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After You’ve Read This You’ll Want To Pucker Up
Howard Productions
[Sydney]: [Howard Productions], No date.A collection of 3 Howard magazines, being Australian men’s pulps filled with salacious pinups and some men’s magazine articles including words on Jean Spangler, rugby, grand prix, and sexual interests. Contains advertisements for various Australian adult bookstores, sex shops, and mail order businesses in Sydney and Melbourne.
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Are You (Really) Fun To Live With
Jim Vikers-Willis
Melbourne: Neway Book Publications, 1973.The condensed results of a seven year survey into sexual relationships. Published alongside the Australian censoring of the Swedish sex education film ‘Language of Love’ (Swedish: Ur karlekens sprak), the author also discusses Australian prudishness. The jacket show still from the film and the verso contains sex education details and a list of venereal disease clinics in Australian capital cities.
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Tokyo Illustrators Society: The 1st Exhibition
Tokyo Illustrators Society
Tokyo: Tokyo Illustrators Society, 1989.Catalogue for the first Tokyo Illustrators Society exhibition. Includes work by 73 Japanese artists including Akira Uno, Hajime Sorayama, Toshio Saeki, and many others, with accompanying short biography and portrait photograph. Includes list of artists with contact details. Rare, unrecorded in OCLC, 1 in CiNii.
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[100 Picture Books that Impressed 100 People], 1978-97
Akira Ono
Tokyo: Heibonsha, 1998.Mook (magazine book) on 100 illustrated children’s books.
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An Exhibition of Kabuki Stage Costumes
Shochiku; Tetsuya Okazaki
Tokyo: Shochiku, 1998. -
The Doodler’s Diary
Jimmy Dean Enterprises
Melbourne: Jimmy Dean Enterprises, No date.1950s unused diary calendar with cheeky text and illustrations filling the margins.
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Women At Work ’85
Glen Betz
Townsville: Perc Tucker Regional Gallery, 1985.Catalogue for an exhibition, ‘An Image of Herself’ and performance ‘Music and Me’. The third Women at Work exhibition at Perc Tucker. Full list of artists; Maria Rita Barbagallo, Ranna Hale, Anne M. Lord, Barbara Pierce, Anneke Silver, Judy Watson, Jane Wheatley, Margaret Wilson, and Grace Cochrane. Together with a list of watercolours by Harriet Jan Jeville-Rolfe from the collection of the Queensland Art Gallery.
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Led Zeppelin Vinyl: The Essential Collection
Ross Halfin
London: Reel Art Press, 2021.“Led Zeppelin released only eight studio albums and no singles over the course of their 12-year career, but to date there are more than 1,000 official singles and 2,000 LPs in the market. This definitive volume illustrates in full colour some of the rarest and most interesting vinyl releases, including one-of-a-kind rarities, bizarre regional variations, official albums and bootleg recordings of legendary concerts, sometimes featuring handmade artwork or coloured vinyl.All the vinyl, labels and covers have been documented by photographer Ross Halfin in superb detail, and are annotated with details of their release. A labour of love, Led Zeppelin Vinyl is a must-have for fans of the group as well as for any vinyl enthusiast.” (publisher’s blurb)
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Everything Lost: The Latin American Notebook of William S. Burroughs
Williams S. Burroughs
Columbus: The Ohio State University Press, 2017.“In late summer 1953, as he returned to Mexico City after an expedition through Latin America, William Burroughs began a notebook of reflections. This notebook, the sole survivor from that period, reveals Burroughs as a man staring down personal catastrophe and visions of looming cultural disaster.” (publisher’s blurb)
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Imperial Youth Review: The Sex Issue
Garrett Cook; Chris Kelso
Birstall: Dog Horn Publishing, 2016.“Years in the making, this colossal, cubist perspective on sexuality features not only never-before-seen work by William Burroughs but contributions from Violet le Voit, Annie Sprinkle, Tom Bradley, Jeff Burk, Jennifer Robin, Collette Torres and multitudes more. From space bear sex to a loving reflection on BDSM life, from a portrait of polyamorous divorce to an analysis of midget porn, we have travelled through space and time and beyond the grave to bring you our Giant-sized Sex Issue-the beginning of a new era.” (publisher’s blurb)
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1960s Nichigeki Music Hall Program: Pompous Nights in Pink Port
Nichigeki Music Hall
Tokyo: Nichigeki Music Hall, 1961.Program for a 1960s topless revue at the Nichigeki Music Hall, also known as the Nihon-Gekijo, an iconic Tokyo theatre from the 1930s up until 1981 when it was demolished for redevelopment. Post-war the theatre hosted burlesque shows and motion picture features for American servicemen and tourists.
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1960s Nichigeki Music Hall Program: Adults Only Of Course!
Nichigeki Music Hall
Tokyo: Nichigeki Music Hall, 1960.Program for a 1960s topless revue at the Nichigeki Music Hall, also known as the Nihon-Gekijo, an iconic Tokyo theatre from the 1930s up until 1981 when it was demolished for redevelopment. Post-war the theatre hosted burlesque shows and motion picture features for American servicemen and tourists.
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1960s Nichigeki Music Hall Program: Pink Lady on the White Shore
Nichigeki Music Hall
Tokyo: Nichigeki Music Hall, 1964.Program for a 1960s topless revue at the Nichigeki Music Hall, also known as the Nihon-Gekijo, an iconic Tokyo theatre from the 1930s up until 1981 when it was demolished for redevelopment. Post-war the theatre hosted burlesque shows and motion picture features for American servicemen and tourists.
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1960s Nichigeki Music Hall Program: A Snail’s Rhapsody
Nichigeki Music Hall
Tokyo: Nichigeki Music Hall, 1969.Program for a 1960s topless revue at the Nichigeki Music Hall, also known as the Nihon-Gekijo, an iconic Tokyo theatre from the 1930s up until 1981 when it was demolished for redevelopment. Post-war the theatre hosted burlesque shows and motion picture features for American servicemen and tourists.
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1960s Nichigeki Music Hall Program: The Legend of the White Serpent
Nichigeki Music Hall
Tokyo: Nichigeki Music Hall, 1960.Program for a 1960s topless revue at the Nichigeki Music Hall, also known as the Nihon-Gekijo, an iconic Tokyo theatre from the 1930s up until 1981 when it was demolished for redevelopment. Post-war the theatre hosted burlesque shows and motion picture features for American servicemen and tourists.
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1970s Nichigeki Music Hall Program: Pink & Hot ’70
Nichigeki Music Hall
Tokyo: Nichigeki Music Hall, 1969.Program for a 1970s topless revue (program printed late December 1969) at the Nichigeki Music Hall, also known as the Nihon-Gekijo, an iconic Tokyo theatre from the 1930s up until 1981 when it was demolished for redevelopment. Post-war the theatre hosted burlesque shows and motion picture features for American servicemen and tourists.
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1970s Nichigeki Music Hall Program: [Mona Lisa’s Laughter]
Nichigeki Music Hall
Tokyo: Nichigeki Music Hall, 1973.Program for a 1970s topless revue at the Nichigeki Music Hall, also known as the Nihon-Gekijo, an iconic Tokyo theatre from the 1930s up until 1981 when it was demolished for redevelopment. Post-war the theatre hosted burlesque shows and motion picture features for American servicemen and tourists.
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1970s Nichigeki Music Hall Program: [Your Skin is Mont Blanc Snow]
Nichigeki Music Hall
Tokyo: Nichigeki Music Hall, 1972.Program for a 1970s topless revue at the Nichigeki Music Hall, also known as the Nihon-Gekijo, an iconic Tokyo theatre from the 1930s up until 1981 when it was demolished for redevelopment. Post-war the theatre hosted burlesque shows and motion picture features for American servicemen and tourists.
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Paris-Tokyo Golden’60 Teijin Fashion Fair
Teijin
Tokyo: Teijin, 1960.Program for a 1960s fashion show in Tokyo featuring Parisian models Nicole Crassat, Chrstine Saunier, Laure Nicole, Anne-Marie Bocheux, and Marianne Leroy-Beaulieu. Rare, unrecorded in OCLC or CiNii.
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The Context
Alexandro Segade
New York: Primary Information, 2020.“The Context reimagines the superhero comic book as a queer parable of belonging. The story follows six powerful beings from different worlds who find themselves inexplicably adrift together in an otherwise lifeless void: Biopower, Cathexis, Barelife, Objector, Drives, and Form. The characters, each named for a concept drawn from critical theory, engage one another in skintight fight scenes that often look like sex scenes, and philosophical debates masked as exposition.” (publisher’s blurb)