Turbo Magazine no.39: Monsieur Miroir
Posted in photography, Zines on January 12th, 2011Tags: Turbo Magazine
The Deaths in Newport – Lewis Baltz
After eight years, VIER5 and lewis baltz collaborated again on an artist book about THE DEATHS IN NEWPORT. The huge newspaper archive of Lewis Baltz formed the basis for this publication which focuses for the first time on the role of the media in the spectacular trial in newport beach in the the late 1940s.
Editor: VIER5
114 pages
Format: 14 cm x 22 cm
22 b/w images
Limited edition of 170.
Numbered and signed by Lewis Baltz.
D 55€
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BOOKS + RECORDS an ongoing accumulation.
Chris Newmyer and Denise Schatz
Parts of this book were originally published in 01 Magazine’s 5th issue, DUO.
Published by Miniature Garden
D 20€
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ANP Quarterly vol. 2 #5
Published by RVCA
With contributions from Alexi Wasser, Weird Records, Susan Miller, Brian Roettinger, Elad Lasery and a bunch more.
D 9€
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Plants & Mammals, Carol Bove.
With a project by Janine Larriviere.
This catalog was published by The Horticultural Society of New Yok on the occasion of the exhibition Plants & Mammals, Carol Bove, April 15 – September 10, 2009 at The Horticultural Society of New Yok, curated by Jodie Vicenta Jacobson.
Design by An Art Service.
Practices Procedures Flows Reversals, Julia Schmidt.
Edited by Markus Dreßen and Julia Schmidt.
Published by Spector Books.
D 36€
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Available for distribution.
Appear to me – Susan Phillipsz
¨Appear to Me¨ consists of a recording of a young woman singing to the tune of the Gregorian chant, ¨Salve Regina¨ . The haunting text, with its allusions to a voice rising like a bird in flight, …
D 15€
Mousse #26
Jimmie Durham has an interesting theory about money: it’s a virus that’s using its biology, architecture and art to replace human nature with its own…
Nick Relph is tangled in the weave of a tartan. Kirsty Bell met up with him to discover his sources of inspiration, which range from his own closet to Ellsworth Kelly’s paintings, by way of DIY groups on the web.
In the last twenty-six years, Moyra Davey has photographed almost no one. On the other hand, she has very clear ideas about the role played by literature in her universe of objects and dust. Gigiotto Del Vecchio explored it with the artist.
Ten, twenty, or even thirty years ago, who would have thought that talking about art schools would become cool? Dieter Roelstraete has an astute theory about this epoch-making “educational turn”.
A two-ton asteroid is reason enough to set Guillermo Faivovich and Nicolás Goldberg to work on a project that incorporates scientific knowledge, socio-political history, and the inexplicable magnetism of an alien object. Johan Lundh talked about it with the artistic duo for PART OF THE PROCESS.
Laure Prouvost has a passion for arranging meetings in unusual places, and Francesco Pedraglio had to follow her through muddy tunnels for an interview about her work. Which lies at the border between surrealism and plausibility.
The Chto Delat? collective is inspired by Lenin and carries on the revolution through musicals. But can it keep political symbols from being co-opted by aesthetics? That’s one of the questions raised by Jakob Schillinger.
Běla Kolářová lived in the shadow of her husband, artist and poet Jiří Kolář, and yet her sophisticated, conceptual work, made up of personal objects, deserves a special place in art history. Alice Motard talks about it.
ARTIST PROJECT: Leonor Antunes.
Plus…
For LOST AND FOUND, Jens Hoffmann traces the career of Marta Minujin, a pioneer of happenings and media art, a global artist ante litteram.
Barbara Casavecchia got the rare chance to take a look at his endless archive of useless images. As a result, through SKELETONS IN THE CLOSET, we too get to explore the terraced house in Chalk Farm, north of London, that belongs to John Stezaker.
D 8€
Penelope Umbrico – Desk Trajectories (As Is)
A new series by Penelope Umbrico, Desk Trajectories (As Is) includes found images of used office desks for sale on the Internet. This work serves as an answer to her continual interest in a certain optimism typically associated with fictions of unattainable lifestyles marketed for and lusted after by consumers.
These desks, once the definitive site of organization and productivity, now sit empty, dusty, and cumbersome as awkward in their photographic frame as they are in the space in which they are pictured. The disorienting compositional space of the pictured flat planes inhibits the viewer to readily discern and give context to the objects presented. In these pictures, all efficiency, productivity, and elegance is in question the mere fact that the desk is out of commission, being sold, points to an attendant deflation of these values.
Published by Swill Children
Edition of 100
B/W Offset on Newsprint
Saddle Stitched
D 5€
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Diwa Tamrong – Somebody Else’s Problem
Somebody Else’s Problem (SEP) is an ongoing series that explores the different ways an artist can loose control of their own work. Every new part to the series uses means of destruction, re-contextualization, collaboration and attempts of preservation in order to further investigate this notion. The work continues to grow with each version, but the artist’s control over the work dwindles as it falls into the hands of other people, disseminating through the internet and everything in between.
Published by Swill Children
Edition of 30
D 15€
Classifications of a Spit Stain – Ellie Ga
Classification of a Spit Stain is the result of Ellie Ga’s two-year project photographing and analyzing stains on city pavements throughout the world. Accompanying the photographs is a classification system which organizes the stains according to various qualities such as substance and longevity. A combination of urban flaneurie and garbology, Classification of a Spit Stain is a mysterious field guide to the landscape underneath the soles of our shoes. The original version of this artist book, made in an edition of twenty-five copies, is in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, the New York Public Library, Yale University, Brown University, and UCLA’s Dickson Library, among others. This trade edition was produced in response to sustained interest.
This book was funded in part by grants from the NEA and from the Jerome Foundation (via CLMP).
Hardcover. 64 pp, 6.75 x 8.5 in.
Published by Ugly Duckling Presse
D 19.90€