistic medium.

Working with Szeemann’s artist’s book/catalog as case study, With A Bao A Qu reflects on the form and structure of the artist’s book. By stylistically adopting a subjective literary voice, drawn, at least partially, from Jorge Luis Borges’s Book of Imaginary Beings (published in English in 1969), the book counterintuitively shifts focus away from the reading of art’s conceptual properties to that of its physical, material embodiment.

An entertaining and thought provoking addition to the reexamination of one of art history’s most mythologized exhibitions that demonstrates how language is attitude and how words are form. ⎯ Jens Hoffmann

Language: English
Pages: 142
Size: 11.2 x 18 cm
Binding: Softcover
ISBN: 978-1-927354-14-8

8€
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Paper Monument 4. Dushko Petrovich & Roger White (Eds.). Paper Monument.

Posted in Journals, writing on December 2nd, 2013
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Paper Monument 4. Dushko Petrovich & Roger White (Eds.). Paper Monument.

From the Editors

Before the Earth was covered mostly in water, there lived a people who worshipped petrochemicals and spent vast sums of money on things called “art objects.” I kept revisiting this thought as I worked: these far-future humans, or maybe even post-humans, puzzling over this funny piece of sculpture—which was now, thanks to my careful ministrations, almost completely free of water stains. It did somehow get me through the day.

Spasm to Spasm
Christopher Hsu

Even during my lifetime, the world, or at least its representation, has become clearly funnier. It’s not just cultural products, films or TV or magazines, YouTube videos of men and women fist fighting on city buses; I mean that I myself, for example, and seemingly everyone I meet have gotten noticeably funnier. I feel an impulse to preface almost every remark in conversation with something light or even with an outright joke, as a sort of aperitif.

Was Asked to Write About the Experience of Occupy Wall Street and Directing Light Onto Fist of Father
MPA

can we begin at the energetic?
can we all meet there?

our beliefs are not our own.

“we” is quoted culture.

Toward a History (and Future) of the Artist Statement
Jennifer Liese

Some are self-doubting, like Adolph Gottlieb’s: “Surrounded by my materials, canvas, paints, oils, brushes, etc. I feel like a relic of the past because paintings are still among the few things made by hand.” Others process-oriented, as with Karel Appel: “I make myself free, I stand aside, I squeeze myself dry. Then I am ready to begin painting.” Some are droll: “Rembrandt is beautiful, but sad. Boucher is gay but bad. ‘Great Painting’ has never made anyone laugh,” observes Jean Dubuffet.

Painting Under Obama
Julian Kreimer

Months later, as I wandered around the Bushwick open studios, it became clear to me that metallic colors had become (along with neon hues) major signifiers of the “Shwicky” look: the blend of irony and earnestness that denotes, somehow, that the artist is aware of her impossible position in the world, simultaneously seeking ideal truths and the mythical rent of $1.00/sq. ft./month.

Resistant
Martha Schwendener

Why would anyone who opposes torture interrogate painting?

Painting Has Issues
Cameron Martin

It’s hard to know what to think of all the paintings being made right now. A curator recently told me that he feels “the conversation” is so diffuse, at this point it’s next to impossible to talk about contemporary painting as a coherent subject. The heterogeneity of current painting production can leave us feeling deep in the potpourri, unable to separate the orange peel from the rose hips.

Dear Yoko Dear Sierra
Sarah Demeuse

I decided to address my feelings in a personal letter to you because I need not only to get rid of my sense of guilt but also to tease out some of the issues raised by this type of exchange. (If you want, you can share this letter with Rivane.) Though I usually prefer email, I feel a letter is closer to the spirit and original context of your tree. While I long ago mastered the skill of writing profusely detailed exposés to Santa, I am not experienced in writing to a famous artist.

Humanimals
Caroline Picard

Through the horse-blood infusions, Laval-Jeantet claims to have effected a shift in her consciousness in which she experienced the world as an herbivore: sleeping little, being unusually nervous. “In my opinion,” she said, “my essence was not changed, but I was able to respond to an eternal frustration: I could finally feel Animal Otherness in me, outside of a purely anthropocentric point of view.” Of the prosthetic cat device, she wrote, “As soon as I put them on and got used to this strange way of walking, the cats came up to me, sniffed and jumped on me, playing with me in the same way as they played between themselves.”

Portfolios

William Pope.L and David Giordano
Andro Semeiko
Mary Weatherford
Pinar&Viola

Price: €13.00

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No Goal. Jacob Kassay. The Power Station.

Posted in Exhibition catalogue, writing on November 30th, 2013
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No Goal. Jacob Kassay. The Power Station.

Featuring contributions by Ajay Kurian.

Published on the occasion of the exhibition ‘No Goal’ held at The Power Station, Dallas, April 11 – July 13 2012.

Language: English.
84 pages.

Price: €27.00

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Zeitschrift #24: Acid

Posted in magazines, photography, writing on November 28th, 2013
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ACID #24

Featuring: Kerstin Cmelka, Megan Francis Sullivan & Sabine Reitmaier, Gavin Morrison & Scott Myles, William Morris, Jan Tschichold, Herbert Beyer, Quinn Latimer, Jennifer West, Brian Holmes and Magda Tothova and many more.

Plus, free Flexi Disc: Eva-Tone Soundsheet Modulator 2013, by Florian Hecker.

Price: €4.00

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Richas Digest Special Edition. Achim Riechers. Richas Digest.

Posted in magazines, photography, writing, Zines on November 25th, 2013
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Richas Digest Special Edition. Achim Riechers. Richas Digest.

Richas Digest Special Edition:
Richas Digest #2 with limited edition photographic print.
Choice of 5 different prints.

Language: German

Price: €20.00

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DADALENIN. Rainer Ganahl & Johan F. Hartle. Edition Taube.

Posted in history, politics, writing on November 23rd, 2013
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DADALENIN. Rainer Ganahl & Johan F. Hartle. Edition Taube.

DADALENIN reconstructs and speculates about how Dada and Lenin had more in common than is usually assumed. The book points to some of the tragicomic aspects of their parallel and overlapping artistic and political histories in order to question the unfulfilled legacy of the avant-garde.

In Rainer Ganahl’s voluminous series of works DADA and Lenin are abundant sources of historical imagination. To dive into the historical situation Ganahl uses a variety of artistic media and techniques––ranging from animation movies to theatre performances, from ink drawings to bronze sculptures, departing from a number of historical details and catch phrases, from the no-man’s land between porn, terror and the history of the avant-gardes.

Co-editor Johan F. Hartle’s text situates DADALENIN in the development of Rainer Ganahl’s work and reconstructs it in the context of current debates on the artistic and political avant-garde. DADALENIN thus appears as a reflection of numerous key motifs of contemporary cultural theory, indirectly haunting us in all kinds of monstrous alliances.

Edited by Rainer Ganahl and Johan F. Hartle
With contributions by Boris Groys and Jenny Borland

Black and white offset print.
Language: English
Hardcover, 608 pages.

Price: €25.00

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Fivehundred places. Jason Dodge (ed.).

Posted in poetry, writing on November 23rd, 2013
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Fivehundred places. Jason Dodge (ed.).

New books by: Anna McDonald, Caroline Knox, Carl Phillips, Mary Ruefle, Matthew Zapruder, Heather Christle, Valzhyna Mort.

Fivehundred places is a press established by Jason Dodge in an attempt to bring new readers to some of the poets that have been so important to his thinking and working over the past decades.

With a single printing of 500 copies, each book will find itself in one of 500 places.

Each Fivehundred places book also features a Dead Scissor by Paul Elliman on its cover.

Price: €8.00

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mono.kultur #35: Marina Abramović

Posted in magazines, performance, writing on November 22nd, 2013
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mono.kultur #35: Marina Abramović

“I’ve been attacked and ridiculed all my life.”

Autumn 2013 / English / 15×20 cm / 48 Pages

Interview by David Levine
Introduction by Anna Saulwick
Artwork by Marina Abramović
Design by Nirit Binyamini & Gila Kaplan

Price: D €5 EU €6 WW €7

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The White Review No. 8. Benjamin Eastham, Jacques Testard (Eds.). The White Review.

Posted in magazines, writing on November 18th, 2013
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The White Review No. 8. Benjamin Eastham, Jacques Testard (Eds.). The White Review.

July 2013

FEATURES:

Estate by China Miéville (Fiction)

Chris Kraus (Interview)

A Fictive Retrospective of the Bruce High Quality Foundation by Legacy Russell (Art)

Poems by John Ashbery, Jack Underwood and Sumana Roy (Poetry)

Claudia Wieser (Art)

The Croatian Fairy by Dubravka Ugrešić (tr. David Williams) (Essay)

Sophie Calle (Interview)

On Queensway Market, or How to Care about Things by Orlando Reade (Essay)

Untyping by Eley Williams (Fiction)

Deborah Levy (Interview)

Guy Gormley (Art)

The Pirate Who Does Not Know the Value of Pi by Eugene Ostashevsky (Poetry)

Barking from the Margins: On Écriture Féminine by Lauren Elkin (Essay)

The Lady of the House by Claire-Louise Bennett (Fiction)

Cover art by Ben Berlow

Language: English
Softcover, 176 pages.

Price: €16.99

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Pages #9: Seep. Nasrin Tabatabai, Babak Afrassiabi (Eds.). Pages Magazine.

Posted in magazines, writing on November 13th, 2013
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Pages #9: Sleep. Nasrin Tabatabai, Babak Afrassiabi (Eds.). Pages Magazine.

Editorial Note:

This issue of Pages assumes seep as a post archival mode: in the Merriam-Webster dictionary the verb ‘seep’ is translated as follows: to flow or pass slowly through fine pores or small openings, to enter or penetrate slowly, to become diffused or spread.

The biology or politics of seeping is like that of raw petroleum oozing at natural oil seeps. Unlike refined oil which has sponsored modernization and its aligned archives, crude oil pours beyond historical purpose and defies structural elevations. It instead disfigures the ground through which it dubiously spreads.

Seeping is a posthumous affair. It is the gradual leaking of a long withdrawn interior. Like the bleeding of a punctured corpse, when the pumping of the heart has stopped, when the body is lifeless and apathetic to any ‘hail’, yet continuing to bleed. Seep as archive is an eternally post-apocalyptic expansion, retraction, deviation, subtraction, or simply the arrival of (non-)things.

CONTENTS
Geo-Archive
Mariam Motamedi Fraser
READ
Contemporary Hole
Editorial Note
Wounds of Archive
Saleh Najafi
The Artist Abstract #6
MARK VON SCHLEGELL
THE UNDERGROUND
Nima Parzham
Vanished Theories
Adam Kleinman
UNFILMABLE
Pages
Seep
Editorial Note
Algorithm
Suzanne Treister
The Dissolute Subject
Alexi Kukuljevic
Andy Warhol, Suicide (Purple Jumping Man), 1963
Matts Leiderstam
Black Infinity; or, Oil Discovers Humans
Eugene Thacker
Infrastructural Suspensions: Global Spanning, Atmospheric Seepage, and Measures of the Undecidable
Natasha Ginwala & Vivian Ziherl

English / Farsi
128 pages

Price: €10.00

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