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Past In Reverse: Contemporary Art of East Asia
Betti-Sue Hertz
San Diego: San Diego Museum of Art, 2004. -
Monuments to Nature
Patricia Leighton
Hamburg: Jahr-Holding, 2002.Catalogue of work by environmental artist Patricia Leighton. This copy inscribed by Leighton.
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Korean 12 Muse
Seung Hyo Jang
Seoul: Sejong Center, 2004.Catalogue for an exhibition of humanoid robot sculpture. Rare, not recorded in OCLC at November, 2020.
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Kilimanjaro 12: Thinking of Collective
Hauser & Wirth; Roman Signer; Damo Suzuki
London: Kilimanjaro, 2011.“Kilimanjaro is a vibrant printed space dedicated to visual culture and editorial experimentation, and aims to generate an environment in which ideas reason with visual pleasure. Contributors stem from different art disciplines including film, fashion, photography and contemporary culture. Issue 12 features Hauser & Wirth, Roman Signer and Damo Suzuki.” (publisher’s blurb)
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Printed Web #1
Paul Soullelis
New York: Library of the Printed Web, 2014.“Featuring new web-to-print work by Joachim Schmid, Penelope Umbrico, Mishka Henner, Clement Valla, David Horvitz, Chris Alexander, Christian Bök, Benjamin Shaykin, & and Paul Soulellis. Texts by Hito Steyerl and Kenneth Goldsmith.” (publisher’s blurb)
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Heath Course Pak
Tan Lin
Denver: Counterpath, 2012.“Like its predecessor, HEATH (plagiarism/outsource), Heath Course Pak exists somewhere between a Project Gutenberg version of Samuel Pepys Diary and a minute-to-minute news feed and blog of Heath Ledger’s death. Sad, appropriated, lyrical and confused, the book contains a brief history of recent performance art, a legal defense of plagiarism, the diary of a poetry workshop at the Asian American Writer’s Workshop, an MP3 protest song, and an examination of SMS and GMS technologies as distribution networks for human sadness. Multi-authored, and with numerous text blocks and photos, the revised edition contains 52 pages of new material, an interview, an annotated text, autographed photos of Jackie Chan and Heath Ledger, e-PostIts, COAs, and coffee/tea stains.” (publisher’s blurb)
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Compost Index
Gabriel Kuri
Amsterdam: Roma Publications, 2005.“Book about the work and thoughts of the Mexican artist Gabriel Kuri, published in co-production with CoNaCultA, with support from kurimanzutto, Mexico City and Franco Noero Gallery, Torino. Texts by Dieter Roelstraete, and Maxine Kopsa.” (publisher’s blurb)
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YXICOOO
Yuko Kanatani
Tokyo: Disk Union, 2014. -
Kamano Man
Ruki Fame
Brisbane: Andrew Baker Art Dealer, 2016.Exhibition catalogue.
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184 Frog Poems: 184 Boss Drovers
Robert MacPherson
Brisbane: Institute of Modern Art, 2001. -
Imaginary Accord
Aileen Burns; Madeleine King; Johan Lundh
Brisbane: Institute of Modern Art, 2017.“Is an art institution only an imagined entity–a temporary constellation of agreements, negotiations, and arrangements–or is it something more fixed? This publication both documents and reinvigorates the fortieth anniversary activities of the Institute of Modern Art (IMA): the exhibition Imaginary Accord; the nine-part lecture series and two-day symposium, What Can Art Institutions Do?; and the online archive, 40years.ima.org.au, that charts the IMA and its immediate historical context. This series of creative and critical projects explored the historical mission of one of Australia’s oldest public galleries, while imagining what the founding principles of a contemporary art institution could mean today and for the future.” (publisher’s blurb)
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Stuart Ringholt: Kraft
Charlotte Day; Robert Leonard
Melbourne: Monash University Museum of Art, 2014.“As part of his diverse artistic practice, Stuart Ringholt leads audiences on naturist gallery tours, anger workshops, and participatory performances that invoke embarrassment, fear, laughter, and love. He also makes videos, absurdist sculptures, painted mirrors, and collages.”
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Simon Starling: In Speculum
Max Delany
Melbourne: Monash University Museum of Art, 2013.“English artist Simon Starlingwho won the prestigious Turner Prize in 2005is celebrated for his erudite projects. His works explore the legacies of modernism and globalisation by addressing peculiar histories surrounding specific objects and sites of art, design, and science. While they mine real histories, there is always something unexpected, excessive, witty, perverse, serendipitous, convoluted, or crafty about them.”
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The Other North
Jesse Jones
Berlin: Sternberg Press, 2017. -
Frontier Imaginaries Edition No 1: Frontier
Vivian Ziheri
Amsterdam: Frontier Imaginaries, 2016.“Frontier Imaginaries Ed No1 offers a chance to reflect upon how, why, and with what tools locally-focused projects can be meaningfully connected across vastly separate geographies. Are publications valuable means of transmitting the specific work of an exhibition across time and territories? Do more recent communications technologies offer other tools that may be more useful? From the art-making perspective, what can be learned and/or contributed to the approaches of current social movements that strive to effect local change within systems of globalised power-relations?”
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Patrick Staff: The Foundation
Aileen Burns; Johan Lundh
Milan: Mousse Publishing, 2015.“This book documents the eponymous work by British artist, Patrick Staff, presented at the Chisenhale Gallery, London; Spike Island, Bristol; Contemporary Art Gallery, Vancouver; and the Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane. The film combines footage shot at the Tom of Finland Foundation in Los Angeles–home to the archive of the erotic artist and gay icon and a community of people that care for it–with choreographic sequences shot within a specially constructed set.” (publisher’s blurb)
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Peter Madden
Evie Franzidis
Brisbane: Institute of Modern Art, 2011.“New Zealand collage artist Peter Madden draws much of his imagery from old issues of National Geographic. He plunders and reworks the magazines discredited empire of signs to forge his own. His surrealistic pictures, objects, and installationswith their watchmaker detail and intensityhave been described as microcosms and intricate kingdoms of flying forms Madden has one foot in the vanitas still-life tradition and the other in new-age thinking. On the one hand, he is death obsessed: a master of morbid decoupage. (Moths and butterfliessymbols of transient lifeabound. His assemblages in bell jars suggest some Victorian taxidermist killing time in his parlour.) On the other hand, with his flocks, schools, and swarms of quivering animal energy, he revels in biodiversity and magic. Maddens works manage to be at once morbid and abundant, rotting and blooming, creepy and fey. This book serveys Maddens work of the last ten years.” Essay by Tessa Laird. Interview by Robert Leonard.