Softcover. Condizione: Very Good with no dust jacket. Square, tight binding. Clean, off-white pages. Wraps have light shelf wear. ; Poetry and prose by many authors. Interviews with William Gass and Robert Duncan. 9.0" tall; 226 pages.
Editore: The Academy, 2019
Da: Katsumi-san Co., Cambridge, MA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. 1st Edition. Volume has small bottom-corner crease; spine has small chip at bottom; tight, text clean. 254 p. [otob: 16].
Editore: Ballinger Publishing Co., 1981
Da: Lot O'Books, Norfolk, VA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condizione: Very Good. ***BOTH are in GREAT CONDITION***CLEAN PAGES*** light edge wear,light tearing on dust jackets. We specialize in non-fiction books. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram.
Editore: Leo. Feist, Inc., New York, 1917
Da: Persephone's Books, Gastonia, NC, U.S.A.
Unbound. Condizione: Very Good. No Jacket. (unpaginated) There is a 1/2" closed tear on the fore-edge, not affecting the score. The score is clean.
Editore: Trout Gallery, Emil R. Weiss Center for the Arts, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA, 1994
Da: Saucony Book Shop, Kutztown, PA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Soft cover. Condizione: Fine. 1st Edition. Stiff dark rust pictorial wraps. As issued. 32 pp., illus. Size: 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. Book.
Editore: Popular Publications Inc, Chicago / New York, 1948
Da: biblioboy, North Providence, RI, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Single Issue magazine. Condizione: Good. cover by Peter Stevens (illustratore). First Edition; First Printing. Chicago / New York: Popular Publications Inc. Good. 1948. First Edition; First Printing. Single Issue magazine. First edition. Pulp magazine. Pictorial wrappers [about 7" x 9.25"], 130 pages, illustrated. A good copy with a small piece of tape across the spine heel, usual edgewear to the covers, small edge tears , scattered scratching and creasing to the front cover, text paper tanning/tanned as usual. See Photo ; 4to 11" - 13" tall; 130 pages . whbx 7E.
Editore: Popular Publications, NY, 1946
Da: Books from the Crypt, N. Potomac, MD, U.S.A.
Membro dell'associazione: IOBA
Rivista / Giornale
Single Issue Magazine. Condizione: Very Good-. Vol. 114, No. 4. Pulp magazine. Edited by Kenneth S. White. Cover art by Gordon Samstag. Includes "The Sword of Shinto" (novelette) by Sidney Herschel Small; "The Old Oil" (novelette) by Gordon MacCreagh; "The Betrayal of Bulkhead Bean" by Albert Richard Wetjen; "Charlie Lynxear and the Law" by Kern L. Perc; "Jebediah and the Saint" by Nard Jones; "Adam Was a Chump" by Coleman Meyer; "Hunter's Moon" by T. F. Tracy; "The Kunming Story" by James Atlas Phillips; "Chains for Columbus" (pt. 4 of 6) by Alfred Powers. Fact Stories: "Printing-Press Money" by R. Havelock-Bailie; "Rip-Snortin' Mountain Man" by C. W. Chamberlain. Departments: "The Camp-Fire"; "Ask Adventure"; "Ask Adventure Experts"; "Lost Trails"; "The Trail Ahead". Illustrated by Frank Kramer, V. E. Pyles, Joseph Farren, Edd Ashe, John Meola, Harve Stein, L. Sterne Stevens, Ray Bethers, and Nick Eggenhofer. Foredge has been shallowly wet from mid to heel with shallow losses to rear cover, mild staining within. Otherwise nice.
Editore: Popular Publications, Inc., 1946
Da: Books From California, Simi Valley, CA, U.S.A.
Single Issue Magazine. Condizione: Good. Original wraps show minor wear, tear, and writing. Pages tanned.
Editore: S.E.L.A., Lausanne, Switzerland, 1965
Da: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Softcover. Condizione: Very Good. Condizione sovraccoperta: Good. Single issue. Illustrated. Self wrappers. 259pp. Small stain on page 208, spine tanned, very good in the good only original, unprinted glassine dust jacket with short tears on edges, loss of bottom half of spine. Poetry, drama, art and more by Giorgio de Chirico, Walter Benjamin, Marcelin Pleynet, Denis Roche, Benedict Nicolson, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Frank O'Hara, W.W. Winkworth, Nicolas Calas, Jasper Johns, Clement Greenberg, William Coldstream and Rodrigo Moynihan, Robert Bly, Richard Emil Brawn, Lorenzo Thomas, Ted Berrigan, Kent Guardien, Musa McKim, Ron Padgett, Emily Coleman, and Meyer Lieben.
Fair to Good condition. Back cover, starting to separate, but intact. Includes "Dead on Arrival" by Constiner, "You'll Never Grow Old" by Meyer, "Out of this World" by Dennis, "Murder for Mac" by Gault, "The Corpse with the Bloody Nose" by Clark, and "Lifting the May Black Mask" by Long. Uncommon.
Editore: Ante-Echo Press at the Village Printer), (Los Angeles, 1968
Da: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Softcover. Condizione: Near Fine. First edition. Small quarto. 32pp. Stapled decorated wrappers. Slight bend at one corner, near fine. Mostly obscure poets, the most familiar name is African-American poet Al Young.
Editore: Published by Leo. Feist, 134 West 37th Street, New York . 1917., 1917
Da: Little Stour Books PBFA Member, Canterbury, Regno Unito
Membro dell'associazione: PBFA
Spartito
EUR 29,71
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloVintage piano sheet music in colour illustrated printed paper covers. 13½'' x 10¾''. Contains 4 pages folded sheet music including the covers. Scored for piano and solo voice with lyrics. Without any tears to the edges and in Very Good sharp condition. Member of the P.B.F.A. SHEET MUSIC.
Editore: Artists Space New York, NY, 1984
Da: Specific Object / David Platzker, New York, NY, U.S.A.
[8] pp.; 22.8 x 15.3 cm.; accordion; black-and-white & color; edition size unknown; unsigned and unnumbered; offset-printed; Exhibition brochure / catalogue published in conjunction with show held January 21 - February 18, 1984. Foreword by Linda Shearer. Curated and with a text by Helene Winer. Galleries include Cash, Christminster Fine Art, Civilian Warfare, East 7th Street Gallery, Executive Gallery, 51 X, Fun Gallery, Tracey Garet, International With Monument, Gracie Mansion, Nature Morte, The New Math Gallery, Oggi - Domani, Pat Hearn, Piezo Electric, PPOW, and Sharpe Gallery. Artists include Stephen Aljian, Alan Belcher, Paul Benney, Zeke Berman, Ellen Berkenblit, Keiko Bonk, Tom Brazelton, Barry Bridgwood, Nancy Brooks Brody, Chris Chevins, Craig Coleman, Rich Colicchio, Michael Collins, George Condo, Gregory A. Crane, Mark Dean, Jimmy de Sana, Futura, Robert Garratt, Dana Garrett, Judith Glantzman, Arthur Gonzalez, Rodney Alan Greenblat, Kathleen Grove, Richard Hambleton, Kiely Jenkins, Sermin Kardestuncer, Elizabeth Koury, Stephen Lack, Leora Laor, Robert Loughlin, Paul Marcus, Frank Moore, Peter Nagy, Michael Ottersen, Steven Parrino, Rick Prol, Hope Sandrow, Michael Sangaris, Bruno Schmidt, Peter Schuyff, Huck Snyder, Ahbe Sulit, Frederick Sutherland, Meyer Vaisman, Oliver Wasow, Dondi White, David Wojnarowicz, Robert Yarber, Zephyr, and Rhonda Zwillinger. "The exhibition includes work from seventeen galleries located in the East Village or the area east of Second Avenue, just below Houston Street: CASH, Christminster, Civilian Warfare, East 7th Street Gallery. Executive Gallery, 51 X, Fun Gallery, Garet/ Kohn Gallery, Gracie Mansion. International with Monument, Nature Morte, New Math, Oggi-Domani, Pat Hearn. Piezo Electric, P.P.O.W. and Sharpe Gallery. Work by artists associated with the galleries have been selected by the individual gallery directors, and Helene Winer, organizer of the exhibition. Helene Winer is a past Director of Artists Space and currently co-owner of Metro Pictures a commercial gallery in SoHo. As part of Artists Space''''s celebration of its 10th anniversary season, she has organized this exhibition to examine a growing number of artist organized commercial exhibition spaces. Ms. Winer''''s past experience with the non-profit art community and her present position in the commercial art world offer a unique outlook on this new trend. In keeping with Artists Space''''s support of new art through both its Exhibition Program and Grants Program, NEW GALLERIES OF THE LOWER EAST SIDE is a look at a new outlet for emerging art: an outlet which straddles the lines between the artists cooperative, the non-profit alternative space, the artist organized independent exhibition and the commercial gallery. NEW GALLERIES OF THE LOWER EAST SIDE acknowledges the recent appearance and rapid proliferation of more than twenty commercial art galleries that are introducing new artists and art. This phenomenon has created overnight, it seems, active new exhibition outlets for artists, an on-going vehicle for massive social opening events, a Sunday activity for the art audience, a new map in the Gallery Guide and a new focus of excitement and energy in the art community. The galleries are now numerous and offer more than the aesthetic that was first presented by the pioneers (Gracie Mansion, Fun Gallery and 51 X) and which has come to be associated with the East Village. They are very professional enterprises that intend to provide serious support and attention to the artists they show. Many of the galleries are artist owned. The artist/owners who converted storefronts to studios have now converted these studios to galleries. Most of these owners work at jobs separate from the gallery to support the activity and many live ''''behind the shop." The East Village Eye and New York Beat play the role that the SoHo News and the Village Voice did for SoHo and Tribeca. The East Village and the Lower East Side of New York has been an area many artists moved to, since SoHo and then Tribeca have been increasingly gentrified, a fate that may now befall the East Village itself. Over the years the art community has found ''''alternative'''' means of creating needed opportunities for artists to exhibit their work to at least their peers, and occasionally to a broader audience. In the fifties. New York artists opened cooperative galleries on Tenth Street. Later, alternative spaces opened with government funding: commercial galleries moved from Uptown to Downtown for both space and accessibility to the artists. community artists organized their own temporary exhibitions such as the Times Square Show, and now, in a period of two years, some 25 commercial galleries have opened on the Lower East Side, the majority in 1983."--from exhibition press release Very Good / Fine. Light yellowing of cover edges, otherwise Fine. Contents clean and unmarked.
Editore: Anthology Film Archives New York, NY, 1986
Da: Specific Object / David Platzker, New York, NY, U.S.A.
[1] pp.; 35.5 x 21.5 cm.; black-and-white; edition size unknown; unsigned and unnumbered; offset-printed Flyer published by Anthology Film Archives Video Program to promote screenings held at Millenium Film Workshop in the Winter of 1986. Screenings by Shigeko Kubota, Kirk von Heflin, Mark Brady, Paul Lamarre, Richard Layzell, Tony Cokes, Laura Kipnis, Diana Formisand, Miles Green, Joan Grossman, Francis Lackey, David Lyons, Paul Sandresky, The Space Program, Richard Rosenbaum, Ann-Sargent Wooster, Stephen Meyer, Steve Fagin, Julie Harrison, Robert Kleyn, Lyn Hershman, Louis Hock, Jill Kroesen, Connie Coleman, Alan Powell and Mark Magill. Good. Folded in four with moderate handling and edge-wear including a 2.4 cm. dog-ear with 4 cm. crease to bottom left corner, 1 cm. dog-ear to top right corner and 1 cm. tear to top edge of page. Yellow discoloration of page. THIS COPY INSCRIBED AND SIGNED IN GREEN AND RED INK BY SHIGEKO KUBOTA.