Editore: peter owen
Da: Hard to Find Books NZ (Internet) Ltd., Dunedin, OTAGO, Nuova Zelanda
Membro dell'associazione: IOBA
EUR 5,17
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrellolarge format paperback (near new); all our specials have minimal description to keep listing them viable. They are at least reading copies, complete and in reasonable condition, but usually secondhand; frequently they are superior examples. Ordering more than one book will reduce your overall postage cost.
EUR 20,00
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPaperback. Condizione: leichte Gebrauchsspuren. 2. udgave, 1. oplag. READY TO SEND! Good condition only the binding is a bit scuffed - international shipping da 275 p. 8°.
Da: Patrik Andersson, Antikvariat., Lund, Svezia
EUR 14,06
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloStockholm; Almqvist & Wiksell, 1972. Originalets titel: Bogen om storfamilierna (Köpenhamn, 1970). Översättning av Gun och Nils A. Bengtsson. 18,5x11 cm. 199, (1 blank) s. + 12 planschblad med foton. Originalpocket. Exlibris för Berndt Gustafsson. Ryggen lätt blekt. Fint ex. "Genom intervjuer med medlemmarna i olika kollektiv ger författarna en allsidig bild av denna annorlunda samlevnadsform och det som gör att allt fler människor väljer den framför andra sätt att bo och leva." (baksidestext).
Editore: F. A. Davis Company, Philadelphia, PA
Da: Shoemaker Booksellers, Gettysburg, PA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condizione: Very Good. Condizione sovraccoperta: Good+. (1964) 140 pp. Original blue covers w/ gilt title on spine. Binding lightly soiled w/ tiny paper lift on rear cover. Light foxing to edges of text block and endpapers. Previous owner's name stamp on blank endpapers and some leaves. DJ lightly soiled w/ light edge wear; approx. 1/2" closed tear at top edge of front panel. Small, faint dampstain at bottom edge of front panel. Spine a bit darkened w/ approx. 1/2" closed tear to middle of spine. Illust. w/ figures. Contents nice.
EUR 28,14
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: Very good.
EUR 435,97
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloUNK. Condizione: Used - Very Good. Used - Like New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000.
UNK. Condizione: Used - Very Good. Used - Like New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000.
EUR 601,70
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: New. pp. 1040.
EUR 534,99
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloBuch. Condizione: Neu. Druck auf Anfrage Neuware - Printed after ordering.
Da: Vangsgaards Antikvariat Aps, Copenhagen, Danimarca
EUR 10,34
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloAschehoug, København 1998. 379 sider. Orig. kartonbind med smudsomslag. Smudsomslag og omslag med lette brugsspor og smudsomslaget falmet på ryggen. omslaget falmet i kanterne, ellers pænt eksemplar.
Da: Vangsgaards Antikvariat Aps, Copenhagen, Danimarca
EUR 10,34
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPolitikens Forlag, København 1980. 448 sider. Rigt illustreret i s/h og farver. Orig. kartonbind. Pænt eksemplar.
EUR 10,34
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPeople s Press, København 2011. Illustreret med fotos i s/h og farver. 554 sider. Orig. illustreret kartonbind med smudsomslag. SMudsomslag med lette brugsspor, og med en tidligere mærkat på bagsiden, ellers velholdt eksemplar.
Da: Vangsgaards Antikvariat Aps, Copenhagen, Danimarca
EUR 11,71
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloAschehoug, København 1998. 1. oplag. 379 sider. Orig. helshirtingsbind med smudsomslag. Ryggen af omslaget jævnt falmet, men ellers velholdt eksemplar.
Da: Vangsgaards Antikvariat Aps, Copenhagen, Danimarca
EUR 11,71
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloGyldendals bogklub, København 1984. 174 sider. Vignetter i s/h. Heftet med orig. omslag.
Da: Patrik Andersson, Antikvariat., Lund, Svezia
EUR 42,19
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloOslo; Galleri Riis, 1988. 35x26 cm. (44) pp. Original printed wrappers. With the label of Anders Tornberg galley on front wrapper. Head of spine is insignificantly worn. A fine copy. Exhibition catalogue with text in Norwegian and German.
Editore: Tipografia John Grieg, Bergen, 1978
Da: Antonio Pennasilico, Carpiano, MI, Italia
EUR 22,00
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCatalogo mostra Venezia, Padiglione Norvegia, La Biennale di Venezia 1978, testo italiano, legatura a punto metallico, formato 18x24, pagine 20 totali, illustrato a colori, ottime condizioni - 37801 ISBN non applicabile 1.
Data di pubblicazione: 1983
Da: Antikvariat Röde Orm, Göteborg, Svezia
EUR 23,44
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCollage Press, OSLO 1983. Förlagets linneband med skyddsomslag. 108 (12) sidor. Illustrerad. Lite kantslitage på skyddsomslaget. Boken är i gott skick. Text: norska.
Lingua: Tedesco
Editore: Berlin; New York : Walter de Gruyter, 1999
ISBN 10: 3110165643 ISBN 13: 9783110165647
Prima edizione
EUR 69,00
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrello24,5 x 17,5 cm. Condizione: Sehr gut. 1. Auflage. VIII, 266 Seiten Mit einer Porträttafel. - Innen sauberer, guter Zustand. Leineneinband, mit den üblichen Bibliotheks-Markierungen, Stempeln und Einträgen, innen wie außen, siehe Bilder. Sehr gutes Bibliotheksexemplar. - Ergänzungsbände zum Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde, Band 21. DH-30-11A Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 600.
Da: Vangsgaards Antikvariat Aps, Copenhagen, Danimarca
EUR 20,67
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloForlaget Sohn, Rødovre 2012. 594 sider. Orig. kartonbind. Velholdt eksemplar.
Editore: Berlin und New York, De Gruyter, 1999., 1999
Da: Antiquariat Thomas Rezek, München, Germania
EUR 85,00
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrello8°. VIII, 266 SS. Original-Pappband Ergänzungsbände zum Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde, Band 21. - Gut erhalten.
Da: Vangsgaards Antikvariat Aps, Copenhagen, Danimarca
EUR 27,56
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloMuseum Tusculanums Forlag, København 2021. 408 sider. Illustreret i s/h. Orig. illustreret kartonbind.
Editore: Eks-Skolens Trykkeri 1968-1970, Copenhagen, 1968
Da: Boo-Hooray, New York, NY, U.S.A.
A near complete run of Hætsjj, the Danish avant-garde artists' "newspaper" rarely (if ever) seen at this level of completeness, let alone in this condition. A phonetic spelling of the Danish word "hetz" ("smear" or "slander" campaign), this publication was issued, for a time, almost daily and was sold on the streets amidst the burgeoning avant-garde, collectivist movements. The publication ran from 1968 to 1970 in 48 numbers. Present here are numbers 1-7, 10-11, 13, 15, 17-18, 21 (presumably incomplete and in facsimile), 22-23, 25-30, 32-34, 36, 38, 40-43, two different versions of #45 (issued a day apart), one unnumbered issue, and four unnumbered folios (possibly inserts). Also present are numbers 1-11, 13-15 of the Hætsjj "Bulletins" for different events, performances, and happenings at the Festival 200 of 1969 each bulletin a stunning work of art in its own right. Additionally, this set contains four numbers of the Henning Christiansen's Panel 13 (#1-2, 4-5), a contemporary, similarly produced publication by his press of the same name, including the Panel 13 manifesto. An eight-page pamphlet, excerpted from Ole Grünbaum's memoir, about the founding of Hætsjj and its context accompanies these. Hætsjj arose from a pivotal moment in Danish experimental art. In 1966, The Experimental School ("Ex-School"), an important avant-garde art school set up as an alternative to the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, moved into a condemned building near Fredrik's Church in the Indre By. There, the Ex-School powerfully nurtured the vanguard: in their first year in that abandoned building they hosted Nam June Paik and Charlotte Moorman, as well as Joseph Beuys, who gave his first performance with the dead hare there. Next door to this collective live-work experiment "was an equally run-down flat which was used as a headquarters for a loose group among whom was the main organiser of the Danish Provo Movement, inspired by the Dutch Provos" (Ørum, 798). The Danish Provos and their associates were organizing and creating art derived from Situationist and Fluxus aims and aesthetics; indeed, "during the late 1960s they even made similar art objects, such as treated book art and assemblages in the typical style of the underground drug culture" (ibid). The concomitant developments in offset printing techniques made it possible for these artist-organizers to produce their own newspaper for their community cheaply. The leftist politics, art-making, performance pieces, and collectivist experiments in living mixing in these two buildings alone was a potent blend of revolutionary, avant-garde spirit and the groups collaborated extensively on each other's publications. Originally founded and edited by Henning Prins and Leif Varmark, their initial goal was to be a mouthpiece of the underground movement, to "incite against the authorities and against those who choose to cooperate with them in any way." Members of both the Provos and the Ex-School contributed to Hætsjj, but the editorial oversight was eventually handed off predominantly to Ole Stig Andersen and Ole Grünbaum, and the artists at the nearby Gallery 101 (home to Joseph Beuys' "Eurasia" actions), such as Bjørn Nørgaard and Peter Louis-Jensen. The first issue was published just days after the assassination of Robert Kennedy, and following comments from Denmark's then-Prime Minister Hilmar Baunsgård, that "violent demonstrations" were "the greatest threat to democracy." The incendiary publication was issued as direct counterpoint to this pacifying, bourgeois ideology, and was made up of local, underground news, political commentary, parody, pornographic political collage, and critical commentary on art and publishing. It "was not political art, but a political activity which was part of the spectrum of activities ranging from art to everyday life, social events and political activities undertaken by the extended Ex-School circle during the late 1960s" (ibid). The publication comprised the work, thinking, art, and organizing, of innumerable groups with divergent aims and methods but who were united in their commitment to the counterculture. This heterogeneous mix was in fact part of the publication's power. Guided by neither a manifesto nor a strict aesthetic program, and published in the form of a newspaper, it offered an image of an alternative world: a self-determined yet collectivist social reality, one governed by freedom of expression, rather than the murderous machinery of capital. Indeed, "Detailed instructions on how to produce an issue of Hætsjj were published in the paper as an encouragement to everyone to contribute or to establish their own newspaper" (ibid). The Bulletins included here were produced for the seminal Festival 200 of 1969. Organized in honor of the 200th anniversary of the Charlottenborg exhibition hall, the festival featured avant-garde artists across Scandinavia. It functioned as an important site of cross-pollination for these groups similarly dedicated to reimagining the social order, collectivist living, and insurgent art. All copies of Hætsjj are extremely rare. Each beautifully made issue is a remarkable work of revolutionary ambition. Not only an important, scarcely seen record of the European vanguard, these are still genuinely inspirational works at the intersections of collectivist thought, political organizing, and anti-commercial expression. Reference: Tania Ørum, "Counterculture," in A Cultural History of the Avant-Garde in the Nordic Countries 1950-1975 (2016). Offset, silkscreen, one photomechanical reproduction. Most numbers unbound folios; one saddle-stapled in illustrated wraps (#43), one single sheet (#21, in facsimile and presumably incomplete), several "Bulletins" with unbound folios loosely inserted into posters (as issued); one corner-stapled pamphlet, annotated in an unknown hand. More than 100 sheets; most numbers 4 pp on one sheet; #43 with folded poster loosely inserted as issued. Various sizes,
Editore: Eks-Skolens Trykkeri 1968-1970, Copenhagen, 1968
Da: Boo-Hooray, New York, NY, U.S.A.
A near complete run of Hætsjj, the Danish avant-garde artists' "newspaper" rarely (if ever) seen at this level of completeness, let alone in this condition. A phonetic spelling of the Danish word "hetz" ("smear" or "slander" campaign), this publication was issued, for a time, almost daily and was sold on the streets amidst the burgeoning avant-garde, collectivist movements. The publication ran from 1968 to 1970 in 48 numbers. Present here are numbers 1-7, 10-11, 13, 15, 17-18, 21 (presumably incomplete and in facsimile), 22-23, 25-30, 32-34, 36, 38, 40-43, two different versions of #45 (issued a day apart), one unnumbered issue, and four unnumbered folios (possibly inserts). Also present are numbers 1-11, 13-15 of the Hætsjj "Bulletins" for different events, performances, and happenings at the Festival 200 of 1969 each bulletin a stunning work of art in its own right. Additionally, this set contains four numbers of the Henning Christiansen's Panel 13 (#1-2, 4-5), a contemporary, similarly produced publication by his press of the same name, including the Panel 13 manifesto. An eight-page pamphlet, excerpted from Ole Grünbaum's memoir, about the founding of Hætsjj and its context accompanies these. Hætsjj arose from a pivotal moment in Danish experimental art. In 1966, The Experimental School ("Ex-School"), an important avant-garde art school set up as an alternative to the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, moved into a condemned building near Fredrik's Church in the Indre By. There, the Ex-School powerfully nurtured the vanguard: in their first year in that abandoned building they hosted Nam June Paik and Charlotte Moorman, as well as Joseph Beuys, who gave his first performance with the dead hare there. Next door to this collective live-work experiment "was an equally run-down flat which was used as a headquarters for a loose group among whom was the main organiser of the Danish Provo Movement, inspired by the Dutch Provos" (Ørum, 798). The Danish Provos and their associates were organizing and creating art derived from Situationist and Fluxus aims and aesthetics; indeed, "during the late 1960s they even made similar art objects, such as treated book art and assemblages in the typical style of the underground drug culture" (ibid). The concomitant developments in offset printing techniques made it possible for these artist-organizers to produce their own newspaper for their community cheaply. The leftist politics, art-making, performance pieces, and collectivist experiments in living mixing in these two buildings alone was a potent blend of revolutionary, avant-garde spirit and the groups collaborated extensively on each other's publications. Originally founded and edited by Henning Prins and Leif Varmark, their initial goal was to be a mouthpiece of the underground movement, to "incite against the authorities and against those who choose to cooperate with them in any way." Members of both the Provos and the Ex-School contributed to Hætsjj, but the editorial oversight was eventually handed off predominantly to Ole Stig Andersen and Ole Grünbaum, and the artists at the nearby Gallery 101 (home to Joseph Beuys' "Eurasia" actions), such as Bjørn Nørgaard and Peter Louis-Jensen. The first issue was published just days after the assassination of Robert Kennedy, and following comments from Denmark's then-Prime Minister Hilmar Baunsgård, that "violent demonstrations" were "the greatest threat to democracy." The incendiary publication was issued as direct counterpoint to this pacifying, bourgeois ideology, and was made up of local, underground news, political commentary, parody, pornographic political collage, and critical commentary on art and publishing. It "was not political art, but a political activity which was part of the spectrum of activities ranging from art to everyday life, social events and political activities undertaken by the extended Ex-School circle during the late 1960s" (ibid). The publication comprised the work, thinking, art, and organizing, of innumerable groups with divergent aims and methods but who were united in their commitment to the counterculture. This heterogeneous mix was in fact part of the publication's power. Guided by neither a manifesto nor a strict aesthetic program, and published in the form of a newspaper, it offered an image of an alternative world: a self-determined yet collectivist social reality, one governed by freedom of expression, rather than the murderous machinery of capital. Indeed, "Detailed instructions on how to produce an issue of Hætsjj were published in the paper as an encouragement to everyone to contribute or to establish their own newspaper" (ibid). The Bulletins included here were produced for the seminal Festival 200 of 1969. Organized in honor of the 200th anniversary of the Charlottenborg exhibition hall, the festival featured avant-garde artists across Scandinavia. It functioned as an important site of cross-pollination for these groups similarly dedicated to reimagining the social order, collectivist living, and insurgent art. All copies of Hætsjj are extremely rare. Each beautifully made issue is a remarkable work of revolutionary ambition. Not only an important, scarcely seen record of the European vanguard, these are still genuinely inspirational works at the intersections of collectivist thought, political organizing, and anti-commercial expression. Reference: Tania Ørum, "Counterculture," in A Cultural History of the Avant-Garde in the Nordic Countries 1950-1975 (2016). Offset, silkscreen, one photomechanical reproduction. Most numbers unbound folios; one saddle-stapled in illustrated wraps (#43), one single sheet (#21, in facsimile and presumably incomplete), several "Bulletins" with unbound folios loosely inserted into posters (as issued); one corner-stapled pamphlet, annotated in an unknown hand. More than 100 sheets; most numbers 4 pp on one sheet; #43 with folded poster loosely inserted as issued. Various sizes,
Editore: Eks-Skolens Trykkeri 1968-1970, Copenhagen, 1968
Da: Boo-Hooray, New York, NY, U.S.A.
A near complete run of Hætsjj, the Danish avant-garde artists' "newspaper" rarely (if ever) seen at this level of completeness, let alone in this condition. A phonetic spelling of the Danish word "hetz" ("smear" or "slander" campaign), this publication was issued, for a time, almost daily and was sold on the streets amidst the burgeoning avant-garde, collectivist movements. The publication ran from 1968 to 1970 in 48 numbers. Present here are numbers 1-7, 10-11, 13, 15, 17-18, 21 (presumably incomplete and in facsimile), 22-23, 25-30, 32-34, 36, 38, 40-43, two different versions of #45 (issued a day apart), one unnumbered issue, and four unnumbered folios (possibly inserts). Also present are numbers 1-11, 13-15 of the Hætsjj "Bulletins" for different events, performances, and happenings at the Festival 200 of 1969 each bulletin a stunning work of art in its own right. Additionally, this set contains four numbers of the Henning Christiansen's Panel 13 (#1-2, 4-5), a contemporary, similarly produced publication by his press of the same name, including the Panel 13 manifesto. An eight-page pamphlet, excerpted from Ole Grünbaum's memoir, about the founding of Hætsjj and its context accompanies these. Hætsjj arose from a pivotal moment in Danish experimental art. In 1966, The Experimental School ("Ex-School"), an important avant-garde art school set up as an alternative to the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, moved into a condemned building near Fredrik's Church in the Indre By. There, the Ex-School powerfully nurtured the vanguard: in their first year in that abandoned building they hosted Nam June Paik and Charlotte Moorman, as well as Joseph Beuys, who gave his first performance with the dead hare there. Next door to this collective live-work experiment "was an equally run-down flat which was used as a headquarters for a loose group among whom was the main organiser of the Danish Provo Movement, inspired by the Dutch Provos" (Ørum, 798). The Danish Provos and their associates were organizing and creating art derived from Situationist and Fluxus aims and aesthetics; indeed, "during the late 1960s they even made similar art objects, such as treated book art and assemblages in the typical style of the underground drug culture" (ibid). The concomitant developments in offset printing techniques made it possible for these artist-organizers to produce their own newspaper for their community cheaply. The leftist politics, art-making, performance pieces, and collectivist experiments in living mixing in these two buildings alone was a potent blend of revolutionary, avant-garde spirit and the groups collaborated extensively on each other's publications. Originally founded and edited by Henning Prins and Leif Varmark, their initial goal was to be a mouthpiece of the underground movement, to "incite against the authorities and against those who choose to cooperate with them in any way." Members of both the Provos and the Ex-School contributed to Hætsjj, but the editorial oversight was eventually handed off predominantly to Ole Stig Andersen and Ole Grünbaum, and the artists at the nearby Gallery 101 (home to Joseph Beuys' "Eurasia" actions), such as Bjørn Nørgaard and Peter Louis-Jensen. The first issue was published just days after the assassination of Robert Kennedy, and following comments from Denmark's then-Prime Minister Hilmar Baunsgård, that "violent demonstrations" were "the greatest threat to democracy." The incendiary publication was issued as direct counterpoint to this pacifying, bourgeois ideology, and was made up of local, underground news, political commentary, parody, pornographic political collage, and critical commentary on art and publishing. It "was not political art, but a political activity which was part of the spectrum of activities ranging from art to everyday life, social events and political activities undertaken by the extended Ex-School circle during the late 1960s" (ibid). The publication comprised the work, thinking, art, and organizing, of innumerable groups with divergent aims and methods but who were united in their commitment to the counterculture. This heterogeneous mix was in fact part of the publication's power. Guided by neither a manifesto nor a strict aesthetic program, and published in the form of a newspaper, it offered an image of an alternative world: a self-determined yet collectivist social reality, one governed by freedom of expression, rather than the murderous machinery of capital. Indeed, "Detailed instructions on how to produce an issue of Hætsjj were published in the paper as an encouragement to everyone to contribute or to establish their own newspaper" (ibid). The Bulletins included here were produced for the seminal Festival 200 of 1969. Organized in honor of the 200th anniversary of the Charlottenborg exhibition hall, the festival featured avant-garde artists across Scandinavia. It functioned as an important site of cross-pollination for these groups similarly dedicated to reimagining the social order, collectivist living, and insurgent art. All copies of Hætsjj are extremely rare. Each beautifully made issue is a remarkable work of revolutionary ambition. Not only an important, scarcely seen record of the European vanguard, these are still genuinely inspirational works at the intersections of collectivist thought, political organizing, and anti-commercial expression. Reference: Tania Ørum, "Counterculture," in A Cultural History of the Avant-Garde in the Nordic Countries 1950-1975 (2016). Offset, silkscreen, one photomechanical reproduction. Most numbers unbound folios; one saddle-stapled in illustrated wraps (#43), one single sheet (#21, in facsimile and presumably incomplete), several "Bulletins" with unbound folios loosely inserted into posters (as issued); one corner-stapled pamphlet, annotated in an unknown hand. More than 100 sheets; most numbers 4 pp on one sheet; #43 with folded poster loosely inserted as issued. Various sizes,
Editore: Eks-Skolens Trykkeri 1968-1970, Copenhagen, 1968
Da: Boo-Hooray, New York, NY, U.S.A.
A near complete run of Hætsjj, the Danish avant-garde artists' "newspaper" rarely (if ever) seen at this level of completeness, let alone in this condition. A phonetic spelling of the Danish word "hetz" ("smear" or "slander" campaign), this publication was issued, for a time, almost daily and was sold on the streets amidst the burgeoning avant-garde, collectivist movements. The publication ran from 1968 to 1970 in 48 numbers. Present here are numbers 1-7, 10-11, 13, 15, 17-18, 21 (presumably incomplete and in facsimile), 22-23, 25-30, 32-34, 36, 38, 40-43, two different versions of #45 (issued a day apart), one unnumbered issue, and four unnumbered folios (possibly inserts). Also present are numbers 1-11, 13-15 of the Hætsjj "Bulletins" for different events, performances, and happenings at the Festival 200 of 1969 each bulletin a stunning work of art in its own right. Additionally, this set contains four numbers of the Henning Christiansen's Panel 13 (#1-2, 4-5), a contemporary, similarly produced publication by his press of the same name, including the Panel 13 manifesto. An eight-page pamphlet, excerpted from Ole Grünbaum's memoir, about the founding of Hætsjj and its context accompanies these. Hætsjj arose from a pivotal moment in Danish experimental art. In 1966, The Experimental School ("Ex-School"), an important avant-garde art school set up as an alternative to the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, moved into a condemned building near Fredrik's Church in the Indre By. There, the Ex-School powerfully nurtured the vanguard: in their first year in that abandoned building they hosted Nam June Paik and Charlotte Moorman, as well as Joseph Beuys, who gave his first performance with the dead hare there. Next door to this collective live-work experiment "was an equally run-down flat which was used as a headquarters for a loose group among whom was the main organiser of the Danish Provo Movement, inspired by the Dutch Provos" (Ørum, 798). The Danish Provos and their associates were organizing and creating art derived from Situationist and Fluxus aims and aesthetics; indeed, "during the late 1960s they even made similar art objects, such as treated book art and assemblages in the typical style of the underground drug culture" (ibid). The concomitant developments in offset printing techniques made it possible for these artist-organizers to produce their own newspaper for their community cheaply. The leftist politics, art-making, performance pieces, and collectivist experiments in living mixing in these two buildings alone was a potent blend of revolutionary, avant-garde spirit and the groups collaborated extensively on each other's publications. Originally founded and edited by Henning Prins and Leif Varmark, their initial goal was to be a mouthpiece of the underground movement, to "incite against the authorities and against those who choose to cooperate with them in any way." Members of both the Provos and the Ex-School contributed to Hætsjj, but the editorial oversight was eventually handed off predominantly to Ole Stig Andersen and Ole Grünbaum, and the artists at the nearby Gallery 101 (home to Joseph Beuys' "Eurasia" actions), such as Bjørn Nørgaard and Peter Louis-Jensen. The first issue was published just days after the assassination of Robert Kennedy, and following comments from Denmark's then-Prime Minister Hilmar Baunsgård, that "violent demonstrations" were "the greatest threat to democracy." The incendiary publication was issued as direct counterpoint to this pacifying, bourgeois ideology, and was made up of local, underground news, political commentary, parody, pornographic political collage, and critical commentary on art and publishing. It "was not political art, but a political activity which was part of the spectrum of activities ranging from art to everyday life, social events and political activities undertaken by the extended Ex-School circle during the late 1960s" (ibid). The publication comprised the work, thinking, art, and organizing, of innumerable groups with divergent aims and methods but who were united in their commitment to the counterculture. This heterogeneous mix was in fact part of the publication's power. Guided by neither a manifesto nor a strict aesthetic program, and published in the form of a newspaper, it offered an image of an alternative world: a self-determined yet collectivist social reality, one governed by freedom of expression, rather than the murderous machinery of capital. Indeed, "Detailed instructions on how to produce an issue of Hætsjj were published in the paper as an encouragement to everyone to contribute or to establish their own newspaper" (ibid). The Bulletins included here were produced for the seminal Festival 200 of 1969. Organized in honor of the 200th anniversary of the Charlottenborg exhibition hall, the festival featured avant-garde artists across Scandinavia. It functioned as an important site of cross-pollination for these groups similarly dedicated to reimagining the social order, collectivist living, and insurgent art. All copies of Hætsjj are extremely rare. Each beautifully made issue is a remarkable work of revolutionary ambition. Not only an important, scarcely seen record of the European vanguard, these are still genuinely inspirational works at the intersections of collectivist thought, political organizing, and anti-commercial expression. Reference: Tania Ørum, "Counterculture," in A Cultural History of the Avant-Garde in the Nordic Countries 1950-1975 (2016). Offset, silkscreen, one photomechanical reproduction. Most numbers unbound folios; one saddle-stapled in illustrated wraps (#43), one single sheet (#21, in facsimile and presumably incomplete), several "Bulletins" with unbound folios loosely inserted into posters (as issued); one corner-stapled pamphlet, annotated in an unknown hand. More than 100 sheets; most numbers 4 pp on one sheet; #43 with folded poster loosely inserted as issued. Various sizes,
Editore: Eks-Skolens Trykkeri 1968-1970, Copenhagen, 1968
Da: Boo-Hooray, New York, NY, U.S.A.
A near complete run of Hætsjj, the Danish avant-garde artists' "newspaper" rarely (if ever) seen at this level of completeness, let alone in this condition. A phonetic spelling of the Danish word "hetz" ("smear" or "slander" campaign), this publication was issued, for a time, almost daily and was sold on the streets amidst the burgeoning avant-garde, collectivist movements. The publication ran from 1968 to 1970 in 48 numbers. Present here are numbers 1-7, 10-11, 13, 15, 17-18, 21 (presumably incomplete and in facsimile), 22-23, 25-30, 32-34, 36, 38, 40-43, two different versions of #45 (issued a day apart), one unnumbered issue, and four unnumbered folios (possibly inserts). Also present are numbers 1-11, 13-15 of the Hætsjj "Bulletins" for different events, performances, and happenings at the Festival 200 of 1969 each bulletin a stunning work of art in its own right. Additionally, this set contains four numbers of the Henning Christiansen's Panel 13 (#1-2, 4-5), a contemporary, similarly produced publication by his press of the same name, including the Panel 13 manifesto. An eight-page pamphlet, excerpted from Ole Grünbaum's memoir, about the founding of Hætsjj and its context accompanies these. Hætsjj arose from a pivotal moment in Danish experimental art. In 1966, The Experimental School ("Ex-School"), an important avant-garde art school set up as an alternative to the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, moved into a condemned building near Fredrik's Church in the Indre By. There, the Ex-School powerfully nurtured the vanguard: in their first year in that abandoned building they hosted Nam June Paik and Charlotte Moorman, as well as Joseph Beuys, who gave his first performance with the dead hare there. Next door to this collective live-work experiment "was an equally run-down flat which was used as a headquarters for a loose group among whom was the main organiser of the Danish Provo Movement, inspired by the Dutch Provos" (Ørum, 798). The Danish Provos and their associates were organizing and creating art derived from Situationist and Fluxus aims and aesthetics; indeed, "during the late 1960s they even made similar art objects, such as treated book art and assemblages in the typical style of the underground drug culture" (ibid). The concomitant developments in offset printing techniques made it possible for these artist-organizers to produce their own newspaper for their community cheaply. The leftist politics, art-making, performance pieces, and collectivist experiments in living mixing in these two buildings alone was a potent blend of revolutionary, avant-garde spirit and the groups collaborated extensively on each other's publications. Originally founded and edited by Henning Prins and Leif Varmark, their initial goal was to be a mouthpiece of the underground movement, to "incite against the authorities and against those who choose to cooperate with them in any way." Members of both the Provos and the Ex-School contributed to Hætsjj, but the editorial oversight was eventually handed off predominantly to Ole Stig Andersen and Ole Grünbaum, and the artists at the nearby Gallery 101 (home to Joseph Beuys' "Eurasia" actions), such as Bjørn Nørgaard and Peter Louis-Jensen. The first issue was published just days after the assassination of Robert Kennedy, and following comments from Denmark's then-Prime Minister Hilmar Baunsgård, that "violent demonstrations" were "the greatest threat to democracy." The incendiary publication was issued as direct counterpoint to this pacifying, bourgeois ideology, and was made up of local, underground news, political commentary, parody, pornographic political collage, and critical commentary on art and publishing. It "was not political art, but a political activity which was part of the spectrum of activities ranging from art to everyday life, social events and political activities undertaken by the extended Ex-School circle during the late 1960s" (ibid). The publication comprised the work, thinking, art, and organizing, of innumerable groups with divergent aims and methods but who were united in their commitment to the counterculture. This heterogeneous mix was in fact part of the publication's power. Guided by neither a manifesto nor a strict aesthetic program, and published in the form of a newspaper, it offered an image of an alternative world: a self-determined yet collectivist social reality, one governed by freedom of expression, rather than the murderous machinery of capital. Indeed, "Detailed instructions on how to produce an issue of Hætsjj were published in the paper as an encouragement to everyone to contribute or to establish their own newspaper" (ibid). The Bulletins included here were produced for the seminal Festival 200 of 1969. Organized in honor of the 200th anniversary of the Charlottenborg exhibition hall, the festival featured avant-garde artists across Scandinavia. It functioned as an important site of cross-pollination for these groups similarly dedicated to reimagining the social order, collectivist living, and insurgent art. All copies of Hætsjj are extremely rare. Each beautifully made issue is a remarkable work of revolutionary ambition. Not only an important, scarcely seen record of the European vanguard, these are still genuinely inspirational works at the intersections of collectivist thought, political organizing, and anti-commercial expression. Reference: Tania Ørum, "Counterculture," in A Cultural History of the Avant-Garde in the Nordic Countries 1950-1975 (2016). Offset, silkscreen, one photomechanical reproduction. Most numbers unbound folios; one saddle-stapled in illustrated wraps (#43), one single sheet (#21, in facsimile and presumably incomplete), several "Bulletins" with unbound folios loosely inserted into posters (as issued); one corner-stapled pamphlet, annotated in an unknown hand. More than 100 sheets; most numbers 4 pp on one sheet; #43 with folded poster loosely inserted as issued. Various sizes,
Lingua: Tedesco
Data di pubblicazione: 2011
Da: bemeX, Villingen-Schwenningen, Germania
EUR 19,83
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrellodvd. Condizione: Gut. Seiten; D2-033 Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 500.
Da: Vangsgaards Antikvariat Aps, Copenhagen, Danimarca
EUR 68,91
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloE.J. Brill, Leiden 1996. 148 pages. Illustrated in b/w. Publisher's boards. Near fine. * Fauna Entomologica Scandinavica, volume 33.
Da: Brook Bookstore On Demand, Napoli, NA, Italia
EUR 184,30
Quantità: Più di 20 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: new.
Da: GreatBookPrices, Columbia, MD, U.S.A.
EUR 200,35
Quantità: Più di 20 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: New.