NEW MINSTRELSY OF THE SCOTTISH BORDER
Harry Josephine Giles & Martin O’Leary
Published by Book Works, London, 2018, 12 pages, 16 × 24 cm, English
Price: €9

Commissioned from open submission, Harry Josephine Giles & Martin O’Leary have used a neural network to produce poems that return to the vernacular language found in the ballads and poetry of nineteenth century Scotland and Northern England.

Harry Josephine Giles is a poet and performer and Martin O’Leary is a digital artist and designer: they came together from their different disciplines and perspectives over a shared interest in online texts, twitterbots, procedural generation and computer poetry.

Dialecty, conceived by Maria Fusco with The Common Guild, considers the uses of vernacular forms of speech and writing, exploring how dialect words, grammar and syntax challenge and improve traditional orthodoxies of critical writing.

#2018 #bookworks #experimentalwriting #mariafusco
Over-Beliefs: Collected Writing 2011-2018
Gordon Hall
Published by Portland Institute for Contemporary Art, Portland, 2019, 52 pages (b/w ill.), 22 × 28.5 cm, English
Price: €10

Produced on the occasion of THROUGH AND THROUGH AND THROUGH, an exhibition of new work by Gordon Hall, curated by Roya Amirsoleymani and Kristan Kennedy, commissioned and presented by the Portland Institute for Contemporary Art in Portland, Oregon from 8 June–10 August, 2019.

With contributions by Roya Amirsoleymani, Kristan Kennedy, Sarah Workneh, Elizabeth Orr, Kristin Poor, Daniel Quiles, Colin Self, Maggie Ginestra, Orlando Tirado, David J. Getsy, Yuri Stone. Designed by Gary Robbins.

#2019 #gordonhall
ABSTRACT PAINTINGS IN JAPAN 1910–1945
Published by The Japan Association of Art Museums, Tokyo, 1992, 225 pages (colour & b/w ill.), 25 × 24 cm, Japanese
Price: €35 (Out of stock)

Comprehensive survey of early Japanese abstract painting (and photography). Including Koshiro Onchi, Iwata Nakayama, Saburo Hasegawa, Kiyoshi Koishi, Ryuichi Amano, Ei-Q and many more.

#abstractphotography #eiq #iwatanakayama #japaneseavantgarde #japanesephotography #kiyoshikoishi #koshiroonchi #ryuichiamano #saburohasegawa
Wild Plants of Palestine
Alaa Abu Asad
Published by Alaa Abu Asad, Maastricht, 2019, hand numbered edition of 25 (second edition), risograph print, unpaginated (b/w ill.), 14.5 × 20 cm, English
Price: €25

Wild Plants of Palestine follows journeys of observational tours solicited by the Palestinian Museum and conducted by two professors from Birzeit University to collect photos of and information on the Palestinian Flora. The title is adapted from a collection of 123 images (circa 1900 to 1920) of wild flowers in Palestine found in the Matson Collection in the Library of Congress. Despite the tendency to trace the wild plants, the text in general aims at questioning the territorial extension of what is meant by the term “Palestinian”, while standing on insignificant topographical features of the (postcolonial) landscape in West Bank. Furthermore, it addresses photography as a practice and a tool of distributing and restricting information at once.

#2019 #alaaabuasad #artistbook #photography
Plastiken 1982–1983
Rosemarie Trockel
Published by Philomene Magers / Monika Sprüth, Bonn / Köln, 1983, 32 pages (b/w ill.), 11 × 16 cm, German
Price: €55 (Out of stock)

Produced on the occasion of Rosemarie Trockel Plastiken 1982–1983 at Monika Sprüth Galerie, Cologne, Germany and Rosemarie Trockel at Galerie Philomene Magers, Bonn, Germany, 1983.

Text (in German) by Wilfred W. Dickhoff. Photography Bernhard Schaub. Designed by Betrieb Am Niehl.

#1983 #rosemarietrockel
EVERYTHING IS FINE
Published by 1856, Melbourne, 2019, 8 pages, 21 × 29.7 cm, English
Price: €2

As part of Paris Internationale 2019, 1856 presented “Everything is fine” with work by Patricia L. Boyd, Ian Burn, Lauren Burrow, and Fred Lonidier.

The work of art is possibly one of the only commodities with equal claim to both private and civic space. It is due to how artworks are embedded in our social relations that we recognise their different values: as historical artefacts, as objects of appreciation (“beautiful” or sensible to taste), political critiques, private financial investments, modes of communication, public documents of the national imaginary—the list goes on. However, the line that divides private and civic has become ever more indiscernible in recent decades—for instance, the erosion of public infrastructure and state industry, private capitalisation on culture and entertainment, the withering of the 8 hour work day, the return of 19th century work conditions, and the ongoing enclosure of our personal lives by a new technological industrialism. In response we might ask, in a reflective manner, what capacity the work of art has to represent these problems at the different points of its reception. The four artists selected here, at different times and with different methods, have asked this of their work.

Curated by Nicholas Tammens. Designed by Ziga Testen.

More on information can be found here.

#1856 #ephemera #fredlonidier #ianburn #laurenburrow #nicholastammens #patricialboyd #zigatesten