Art Administration As Performative Practice / Organizing Art As Institutional Critique
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Constellation & Correspondences
LIBRARY CONSTELLATION & CORRESPONDENCES AND NETWORKING BETWEEN ARTISTS ARCHIVES 1970 –1980 KATHY ACKER (RIPOFF RED & THE BLACK TARANTULA) MAC ADAMS ART & LANGUAGE DANA ATCHLEY (THE EXHIBITION COLORADO SPACEMAN) ANNA BANANA ROBERT BARRY JOHN JACK BAYLIN ALLAN BEALY PETER BENCHLEY KATHRYN BIGELOW BILL BISSETT MEL BOCHNER PAUL-ÉMILE BORDUAS GEORGE BOWERING AA BRONSON STU BROOMER DAVID BUCHAN HANK BULL IAN BURN WILLIAM BURROUGHS JAMES LEE BYARS SARAH CHARLESWORTH VICTOR COLEMAN (VIC D'OR) MARGARET COLEMAN MICHAEL CORRIS BRUNO CORMIER JUDITH COPITHORNE COUM KATE CRAIG (LADY BRUTE) MICHAEL CRANE ROBERT CUMMING GREG CURNOE LOWELL DARLING SHARON DAVIS GRAHAM DUBÉ JEAN-MARIE DELAVALLE JAN DIBBETS IRENE DOGMATIC JOHN DOWD LORIS ESSARY ANDRÉ FARKAS GERALD FERGUSON ROBERT FILLIOU HERVÉ FISCHER MAXINE GADD WILLIAM (BILL) GAGLIONE PEGGY GALE CLAUDE GAUVREAU GENERAL IDEA DAN GRAHAM PRESTON HELLER DOUGLAS HUEBLER JOHN HEWARD DICK NO. HIGGINS MILJENKO HORVAT IMAGE BANK CAROLE ITTER RICHARDS JARDEN RAY JOHNSON MARCEL JUST PATRICK KELLY GARRY NEILL KENNEDY ROY KIYOOKA RICHARD KOSTELANETZ JOSEPH KOSUTH GARY LEE-NOVA (ART RAT) NIGEL LENDON LES LEVINE GLENN LEWIS (FLAKEY ROSE HIPS) SOL LEWITT LUCY LIPPARD STEVE 36 LOCKARD CHIP LORD MARSHALORE TIM MANCUSI DAVID MCFADDEN MARSHALL MCLUHAN ALBERT MCNAMARA A.C. MCWHORTLES ANDREW MENARD ERIC METCALFE (DR. BRUTE) MICHAEL MORRIS (MARCEL DOT & MARCEL IDEA) NANCY MOSON SCARLET MUDWYLER IAN MURRAY STUART MURRAY MAURIZIO NANNUCCI OPAL L. NATIONS ROSS NEHER AL NEIL N.E. THING CO. ALEX NEUMANN NEW YORK CORRES SPONGE DANCE SCHOOL OF VANCOUVER HONEY NOVICK (MISS HONEY) FOOTSY NUTZLE (FUTZIE) ROBIN PAGE MIMI PAIGE POEM COMPANY MEL RAMSDEN MARCIA RESNICK RESIDENTS JEAN-PAUL RIOPELLE EDWARD ROBBINS CLIVE ROBERTSON ELLISON ROBERTSON MARTHA ROSLER EVELYN ROTH DAVID RUSHTON JIMMY DE SANA WILLOUGHBY SHARP TOM SHERMAN ROBERT 460 SAINTE-CATHERINE WEST, ROOM 508, SMITHSON ROBERT STEFANOTTY FRANÇOISE SULLIVAN MAYO THOMSON FERN TIGER TESS TINKLE JASNA MONTREAL, QUEBEC H3B 1A7 TIJARDOVIC SERGE TOUSIGNANT VINCENT TRASOV (VINCENT TARASOFF & MR. -
The Estate of General Idea: Ziggurat, 2017, Courtesy of Mitchell-Innes and Nash
Installation view of The Estate of General Idea: Ziggurat, 2017, Courtesy of Mitchell-Innes and Nash. © General Idea. The Estate of General Idea (1969-1994) had their first exhibition with the Mitchell-Innes & Nash Gallery on view in Chelsea through January 13, featuring several “ziggurat” paintings from the late 1960s, alongside works on paper, photographs and ephemera that highlight the central importance of the ziggurat form in the rich practice of General Idea. It got me thinking about the unique Canadian trio’s sumptuous praxis and how it evolved from humble roots in the underground of the early 1970s to its sophisticated position atop the contemporary art world of today. One could say that the ziggurat form is a perfect metaphor for a staircase of their own making that they ascended with grace and elegance, which is true. But they also had to aggressively lacerate and burn their way to the top, armed with real fire, an acerbic wit and a penchant for knowing where to apply pressure. Even the tragic loss of two thirds of their members along the way did not deter their rise, making the unlikely climb all the more heroic. General Idea, VB Gown from the 1984 Miss General Idea Pageant, Urban Armour for the Future, 1975, Gelatin Silver Print, 10 by 8 in. 25.4 by 20.3 cm, Courtesy Mitchell-Innes and Nash. © General Idea. The ancient architectural structure of steps leading up to a temple symbolizes a link between humans and the gods and can be found in cultures ranging from Mesopotamia to the Aztecs to the Navajos. -
Early Twentieth-Century Artists' Paints in Toronto: Archival and Material
Early Twentieth-Century Artists’ Paints in Toronto: Archival and Material Evidence Kate Helwig, Elizabeth Moffatt, Marie-Claude Corbeil and Dominique Duguay Journal of the Canadian Association for Conservation (J.CAC), Volume 40 © Canadian Association for Conservation, 2015 This article: © Canadian Conservation Institute, 2015. Reproduced with the permission of the Canadian Conservation Institute, Department of Canadian Heritage. J.CAC is a peer reviewed journal published annually by the Canadian Association for Conservation of Cultural Property (CAC), 207 Bank Street, Suite 419, Ottawa, ON K2P 2N2, Canada; Tel.: (613) 231-3977; Fax: (613) 231-4406; E-mail: [email protected]; Web site: http://www.cac-accr.ca. The views expressed in this publication are those of the individual authors, and are not necessarily those of the editors or of CAC. Journal de l’Association canadienne pour la conservation et la restauration (J.ACCR), Volume 40 © l’Association canadienne pour la conservation et restauration, 2015 Cet article : © l’Institut canadien de conservation, 2015. Reproduit avec la permission de l’Institut canadien de conservation, Ministère du Patrimoine canadien. Le J.ACCR est un journal révisé par des pairs qui est publié annuellement par l’Association canadienne pour la conservation et la restauration des biens culturels (ACCR), 207, rue Bank, bureau 419, Ottawa ON K2P 2N2, Canada; Téléphone : (613) 231-3977; Télécopieur : (613) 231-4406; Adresse électronique : [email protected]; Site Web : http://www.cac-accr.ca. Les opinions -
AA Bronson Radical Asshole '…The Use of Irony Was Itself Serious
AA Bronson Radical Asshole ‘…the use of irony was itself serious…’ – AA Bronson on General Idea, in The Confession of AA Bronson (2011) AA Bronson thinks his butt is revolutionary. That may be the case – I haven’t tried it – but I’m not quoting him fairly. He thinks all assholes are revolutionary. In this he joins proto-queer thinker Guy Hocquenghem, who argued that the liberation of anal pleasure from shame was one way to remake society as a whole. Homosexuality is dangerous, he claimed in Homosexual Desire (1972), because it shows that eroticism is not tied to reproduction. Male receptivity further disturbs the masculine/feminine, active/passive oppositions which uphold patriarchal authority and by extension marriage or other systems of ownership. This undoing of gendered mastery finds echoes in Bronson’s earlier work as a member of General Idea. From their mock beauty pageants in which the artist becomes feminised commodity, to their pose as pampered poodles, they mercilessly satirised the singular (straight male) artistic genius as a myth of the media and marketplace. But the deaths of his partners and collaborators Jorge Zontal and Felix Partz from AIDS in 1994, and his reversion to working alone, caused not only a personal but an artistic crisis for Bronson. How could he represent himself without betraying the group’s critique of the artist as gifted individual? While his most recent work has sought to memorialise those lost to the pandemic and histories of homophobic persecution, his decision to summon the queerly departed by posing, like Joseph Beuys, as a shaman, appears to abandon the principles of GI. -
BRENDAN FERNANDES B
BRENDAN FERNANDES b. 1979, Nairobi, Kenya lives and works in Chicago, IL Education 2006 – 2007 Whitney Museum oF American Art, Independent Study Program, New York, NY 2003 – 2005 The University oF Western Ontario, Master’s of Fine Arts in Visual Arts, London, ON 1998 – 2002 York University, Honors, Bachelor oF Fine Arts in Visual Arts, Toronto, ON Selected Solo Exhibitions 2021 Inaction…The Richmond Art Gallery. Richmond, BC In Pose. The Art Gallery in Ontario. Toronto, ON 2020 Art By Snapchat. Azienda SpecialePalaexpo. Rome, Italy. Brendan Fernandes: Bodily Forms, Chrysler Art Museum We Want a We, Pearlstein Gallery, Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA In Action. Tarble Art Center, Eastern Illinos University, Charleston, IL 2019 Restrain, moniquemeloche, Chicago, IL In Action, Zilkha Gallery, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT (will travel to Tarble Arts Center, Eastern Illinois University, Charleston, IL, 2020) Contract and Release, The Noguchi Museum, Long Island City, NY Call and Response, Museum oF Contemporary Art, Chicago, IL (perFormance series) Free Fall. The Richmond Art Gallery. Richmond, BC Free Fall 49. The Smithsonian American Art Museum. Washington, DC Ballet Kink. The Guggenheim Museum. New York, NY 2018 The Living Mask, DePaul University Art Museum, Chicago, IL On Flashing Lights, Nuit Blanche, Toronto, ON (performance) Open Encounter, The High Line, New York, NY (perFormance) The Master and Form, The Graham Foundation, Chicago, IL To Find a Forest, Art Gallery oF Greater Victoria, Victoria, BC (perFormance) SaFely (Sanctuary). FOR-SITE Foundation. San Francisco, CA 2017 Art by Snapchat, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, IL (performance) Move in Place, Anna Leonowens Gallery, NSCAD University, Halifax, NS Free Fall 49, The Getty, Los Angeles, CA (performance) From Hiz Hands, The Front, Eleven Twenty Projects, BuFFalo, NY I’M DOWN, 18th Street Arts Center, Santa Monica, CA Clean Labor, curated by Eric Shiner, Armory Fair, New York, NY (performance) Lost Bodies. -
A USER's GUIDE to GENERAL IDEA by PHILIP Monk
GLAMOUR IS THEFT A USER’S GUIDE TO GENERAL IDEA BY PHILIP MONk Portrait of Granada Gazelle, Miss General Idea 1969, from The 1971 Miss General Idea Pageant documentation, 1971 1 Granada Gazelle, Miss General Idea 1969, displays The 1971 Miss General Idea Pageant Entry Kit The 1971 Miss General Idea Pageant poster, 1971 4 The 1971 Miss General Idea Pageant (Artscanada), 1971 5 6 7 Artist’s Conception: Miss General Idea 1971, 1971 8 GLAMOUR IS THEFT A USER’S GUIDE TO GENERAL IDEA: 1969-1978 PHILIP MONk The Art Gallery of York University “Top Ten,” FILE 1:2&3 (May/June 1972), 21 10 TABLE OF CONTENTS 15 PreFace PART I. DESCRIPTIVE PART II. ANALYTIC PART III. SYNTHETIC 21 threshold 121 reWrIte 157 soMethInG By Mouth 25 announceMent 131 Ideolect 29 Myth 135 enuncIatIon 37 edItorIal 141 systeM 41 story 147 vIce versa 45 PaGeant 49 sIMulatIon 53 vIrus 57 Future 61 PavIllIon 67 nostalGIa 75 BorderlIne 81 PuBlIcIty 87 GlaMour 93 PlaGIarIsM 103 role 111 crIsIs APPENDICES 209 Marshall Mcluhan, General Idea, and Me! 221 PerIodIzInG General Idea EXHIBITIONS 233 GoInG thru the notIons (1975) 241 reconstructInG Futures (1977) 245 the 1984 MIss General Idea PavIllIon (2009) 254 lIst oF WorKs 255 acKnoWledGeMents 11 Portrait of General Idea, 1974 (photograph by Rodney Werden) The study of myths raises a methodological problem, in that it cannot be carried out according to the Cartesian principle of breaking down the difficulty into as many parts as may be necessary for finding the solution. There is no real end to mythological analysis, no hidden unity to be grasped once the breaking-down process has been completed. -
History of Art Libraries in Canada/Histoire Des Bibliotèques D
History of Art Libraries in Canada Histoire des bibliothèques d’art au Canada www.arliscanada.ca/hal Sponsored by / Commandité par: ESSAYS IN THE HISTORY OF ART LIBRARIANSHIP IN CANADA National Gallery of Canada Library and Archives Musée des beaux-arts du Canada Bibliothèque et Archives ESSAIS SUR L’HISTOIRE DE LA BIBLIOTHÉCONOMIE D’ART AU CANADA ARLIS/NA ESSAYS IN THE HISTORY OF ART LIBRARIANSHIP IN CANADA ESSAIS SUR L’HISTOIRE DE LA BIBLIOTHÉCONOMIE D’ART AU CANADA Table of Contents Table des matières Introduction Reflections Through the Looking Glass: Murray Waddington The Story of the Fine Arts Library at the Uni- versity of British Columbia Introduction Diana Cooper, Peggy McBride Murray Waddington Traduit par Denise Loiselle A Library for Artists: The Early Years of The Banff Centre Library ARLIS/Canada: James Rout The First Ten Years Jonathan Franklin The Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies Bob Foley ARLIS/Canada : les dix premières années The Alberta College of Art + Design: Jonathan Franklin Luke Lindoe Library Traduit par Denise Loiselle Christine Sammon A History of the Canadian Art Libraries Section The Architecture/Fine Arts Library, Fort Garry (CARLIS) Campus, University of Manitoba Melva J. Dwyer Liv Valmestad Hidden Collections: Held in Trust: The Invisible World of English Canadian Book The National Gallery of Canada Library Illustration and Design and Archives Randall Speller Jo Nordley Beglo L’histoire du livre d’artiste au Québec Pour le compte des Canadiens : Sylvie Alix La Bibliothèque et les Archives du Musée des beaux-arts du Canada A History of the Artist's Book in Québec Jo Nordley Beglo Sylvie Alix Traduit par Denise Loiselle Translated by Mark Dobbie “So Hopefully and Imaginatively Founded”: The Vancouver Art Gallery and the Machinery The CCA Library to 1998 of Happiness Rosemary Haddad Cheryl Siegel Le Centre d’information Artexte : Who Was Who: un mandat, et un parcours, atypiques Biographies of Canadian Art Librarians Danielle Léger Steven C. -
This World & Nearer Ones Nyc's First
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE MEDIA CONTACT Nicholas Weist, Creative Time [email protected] 212.206.6674 x 205 CREATIVE TIME PRESENTS PLOT09: THIS WORLD & NEARER ONES NYC’S FIRST PUBLIC ART QUADRENNIAL, ON GOVERNORS ISLAND, NYC 19 public art commissions by major international artists Free, Opening June 27 Work by Mark Wallinger, Lawrence Weiner, Anthony McCall, Krzysztof Wodiczko, Patti Smith, AA Bronson, and more PLOT09: This World & Nearer Ones Opening June 27 Free and open to the public Fridays 11-4 and Saturdays and Sundays, 12-6 Digital press center: http://creativetime.org/programs/archive/2009/GI/ (May 29, 2009 New York, NY) Creative Time is pleased to announce its new public art quadrennial: PLOT, taking place on historic Governors Island and featuring international artists responding to the island with new, site-responsive artworks. The first edition of PLOT, This World & Nearer Ones, is curated by Mark Beasley. The project is produced in association with Governors Island Preservation and Education Corporation, the National Park Service, NYC & Company, and the Office of the Mayor. PLOT09 will draw thousands to Governors Island to explore the artwork and numerous other public programs. PLOT09 is free and open to the public, and will open on June 27. This World & Nearer Ones will intervene in the architectural and natural fabric of the island, transforming its historic buildings and vast lawns—from the iconic Fort Jay to St. Cornelius Chapel—through installation, performance, video, and auditory works, inviting audiences to reconsider the island’s past and future. PLOT09 will feature artists from 9 different countries, including Edgar Arceneaux, AA Bronson and Peter Hobbs, The Bruce High Quality Foundation, Adam Chodzko, Tue Greenfort, Jill Magid, Teresa Margolles, Anthony McCall, Nils Norman, Susan Philipsz, Patti Smith and Jesse Smith, Tercerunquinto, Tris Vonna-Michell, Mark Wallinger, Klaus Weber, Lawrence Weiner, Judi Werthein, Guido van der Werve, and Krzysztof Wodiczko, realizing temporary projects in various sites throughout Governors Island. -
Early Manufacture of Artists' Materials in Canada: a History of Canadian
Early Manufacture of Artists’ Materials in Canada: A History of Canadian Art Laboratory Barbara Klempan Journal of the Canadian Association for Conservation (J. CAC), Volume 37 © Canadian Association for Conservation, 2012 This article: © Barbara Klempan, 2012. Reproduced with the permission of Barbara Klempan. J. CAC is a peer reviewed journal published annually by the Canadian Association for Conservation of Cultural Property (CAC); http://www.cac-accr.ca/. The views expressed in this publication are those of the individual authors, and are not necessarily those of the editors or of CAC. Journal de l'Association canadienne pour la conservation et la restauration (J. ACCR), Volume 37 © l'Association canadienne pour la conservation et la restauration, 2012 Cet article : © Barbara Klempan, 2012. Reproduit avec la permission de Barbara Klempan. Le Journal de l’ACCR est une revue arbitrée qui est publiée annuellement par l'Association canadienne pour la conservation et la restauration des biens culturels (ACCR); http://www.cac-accr.ca. Les opinions exprimées dans la présente publication sont celles des auteurs et ne reflètent pas nécessairement celles de la rédaction ou de l'ACCR. 41 Early Manufacture of Artists’ Materials in Canada: A History of Canadian Art Laboratory Barbara Klempan Art Conservation Program, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario K7L 3N6, Canada; [email protected] Canadian Art Laboratory was a notable Canadian manufacturer and international supplier of artists’ materials during the early- to mid- twentieth century. Founded in Toronto in the early 1930s by chemical engineer Henry James Goulding Carter, this firm filled a void in the manufacturing sector of artists’ materials in Canada. -
MAUREEN PALEY. Press Release AA BRONSON + GENERAL IDEA 30 September
MAUREEN PALEY. press release AA BRONSON + GENERAL IDEA 30 September – 11 November 2018 private view: Sunday 30 September 5:30 – 7:30 pm The exhibition marks fifty years since AA Bronson, Felix Partz and Jorge Zontal first met in 1968, initiating their collaboration as the Canadian collective General Idea the following year. Over the course of twenty five years (1969-1994), they lived and worked together to produce the living artwork of their being together, undertaking over 100 solo exhibitions, countless group shows and temporary public art projects. They were known for their magazine FILE (1972-1989), their unrelenting production of numerous multiples, and their early involvement in punk, queer theory and AIDS activism. The celebrated publication FILE appropriated the design of LIFE magazine; some of the most radical artists and collectives of the period contributed to FILE, among them Art & Language, writer William Burroughs, and bands such as Talking Heads and The Residents. The adoption of the existing mass-market format of LIFE magazine set up a sustained interest in the possibility of using ‘found formats’ as ‘hosts’ for their ideas. From 1987 through 1994, working primarily in New York City, General Idea’s work addressed the AIDS crisis and produced their best known work to date - Imagevirus. Reappropriating Robert Indiana’s work LOVE - substituting, in the same visual arrangement and colour composition, the letters L-O-V-E with A-I-D-S – they used the mechanism of viral transmission to investigate the term as both word and image. The series took the form of paintings, sculptures, postage stamps, posters and magazine covers. -
Artists' Books : a Critical Anthology and Sourcebook
Anno 1778 PHILLIPS ACADEMY OLIVER-WENDELL-HOLMES % LI B R ARY 3 #...A _ 3 i^per ampUcm ^ -A ag alticrxi ' JZ ^ # # # # >%> * j Gift of Mark Rudkin Artists' Books: A Critical Anthology and Sourcebook ARTISTS’ A Critical Anthology Edited by Joan Lyons Gibbs M. Smith, Inc. Peregrine Smith Books BOOKS and Sourcebook in association with Visual Studies Workshop Press n Grateful acknowledgement is made to the publications in which the following essays first appeared: “Book Art,” by Richard Kostelanetz, reprinted, revised from Wordsand, RfC Editions, 1978; “The New Art of Making Books,” by Ulises Carrion, in Second Thoughts, Amsterdam: VOID Distributors, 1980; “The Artist’s Book Goes Public,” by Lucy R. Lippard, in Art in America 65, no. 1 (January-February 1977); “The Page as Al¬ ternative Space: 1950 to 1969,” by Barbara Moore and Jon Hendricks, in Flue, New York: Franklin Furnace (December 1980), as an adjunct to an exhibition of the same name; “The Book Stripped Bare,” by Susi R. Bloch, in The Book Stripped Bare, Hempstead, New York: The Emily Lowe Gallery and the Hofstra University Library, 1973, catalogue to an exhibition of books from the Arthur Cohen and Elaine Lustig col¬ lection supplemented by the collection of the Hofstra Fine Arts Library. Copyright © Visual Studies Workshop, 1985. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. Except in the case of brief quotations in reviews and critical articles, no part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. -
Colin Campbell CV EXHIBITIONS (Selected) 2001 Saw Gallery, Ottawa, Ontario (Solo)
Colin Campbell CV EXHIBITIONS (selected) 2001 Saw Gallery, Ottawa, Ontario (Solo) 2000 Magnetic North-Experimental Canadian Video', Tour, Walker Art Centre, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Catalogue. Art Gallery Of Ontario, Toronto 'Between Geography and Imagination', Trinity Square Video, Toronto, Screening/Panel. 'Borderstasis', University of Toronto 'Disheveled Destiny World Premier', Owen's Art Gallery, Sackville, N.B. 1999 Appropriate Behaviour, British/Canadian Video Exchange, London, England. Catalogue. Tranz-Tech, Toronto International Video Art Biennial. Catalogue. ‘Fragile Electrons’ National Gallery of Canada: Toured: Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, Mendel Art Gallery. Catalogue. ‘Possible Maps’ Vtape, Toronto. Catalogue. 1998 ‘La Quizaine de la Video’, Videograph, Montreal. ‘New Toronto Works’, Pleasure Dome, Toronto ‘Picturing Toronto-The Queen Street Years’, Power Plant, Toronto. Catalogue. C Magazine 12 page insert., issue #59, Sept.-Nov. Toronto Life magazine. ‘Close Encounters/Contacts Time’, Ottawa Art Gallery Art Gallery of York University, Toronto. 1997 ‘Synthetica’, Walter Phillips Gallery, Banff 'Flaming Creatures', Agnes Etherington Arts Centre, Kingston. Catalogue. Concordia University, Montreal Jury Member, Exhibition Committee for: Alex Wilson Community Project Design Competition, The Design Exchange, Toronto Premier of ‘Rendez-Vous’ at ‘So High I Could Almost See Eternity’ Symposium on Performance Art, Mount Allison University 1996 Vancouver Art Gallery, Vancouver. Love Gasoline, Mercer Union, Toronto. Video Art Plastique, Centre d'Art Contemporain de Basse Normandie, France. 1995 ‘Pressing The Flesh’, Toronto Photographers Workshop, Toronto Solo: Colin Campbell: Early Tapes, Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto 1994 Art Video Art, TVO Broadcast Television, Toronto Wexner Centre for the Arts, Columbus, Ohio World Conference on AIDS, Berlin Rutgers University, New Brunswick, N. J. New York University, New York EM Media, Calgary Budapest Gay and Lesbian Festival Pyramid Arts Centre, Rochester, New York.