Editore: Mexico City: El Corno Emplumado, 1968
Da: Philip Smith, Bookseller, Berkeley, CA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. 1st edition. VG+. 8vo, 120pp, printed wrappers. 1 of 3000 stated copies of this scarce issue of this multi-language literary magazine from 1968 Mexico City. Issue dedicated to the memory of Che Guevara (includes a tribute). Also work by Ed Dorn (see Streeter C106). Unmarked copy (aside from faint penciled price to cover), clean overall with a bit of wear and typical toning. Not Signed.
Editore: Detroit: Artists Workshop Press, 1967
Da: Philip Smith, Bookseller, Berkeley, CA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. 1st edition. VG. 4to, 4 leaves (mostly mimeographed), corner-stapled. Uncommon press release relating to the January 24, 1967, mega-bust of persons associated with the Detroit Artists' Workshop, including the Sinclairs, Jim Semark, and other worthies. Includes a statement and reproductions of press clippings. Unmarked copy, horizontal fold line, light toning. Not Signed.
Editore: Detroit: Artists Workshop Press, 1967
Da: Philip Smith, Bookseller, Berkeley, CA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Soft cover. Condizione: Good. 1st edition. Good only (lacking front wrapper). 4to, [xvi]+148pp (mimeographed), stapled wrappers. Edited by John Sinclair. A massive Artists Workshop Press production. Includes Michael McClure, Gerrit Lansing, Diane di Prima, and a whole bunch of other folks. Solid (about VG) aside from the missing cover (which is supplied in photocopy). Not Signed.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: New York, 1968
Da: Kaaterskill Books, ABAA/ILAB, East Jewett, NY, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
First edition. 17x 22 inches. Published by Allen Van Newkirk, later arrested for holding up a Toys-R-Us store in 2005, and who in the 1960s charged the stage during a Kenneth Koch reading firing a pistol (loaded with blanks) declaring "death to bourgeois poets," the free newspaper of the streets was an important if short lived publication helping to shape the counterculture's understanding of surrealism's relationship to contemporary social movements, and is perhaps best summed up by the subtitle of this issue taken from the surrealists' open letter in 1925: "Art matters little to us, we profoundly hope that revolutions, wars, and the colonial insurrections will annihilate this Western civilization whose vermin you defend even in the Orient, and we call upon this destruction as the least unacceptable state of things for the mind.We assert that we have found treason and whatever else can harm the security of the State more reconcilable with poetry than the sale of 'large quantities of lard' to a nation of pigs and dogs." Includes poetry and quotes from Ed Dorn, LeRoi Jones, Surrealists, Rimbaud, Smohalla, Nez Perce tribe, Diane Di Prima, Sam Abrams, Robert Kelly, Margaret Randall, Victor Hernandez Cruz, and others. And an illustration, attributed to "CHE," of a modified weapon designed to launch Molotov cocktails. Scarce. OCLC locates only six copies of this issue: NYU, Yale, Univ. Kansas, Univ. Indiana, Northern Illinois Univ. While we could locate a few auction and sales records for other issues, we could find none for this issue. A very good cop, a few corner tape marks and pin pricks, folds.
Editore: The Artists' Workshop Press, Detroit, 1966
Da: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Softcover. Condizione: Fine. Magazine. Cover by John Dana, Charles Moore, and Stanley Cowell. Quarto. Stapled red printed wrappers. 98pp. A bit of toning to the pages, else fine. A magazine edited by Sixties poet and radical, John Sinclair, co-founder of the White Panthers Party, and one-time manager of the band MC5. This issue of the magazine was rushed into production shortly before Sinclair was to report to jail for an earlier conviction for selling marihuana to an undercover agent. His incarceration lead to a host of protests, most notably Allen Ginsberg, who rushed the stage during The Who's Woodstock performance to plead Sinclair's case, and John Lennon, who recorded the song "John Sinclair" on his album, *Some Time in New York City*. Among the contributors are Robert Creeley, Jonathan Williams, Charles Olson, Anselm Hollo, Ernst Robert Curtius, Reiner M. Gerhardt, Ed Roberson, David Federman, Steve Jonas, Allen Van Newkirk, George Tysh, J.D. Whitney, Bill Hutton, David Sinclair, Joe Groppuso, Jim Semark, Henry Malone, Jerry Younkins, Arnold Shulsky, D. Welsh, Marshall Rosenthal, Robin Eichele, and Kenny Schooner.
Editore: Artist's Workshop Press, Detroit, 1967
Da: San Francisco Book Company, Paris, Francia
EUR 450,00
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPaperback. Condizione: Fair. Paperback. newspaper format, 28 pp; published during the summer riots in Detroit in 1967, this radical underground newspaper included works by John Sinclair, Andre Breton, Diane DiPrima, Michael McClure, Marion Brown, Malay Roy Choudhury, Joel Oppenheimer, Al Young, Danny Spencer and others; generally in good to fine condition but pages are worn and chipped and browned at edges but all pages and text are complete Standard shipping (no tracking) / Priority (with tracking) / Custom quote for large or heavy orders. in portfolio in office.
Editore: Artists' Workshop Press, Detroit, 1967
Da: PsychoBabel & Skoob Books, Didcot, Regno Unito
EUR 570,53
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPaperback. Condizione: Acceptable. Condizione sovraccoperta: No Dust Jacket. Paperback. First issue of radical underground newspaper. Includes contributions by John Wieners, Joel Oppenheimer, John Sinclair, Andre Breton and others. Pages are very tanned. Minor foxing on front page. Several tears and nicks on pages. Text and illustrations remain clear. AF. Used.
Editore: Artists' Workshop Press, Detroit, MI, 1967
Da: Capitol Hill Books, ABAA, Washington, DC, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Condizione: Very Good -. Detroit, MI: Artists' Workshop Press, 1967. First Edition. Newsprint tabloid format (44cm); 28pp. Black text with red graphics; 35¢ price intact. Folded horizontally, as issued. Illustrations and photographs throughout. Toned; chips appear at edges and folds but do not touch text. An overall Good to Very Good copy. Inaugural issue of the short-lived underground newspaper, co-edited by Allen Van Newkirk and John Sinclair.
Editore: Allen Van Newkirk / Liberation News Service, New York and San Francisco, 1968
Da: Lorne Bair Rare Books, ABAA, Winchester, VA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
First Edition. Original double-sided poster, with text and images offset printed in black on white stock, measuring 54.25cm x 41.5cm (21 3/8" x 16 3/8"). Some old folds smoothed out, pin holes at corners, light wear and dust-soil, with mild toning on recto, and a more pronounced patch of toning at upper left quarter on verso; Very Good. Single issue of Van Newkirk's ephemeral free newspaper, distributed irregularly as "a cultural supplement of Liberation News Service." Printed on recto is a bold proclamation in support of Eldridge Cleaver's Presidential campaign; verso collects endorsements of Cleaver by various figures on the left above the text of the Black Panther Party Platform and Program. Van Newkirk was a seminal figure in the Detroit radical scene of the Sixties, where he was affiliated with such groups as the Detroit Artists Workshop and John Sinclair's White Panther Party. Guerrilla was issued irregularly from 1967-68, in various formats and under a variety of imprints. The current issue provides an editorial address in New York City and a San Francisco imprint.
Editore: Follett Publishing Company / Big Table Books New York, NY, 1968
Da: Specific Object / David Platzker, New York, NY, U.S.A.
[2] pp.; 70.9 x 55.9 cm.; duotone; edition size unknown; unsigned and unnumbered; offset-printed Large-scale folded poster published in conjunction with a series of six readings held May 20 - 25, [1968] at the homes of six artists and writers in celebration of the publication of "The Young American Poets Anthology," edited by Paul Carroll with an introduction by James Dickey. Readings were held at the homes of Jasper Johns, Norman Mailer, Red Grooms, Frank Stella, Claes Oldenburg, and Robert Rauschenburg with introductions by Kenneth Koch, Norman Mailer, John Ashbery, James Wright, and Paul Carroll and readings by Bill Berkson, Ted Barrigan, Tom Clark, Norman Mailer, Kenward Elmslie, Louise Glück, Robert Hass, Red Grooms, Richard Kostelanetz, Lou Lipsitz, Ron Padgett, Peter Schjeldahl, Frank Stella, Charles Simic, Mark Strand, Tony Towle, Claes Oldenburg, Allen Van Newkirk, Diane Wakoski, Anne Waldman, Lewis Warsh, Robert Rauschenberg, Vito Acconci, Michael Benedickt, Clark Coolidge, John L'Heureux, Lewis MacAdams, and John Perreault. Very Good. Folded in 8 as issued, with torn closure sticker, unmailed copy. Light yellow soiling along fold lines. Price correction sticker on recto, original to poster. Light handling wear. Five small pin holes to poster. Otherwise clean and unmarked.
Editore: Artists' Workshop Press, Detroit, 1967
Da: Mare Booksellers ABAA, IOBA, Dover, NH, U.S.A.
Tabloid. Condizione: Good. Tabloid newspaper format. 28 pp. Illustrations and photos throughout. Second issue issue of this influential and boundary pushing underground paper. Edited by Allen Van Newkirk, Guerrilla adopted a Dadaesque editorial style while seeking real social change. That included critiquing the counterculture and leftist movements. In a sense, it operated much as the Situationists did, using radical and revolutionary art to chip away at mainstream culture. With work by John Sinclair, Diane DiPrima and Michael McLure, a look at Black Dada, etc. GOOD condition. Moderate to heavy toning, especially along the edges. Minor chipping, tearing and creases along the extremities. Minor soiling.
Editore: Artists' Workshop Press, Detroit, 1967
Da: Mare Booksellers ABAA, IOBA, Dover, NH, U.S.A.
Tabloid. Condizione: Good. Tabloid newspaper format. 28 pp. Illustrations and photos throughout. First issue of this influential and boundary pushing underground paper. Edited by Allen Van Newkirk, Guerrilla adopted a Dadaesque editorial style while seeking real social change. That included critiquing the counterculture and leftist movements. In a sense, it operated much as the Situationists did, using radical and revolutionary art to chip away at mainstream culture. This issue looks at obscenity, anarchist terrorism, has work by Diane DiPrima and Michael McLure, etc. GOOD condition. Moderate to heavy toning, especially along the edges. Chipping, tearing and creases along the extremities. Small piece of tape to the upper and lower front edge. Heavy diagonal crease to the rear cover. Minor soiling.