Life Isn't Good, It's Excellent
David Robilliard
Published by Gilbert & George, London, 1993, 100 pages (b/w ill.), 15.5 × 21.5 cm, English
Price: €40 (Out of stock)

David Robilliard (b.1952, Guernsey) moved to London in the late 1970s where he established himself as a self-taught painter and poet. He began working for Gilbert & George after appearing as an ‘angry young man’ in their film The World of Gilbert and George (1981). They actively promoted him as their favourite artist and in 1984 published ‘Inevitable’, his first volume of poetry. Three years later, in 1987, Robilliard was diagnosed as HIV positive and in 1988 he died at the age of 36. In his short life he produced a modest but important body of work now held in significant public collections including the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; Tate Modern, London and the Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven. His work is direct both in content and form, comical and yet ultimately deeply romantic.—Rob Tufnell, David Robilliard Disorganised Writings and Sketches

#1993 #davidrobilliard #poetry
Bound and Unbound
Judith Scott
Published by Prestel, New York, 2014, 128 pages (colour & b/w ill.), 24.8 × 28 cm, English
Price: €28

Judith Scott’s work is celebrated for its astonishing visual complexity. In a career spanning just seventeen years, Scott developed a unique and idiosyncratic method to produce a body of work of remarkable originality. Often working for weeks or months on individual pieces, she used yarn, thread, fabric, and other fibers to envelop found objects into fastidiously woven, wrapped, and bundled structures.

Born in Columbus, Ohio, with Down syndrome, Scott (1943–2005) was also largely deaf and did not speak. After thirty-five years living within an institutional setting for people with disabilities, she was introduced in 1987 to Creative Growth Art Center—a visionary studio art program founded more than forty years ago in Oakland, California, to foster and serve a community of artists with developmental and physical disabilities.

#2014 #judithscott
Lexicon Of Infinite Movement
Charlotte Posenenske
Published by Kröller Müller Museum, Otterlo, 2019, 32 pages (b/w ill.), 21 × 29.7 cm, English
Price: €4

Produced on the occasion of Lexicon of Infinite Movement, at the Kröller Müller Museum, 18 May, 2019–15 September, 2019, the first Dutch museum solo exhibition of Charlotte Posenenske.

The works of Charlotte Posenenske (Wiesbaden, 1930-Frankfurt am Main, 1985) consist of series in an unlimited edition. According to a number of rules, they can be made and repeated—also by others—and combined with each other. With her radical and ‘democratic’ ideas about material, production and authorship, Charlotte Posenenske influenced and shaped conceptual and minimalist art of the sixties.

Curated by Suzanne Wallinga and Eloise Sweetman and featuring the work of Ruth Buchanan (New Plymouth, 1980) and Yeb Wiersma (Groningen, 1973) in reaction to the work of Charlotte Posenenske.

Also available as a PDF.

#2019 #charlotteposenenske #eloisesweetman #ephemera #ruthbuchanan
I See That I See What You Don’t See
Published by Het Nieuwe Instituut, Rotterdam, 2019, 13 pages (b/w ill.), 14.7 × 29.7 cm, English / Italian
Price: €4 (Out of stock)

Produced on the occasion of I See That I See What You Don’t See, the official Dutch contribution to the XXII Triennale di Milano, 1 March–1 September, 2019. Designed by Rudy Guedj.

#2019 #rudyguedj
Vivian Suter
Published by Hatje Cantz, Berlin, 2019, 352 pages (colour & b/w ill.), 21 × 27 cm, English
Price: €47 (Out of stock)

More than thirty years ago the Swiss-Argentine artist Vivian Suter (*1949) moved to the rain forest in Panajachel, Guatemala, to live on a former coffee plantation. Since then she has worked on her impressive paintings in her wooden-hut studio, as well as outdoors. Her canvases lie on the sandy ground or hang in trees; dust, mud, leaves, mangos, and insects leave their traces on them. Her painting is influenced by organic processes and coincidence—even natural disasters are her material, when flood waters make their mark on canvases, becoming part of her large, colorful paintings. With texts by Adam Szymczyk, contributions by R.H. Quaytman, Moyra Davey, Hendrik Folkerts. Designed by Studio Manuel Raeder.

You can see Rosalind Nashashibi’s film Vivian’s Garden here.

#2019 #adamszymczyk #moyradavey #rhquaytman #studiomanuelraeder #viviansuter
Öyvind Fahlström as I remember him
Bengt Abrahamsson
Published by Repro and Tryck, Goteborg, 2002, 22 pages (b/w ill.), 15 × 21 cm, English
Price: €10 (Out of stock)

Biography of Öyvind Fahlström written by Bengt Abrahamsson and translated by June Abrahamsson.

“Öyvind Fahlström (1928–76) was born in São Paulo to Swedish-Norwegian parents. Fahlström was unquestionably one of the twentieth century’s most innovative and versatile artists. His incentive was to investigate economical, political and social issues and the production of meaning. Rather than developing a style, he worked with a variety of different media and techniques: poetry, theater, journalism, criticism, drawing, painting, film, television, happenings, radio, objects, graphic design, and installations.”—Modern Museet

#2002 #oyvindfahlstrom