Critical theory publication on artists' books by Renee Riese Hubert and Judd D. Hubert. Includes a bibliography of writings on artists' books and an index. Artists include Telfer Stokes, Helen Douglas, Dieter Roth, Buzz Spector, Scott McCarney, Clifton Meador, Christian Boltanski, Annette Messager and others. [details]
Artist's book about the politicization of homosexuality as a political wedge by Republicans in the 1980s and early 1990s. "Public figure's homophobic quotes gleaned from print sources are revealed by flipping-out portraits of those quoted, shadowed by kissing boys. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with an exhibition at the Memorial Art Gallery at the University of Rochester from January 31 to March 30, 1986. The cover is die-cut and the book is bound dos-a-dos with the first section containing text and the second containing black-and-white illustrations. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held at Strathmore Hall Arts Center, Rockville, Maryland, December 1, 1989 - January 6, 1990. Traveled to Washington County Museum of Fine Arts, Hagerstown, Maryland, July 1 - August 26, 1990; Goucher College, Baltimore, Maryland, September 4 - October 8, 1990; Washington College, October 15 - November 11, 1990; Peninsula Fine Arts Center, Newport News, Virginia, November 17 - December 23, 1990. ... [details]
Named for a traditional American quilt square motif after which the book's pattern is styled. Consists of a collection of photographs by the artist, scanned and pieced together using Adobe Photoshop 4. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held November 10 - December 30, 1995. Essay by Mel Watkin. Artists include Larry Krone, Sally Alatalo, David Sandlin, Alfredo Jaar, Julie Chen, William Harroff, D. ... [details]
"Edward Ruscha's second book, Various Small Fires and Milk, (1964) was published in Los Angeles, California. It presents a series of photographs of small fires – cigarettes, matches, a stove, a barbecue – and surprises us with an unrelated image of a glass of milk as the last plate. ... [details]