Paperback. Condizione: Good. No Jacket. Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.
Paperback. Condizione: Very Good. No Jacket. May have limited writing in cover pages. Pages are unmarked. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Henry Art Gallery, Seattle, 1981
Da: Avol's Books LLC, Madison, WI, U.S.A.
Paperback. Condizione: Very Good. Light shelf rubbing to cover. 64 pps. One of 1500 copies.
Paperback. Condizione: Very Good. First Edition. First Edition, First Printing. Not price-clipped. Published by Pando Pubns, 1987. Octavo. Paperback. Book is very good with shelf/edgewear.100% positive feedback. 30 day money back guarantee. NEXT DAY SHIPPING! Excellent customer service. Please email with any questions. All books packed carefully and ship with free delivery confirmation/tracking. All books come with free bookmarks. Ships from Sag Harbor, New York.
EUR 23,77
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloSoft cover. Condizione: Very Good. CONDITION: Used - Very Good (VG) A book that has been previously owned but remains in excellent shape. This copy shows only minor signs of use, making it an extremely clean and structurally sound choice for both reading and display. Overall Quality: Pages: Clean, crisp, and free of highlighting, underlining, or marginalia throughout the entire text block. Binding: Tight, secure, and square. The book lays flat and shows minimal evidence of having been fully opened or read. Covers: Very light shelf wear or rubbing along the edges, but no major scuffs, tears, or creases.
Editore: Seattle, Washington: University of Washington Henry Art Gallery, 1981
Da: Wittenborn Art Books, San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Condizione: Good. 8vo. Softcover. 64 pp. No Plates. Good, slight wear to edges of book.1 of 1,500 copies.
Editore: Los Angeles Institute of Contemporary Art Los Angeles, CA, 1979
Da: Specific Object / David Platzker, New York, NY, U.S.A.
64 pp.; 27.5 x 21.3 cm.; staple bound; black-and-white; edition size unknown; unsigned and unnumbered; offset-printed; June/July 1979 issue of Journal. Edited by Debra Burchett and Bridget Johnson. Contents include: "For An Art Against the Mythology of Everyday Life," by Martha Rosler; "Exploring the Mathematical Option in Art," by Bernar Venet; "No Money Back Anytime," by Kristine Stiles; "A Diamond is Forever," by Gregory Battcock; "Chymical Wedding," by Carole Caroompas; "To Pico," by Peter Schjeldahl; "Conceptual Art and the Continuing Quest for a New Social Context," by Robert Morgan; "The Level of Water," by Lawrence Weiner; "A The A The," by Alan Sondheim; "Conceptual Comments," by Douglas Huebler; "On Art Writing/Part I," by Clair Wolfe; "L Three Leers/W Three Whys," by John Baldessari; "Media: TeleVisions," by Christopher Knight; "The Dinner Party," by Melinda Wortz; "With a Dinner Party You Get Cheerleaders," by Suzanne Muchnic; "Photographs from the Dinner Party," by Ruth Askey; "The Chelsea Girls Return," by David James; "Photography: Two Photographic Books: Speaking About the Process of Making," by James Hugunin "Painting: Back to Back," by Melinda Wortz. Cover by Ed Ruscha. Reference : "Artists' Magazines : An Alternative Space for Art" by Gwen Allen. Cambridge / London, MA / United Kingdom : The MIT Press, 2011, pp. 271. Very Good / Fine. 2.3 cm. dog-ear to bottom right corner of recto. 5.1 cm. of light yellowing along top edge of recto. Additional light rubbing of covers and yellowing of pages. Contents clean and unmarked.
Editore: 0, London
Da: William Allen Word & Image, London, Regno Unito
EUR 4.456,80
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPaperback. Condizione: Near Fine. Book. Complete set of Stephen Willats' seminal periodical 'Control'. First 5 issues: 310 x 225 mm with screenprinted wrappers. Later issues have printed pictorial wrappers and are slightly smaller in format. Since 1965, this pioneering conceptual art magazine has published original artwork and writing from over 150 artists, alongside collectives and collaboratives such as Artists Placement Group. Issue 13 features an original work by Anish Kapoor of an insect-object sprayed blue; together with a photocopy collage intervention by Glenys Johnson entitled Agent Orange. Issue 3 comes complete with inserts: Poem-Blanc by John Sharkey and Peter Upward's untitled painting. This seminal publication is significant for its community-based approach, and its theories based on cybernetics and social science. Its content rejected a traditional mode of criticism and instead concentrated on theoretical ideas, technical models and artistic methods: Control is purely a magazine of art theory, in the sense that it presented text by artists looking at the thinking behind their work (Willats, Publishing Interventions, 2 in In Numbers: Serial Publications by artists since 1955, PPP Editions, Zurich, 1999, p. 129). While within the remit of the art magazine, Control is notable for its interdisciplinary reach. As the artist has commented, the magazine's origins were a reaction to a very strong inheritance from previous decades that constrained the artists into very set roles of painting, sculpture and traditional mediums (ibid). Contents - Issue 1, 1965, contributors (C): Loggie Barrow, Roy Ascot, Stephen Willats, Mark Boyle et al/No.2, 66, C: Stroud Cornock, Adrian Berg, Willats, Tom Phillips et al/ No.3, 67, C: Joe Tilson, Noel Forster, Peter Cook-Archigram Group, John Latham (Noit for Control), Willats, an original painted insert by Peter Upward, John Sharkey (Poem-Blanc) et al. Comes with a tipped-in envelope containing Three Light Modulators/No.4, 68, C: Victor Burgin, Norman Toynton, Sharkey, Willats, Douglas Sandle, et al/No.5, 69, C: Laurie Burt, Don Mason, Sharkey, Rick Oginz, Willats (on APG) et al/No.6, 71, C: Jan Kopinski, Willats, Sharkey, Ernest Edmonds, David Budgen et al/No.7, 73, C: Kevin Lole, Peter Smith, Willats, Howard O' Conner, John Stezaker/No.8, 74, C: Lole, Joe Wilson, Andrew Ironside, Willats, Gerald Laing, Stezaker et al/No.9, 75, C: Peter Smith, Dan Graham, Herve Fischer, Willats, Alan Sondheim et al / No.10, 77, C: Jon Bird, Peter Dunn & Loraine Leeson, Jane Kelly, Mary Kelly et al/ No.11, 79, C: Tony Rickaby, Willats, Ray Barrie, Kelly, Fern Tiger, Graham et al/No.12, 81, C: Lili Fisch, Willats, Helen Chadwick, Michael Peel, Bernhard Sandfort, Fred Forest et al/No.13, '82, C: Bill Woodrow (TV Blind), Glenys Johnson (Agent Orange), Jenny Holzer, Kate Blacker, Jean-Luc Vilmouth, Willats, Sue Arrowsmith, Tony Bevan, Tony Cragg and a blue sprayed insect work by Anish Kapoor: I once saw an insect in a pile of colour, it seemed to me that this was almost a work. (p32)/No.14, 90, C: Andrew Wilson, Lawrence Weiner, Rita Pacquee, Andreas Seltzer, Dennis Adams, Stephen Bann & Bob Chaplin, Martha Rosler, Willats, Michael Gibbs, Endre Tot, Simon Cutts & Colin Sackett et al/No.15, 96, C: Poster Studio, Alan Murray, Denise Hawrysio, Oliver Whitehead, Alan Kane & Jeremy Deller, Oliver Cieslik & Barbara Schenk, Les Levine, Liam Gillick, Willats et al/No.16, 01, C: Jakob Jakobsen, David Goldenberg, Art Lab, Nils Norman, Elinor Jansz, Christabel Stewart & Emily Pethick, Hamish Fulton, Sarah Staton, David Beech, Willats, et al / No.17, 07, C: French Mottershead, Jakobsen, Dan Kidner, Langlands & Bell, Nils Norman, Miriam Steinhauser, Willats, Chris Hammond et al/No.18, 09, C: Vito Acconci, Karolin Meunier, Willats, Erwin van Doorn, Dan Mitchell, Annette Krauss, Thomas Hirschhorn, Harmen de Hoop et al. / No.19, 14, C: Christian Nyampeta, Rosalie Schweiker, Ricardo Basbaum, Andrea Francke, Emma Smith, Willats, Eva Weinmayr, Taylor & Zaharia et al / No.20, 17, C: Merlin Carpenter, Bedfellows, Francisco Camacho Herrera, Radio Anti, Willats, Eliana Otta et al / No.21, C: Helen Walker & Harun Morrison, Pete Clarke, Lucie Kolb, Gary Bratchford & Robin Parkinson, Rebecca Davies & Eva Sajovic, Elina Otta, Stephen Willats, Javier Calderon, Chalton Gallery. Collated and correct. Near fine.