...ical Krbbr Prdly Prsnts Gart Jas, Jon Klsy, Josf Stra
Michael Krebber
Published by Walther König, Köln, 2006, 207 pages (colour ill.), 15.2 × 22.9 cm, English/German
Price: €70 (Out of stock)

Published on the occasion of …ical Krbbr Prdly Prsnts Gart Jas, Jon Klsy, Josf Stra at Portikus, Frankfurt, 16 December, 2006–21 January, 2007. A group show curated by Michael Krebber also featuring Gareth James, John Kelsey and Josef Strau.

“A bridge, an ellipsis, a sudden trailing off, the title of this exhibition, etc, the … might also be the blub blub blub of an underwater clam drawn by Jack Smith (“Ploduction Ploblems”), or a sort of mussel-talk taking over. In Réné Daumal’s unfinished novel Mount Analogue, which narrates the search for an invisible mountain (the largest on earth), there is a description of the money used in this place: smooth, pearl-like orbs dug out of the invisible mountain’s soil and very difficult to find. So on Mount Analogue, the … would also be a price, a sum, exact amount of invisible cash.”

Designed by Yvonne Quirmbach.

#2006 #garethjames #johnkelsey #michaelkrebber #portikus #yvonnequirmbach
Yellow Movies
Tony Conrad
Published by Galerie Buchholz, Köln, 2008, 80 pages (colour ill.), 25 × 19 cm, English/German
Price: €28

Published on the occasion of two exhibitions, one at Galerie Daniel Buchholz in Cologne and the other at Greene Naftali in New York, that presented a group of works by artist, filmmaker and musician Tony Conrad entitled “Yellow Movies”. Alongside an introductory note by Tony Conrad that served as a press release for the two gallery exhibitions, the book contains a new text by Diedrich Diederichsen and a comprehensive documentation of all the “Yellow Movies” still in existence. The catalogue is produced in collaboration with Galerie Daniel Buchholz and Greene Naftali.

“Yellow Movies,” is the title of a series of works in which Conrad explored the intersection of film and painting. He conceived of these works not as paintings but as films of incredibly long duration, devoid of the action or narrative typically associated with Hollywood cinema. When the works were first debuted in 1973, Conrad referred to their installation as a “screening.” To make this work, and others like it, he painted a rectangle of cheap house paint on paper and framed it with a black border. Over time the central painted rectangle will slowly yellow, much in the same way film emulsion does. This yellowing happens with or without exposure to light; it is always “screening,” as the passage of time itself actively marks its surface.

Design by Yvonne Quirmbach.

#2008 #galeriebuchholz #tonyconrad #yvonnequirmbach