Retrospective
Tetsumi Kudo
Published by Fridericianum, Kassel, 2016, 34 pages (colour & b/w ill.), 15 × 21 cm, English
Price: €5 (Out of stock)

Exhibition booklet produced on the occasion of the exhibition Tetsumi Kudo: Retrospective, curated by  Susanne Pfeffer, Fridericianum, 25 September 2016–1 January, 2017.

Bottled humanism, coloured neon contaminations, tattered flaps of skin, and limp penises bring humanist self-assurance crashing to the ground. What appears as poison or chemical devastation is in fact an appeal to understand metamorphosis as a state of being. Over a period of three decades (from the mid-1950s to the late 1980s), Tetsumi Kudo created a consistent body of work that serves as a model for contemporary conceptual approaches. The Fridericianum presented the first comprehensive retrospective exhibition of the Japanese artist’s work in Germany. This pamphlet also serves as the gallery guide for Loretta Fahrenholz’s exhibition, Two A.M. Designed by Zak Group.

#2016 #lorettafahrenholz #susannepfeffer #tetsumikudo #zakgroup
Das Origen Mysterien Theater
Hermann Nitsch
Published by De Appel, Amsterdam, 1977, 1 pages (b/w ill.), 21 × 29.7 cm, Dutch
Price: €12 (Out of stock)

Produced on the occasion of the exhibition of Wiener Aktionisten from December 1976 through February 1977, De Appel presented photo’s, drawings, objects and films by the main exponents of Wiener Aktionisten. This particular document is the press realease for the reading and exhibition of Das Orgien Mysterien Theater by Hermann Nitsch on 5 January 1977.

You can find more on the show here.

#1977 #deappel
Bilder, Skulpturen und Zeichnungen
Rosemarie Trockel
Published by Rheinland Verlag GmbH, Köln, 1985, 56 pages (colour & b/w ill.), 24.5 × 32.5 cm, German
Price: €35 (Out of stock)

Produced on the occasion of Rosemarie Trockel: Bilder, Skulpturen und Zeichnungen at the Rheinisches Landesmuseum, Bonn, 5 September–6 October, 1985.

#1985 #rosemarietrockel
(Over)production and Value
Diedrich Diederichsen
Published by Sternberg Press, Berlin, 2017, 64 pages, 11.5 × 18 cm, English / German
Price: €9

The “economization of art” began to take shape in the wake of the crisis of capital in 2009. The shifts that occurred in the art field during this time were accompanied by explicit critique and academic analysis that aimed to make the genesis of these transformations comprehensible. In this book, first delivered as a lecture at Kunsthalle Bern in April 2016, Diedrich Diederichsen follows Marx’s labor theory of value and counters the symbolic economies dominating the art field, as well as economic exceptionalism or calculation, with systems of recording and reading out. Expanded to include the sphere of individual aesthetic experience, these systems are not formulated as solipsism, or in terms of purposefulness, but as a means to compare relations within the productivity of open and incalculable connectivity, relations that allow aesthetic experience to be read out as the liquefied labor and lifetime of concrete others. Designed by HIT.

#2017 #diedrichdiederichsen #hit #sternbergpress #theory
Sonsbeek '66
Published by Stichting Sonsbeek, Arnhem, 1966, 110 pages (b/w ill.), 16.5 × 23 cm, Dutch
Price: €9 (Out of stock)

Produced on the occasion of Sonsbeek, 27 May–25 September 1966, Arnhem. Curated by Wim Beeren. Featuring; Hans Arp, Max Bill, Anthony Caro, Lucio Fontana, Alberto Giacometti, Barbara Hepworth, Norbert Kricke, Isamu Noguchi, Eduardo Paolozzi amongst others. Designed by Wim Crouwel.

#1966 #barbarahepworth #eduardopaolozzi #hansarp #wimcrouwel
Section 54
Ian Wilson
Published by Giuseppe Panza di Biumo, Milan, 1990, unpaginated, 14 × 21.5 cm, English
Price: €55 (Out of stock)

Ian Wilson has been exploring the aesthetic potential of spoken language since the late 1960s. His ongoing body of work—beginning with “oral communication” and eventually including his signature Discussions—began in 1968 with the spoken word “time”.

Over the course of the 1970s, his discussions took on a more formal character, and his interests shifted towards ‘The Known and Unknown’, based on Plato’s ‘The Parmenides’. In contrast to a ‘performance’, during a discussion the audience can actively take part in realising the concept of ‘oral communication’. Wilson does not want the discussion to be recorded either on film or audio. Wilson summarises the core of these discussions in a book series entitled ‘section’.

#1990 #ianwilson