Archivi tag: Printed matter

“flashpoint! protest photography in print”: book + conversation @ printed matter, january 21

Flashpoint! Protest Photography in Print

Conversation with Olga Yatskevich, Russet Lederman and Lesley A. Martin
TODAY, January 21, 2025
6–8PM

Join us for a conversation between Olga Yatskevich, Russet Lederman and Lesley A. Martin on occasion of the release of Flashpoint! Protest Photography in Print, 1950-Present, a new anthology from 10×10 Photobooks.

Flashpoint: protest photography 1950-present

The past seventy-five years have been a time of extreme social and cultural transformations worldwide. Political and social upheaval, often contentious, disorienting and polarizing, is now a daily reality. We live in a world rife with ideological and tribal conflicts. Since its inception, photography has captured defining historical moments, serving as either a tool or a document of protest—or both. Flashpoint! Protest Photography in Print, 1950-Present, does a deep dive into protest photography in print through a global selection of photobooks, zines, posters, pamphlets, independent journals and alternative newspapers.

book: https://www.printedmatter.org/catalog/67472/

conversation: https://www.printedmatter.org/programs/events/2010

“flashpoint! protest photography in print”: book + conversation @ printed matter, january 21

Flashpoint! Protest Photography in Print

Conversation with Olga Yatskevich, Russet Lederman and Lesley A. Martin
January 21, 2025
6–8PM

Join us for a conversation between Olga Yatskevich, Russet Lederman and Lesley A. Martin on occasion of the release of Flashpoint! Protest Photography in Print, 1950-Present, a new anthology from 10×10 Photobooks.

Flashpoint: protest photography 1950-present

The past seventy-five years have been a time of extreme social and cultural transformations worldwide. Political and social upheaval, often contentious, disorienting and polarizing, is now a daily reality. We live in a world rife with ideological and tribal conflicts. Since its inception, photography has captured defining historical moments, serving as either a tool or a document of protest—or both. Flashpoint! Protest Photography in Print, 1950-Present, does a deep dive into protest photography in print through a global selection of photobooks, zines, posters, pamphlets, independent journals and alternative newspapers.

book: https://www.printedmatter.org/catalog/67472/

conversation: https://www.printedmatter.org/programs/events/2010

an exhibition at printed matter: “out of the grid: italian zines (1978–2006)”

Printed Matter is pleased to present Out of the Grid: Italian Zines (1978–2006), an exhibition (also from a —sadly sold-out— book) bringing together a selection of historical underground publications that exemplify the aesthetic language and approaches of various subcultural movements across Italy. The exhibition is developed by artist Dafne Boggeri and photographer Alien, drawn from the research for the publication of the same name. The publication, published by Les presses du réel (2023), was created by Boggeri for SPRINT and O’ non-profit association, in collaboration with Sara Serighelli and Marta Zanoni.

The work on view—including original fanzines, facsimiles, in-progress materials and related tools—traces the ways in which independent publishing in Italy was shaped by social, political, aesthetic, and technological shifts across three decades. The zines are of an era characterized by Boggeri as ‘post-movement to pre-internet3.0’—a period of time shaped by the loss of collective political purpose following the uprisings of ‘68, the subsequent rise of 80s punk mentality, and a lively print culture that thrived before digital space became a primary mode for communication and the dissemination of ideas. This outpouring of creativity was captured by mimeographs, photocopiers and offset machines, resulting in printed works that articulate a shared language around subcultural identity, as well as an evolving visual and typographic sensibility, often grounded in cut-and-paste.

The publications on display include projects like the Metal zine Fireball, queer productions Fuck bloc, PH+TXT and Clit Rocket, and role-playing game zines like Spell Book and Crom! alongside their original paste-ups. Also on view are some international publications that played a pivotal role in shaping local movements and served as precursors to the emergence of a distinct Italian scene.

On the walls, metal offset plates from the printing of Out of the Grid offer insight into the materiality of industrial print production in contrast to a DIY zine-making.

A selection of posters draws attention to scanned fragments from the zines themselves—amplified illustrations, slogans, and typographic experiments that convey the raw energy and attitude of the movements they represent.

On occasion of the presentation, Printed Matter releases ‘Mattone,’ an A2-sized poster by Boggeri available for free takeaway. The work features a brick-texture borrowed from a found 1980s Letratone sheet, once used by architects and graphic designers for dry transfers of letters, numbers, and motifs. The wall is reminiscent of typical gathering spots for young people across Italy, known colloquially as the ‘muretto’ (‘small wall’) and evokes references such as the iconic 1976 Ramones album cover and historic divisions like the Berlin Wall, serving as a potent symbol of rebellion and counterculture.

Special thanks to Roberto Di Meglio and Roberto Rog Gigli for lending their original material.

This exhibition is supported by the National Endowment for the Arts.

The exhibition graphic uses a cropped image from the cover of the zine Clit Rocket n.03, 2004, edited by Veruska Outlaw.

https://slowforward.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/out-of-the-grid-zines.pdf
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oct 22nd, a conversation with alessandro de francesco @ printed matter chelsea

cliccare per ingrandire

new york, sept 5th: “skank bloc bologna: alternative art spaces since 1977” (mousse publishing), by roberto pinto and francesco spampinato

click to enlarge

Skank Bloc Bologna: Alternative Art Spaces since 1977 is edited by Roberto Pinto and Francesco Spampinato, with texts by Roberto Pinto, Francesco Spampinato, Andrea Lissoni, Lara De Lena and Davide Da Pieve.

https://www.printedmatter.org/programs/events/1906

Francesco Spampinato is an associate professor of Contemporary Art History at the Department of the Arts, University of Bologna. His research concerns contemporary art practices and visual studies, with a concentration on the relationship between contemporary art, media, and technology. He has authored the books Come Together: The Rise of Cooperative Art and Design (Princeton Architectural Press, 2015), Can You Hear Me? Music Labels by Visual Artists (Onomatopee, 2015), Art Record Covers (TASCHEN, 2017), and Art vs. TV: A Brief History of Contemporary Artists’ Responses to Television (2022), and edited various volumes including GMM – Giovanotti Mondani Meccanici. Computer Comics 1984–1987 (NERO, 2021), The Pandemic Visual Regime: Visuality and Performativity in the Covid-19 Crisis (Punctum Books, 2023), and Skank Bloc Bologna: Alternative Art Spaces since 1977 (Mousse, 2024).

printed matter publisher work grant: application due sept. 18

https://printedmatterinc.submittable.com/submit/300137/printed-matter-publisher-work-grant

Attention independent artists’ book publishers — applications for the Publisher Work Grant close no more on September 9 but on September 18. Don’t miss out on this opportunity to receive capacity-building funds to sustain your press and future book projects!

The Publisher Work Grant is an annual cycle of unrestricted grants awarded to three artists’ book publishers, made possible with the generous support of Wagner Foundation. Applications will be reviewed by Printed Matter and a guest jury, taking into account the imprint’s accomplishments in past work, the strength of upcoming projects outlined, and the potential impact of the award.

Three awardees will receive:
— An unrestricted grant of $10,000 USD
— A featured exhibitor presence at a forthcoming Printed Matter NY or LA Art Book Fair

Applications are open via Submittable through September 18, 2024, 11:59PM EST. There is no cost to apply. Please read the FAQ to learn more about eligibility and requirements. We encourage you to share with artists and publishers within your community.

the ‘printed matter’ publisher work grant, a new annual cycle of unrestricted grants available to artists’ book publishers

– read the full text here: https://www.printedmatter.org/workgrant

– the grant is open to both US-based and international publishers

– no application fee

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“out of the grid” @ printed matter, march 27th

@ printed matter https://www.printedmatter.org/programs/events/1823

Join us for an event exploring OUT OF THE GRID published by les presses du réel. The project presents a critical selection of 100 Italian zines from 1978 to 2006 that display a broad spectrum of social, political, aesthetic, and technological changes in the use of language and communication strategies across the territory of self publishing. Project editor and designer Dafne Boggeri together with book photo editor Ilenia Arosio will present on the project

yoko ono @ printed matter

https://www.printedmatter.org/catalog/tables/31482

A pioneering conceptual artist and founding member of the Fluxus movement, Yoko Ono has produced a diverse and ever-expanding body of work since she first emerged on the downtown avant garde art scene in the early 1960s. This presentation gives a broad overview of the artist’s career—which now spans more than five decades—and charts her growing influence in the fields of photography, installation, painting, conceptual art, music, and performance. Included are artists’ publications such as The Other Rooms, a sequel to the groundbreaking artists’ book Grapefruit, and the experimental narrative “Spare Room.” These works are presented alongside a selection of exhibition catalogs from around the globe.

Ono’s artists’ books and related publications have had a longtime presence at Printed Matter. The artist has been an active and enduring participant, supporter and advocate of the organization for decades. Grapefruit was amongst Printed Matter’s earliest inventory when the organization was located on Lispenard Street. In the early 2000s, Printed Matter, at that time on 22nd Street, staged an exhibition curated by then-Assistant Manager Amanda Keeley which featured scores of Ono’s artists’ books, posters, printed ephemera, and artists’ multiples. In 2010, Printed Matter was a recipient of Yoko Ono’s second annual Courage in the Arts Awards, alongside the Guerilla Girls and Émile Zola, posthumously.

Yoko Ono’s radical imagination and provocative wit are on full display within the pages of her wide-ranging creations, which serve as blueprints for building a more open and inventive global society.

jenny holzer @ printed matter

https://www.printedmatter.org/catalog/tables/19351

https://mailchi.mp/printedmatter/honoring-jenny-holzer-plus-new-special-edition-postcards-from-the-artist

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malte bartsch: the time machine network (2013-ongoing)

The Time Machine @ Printed Matter, Chelsea. Click to enlarge

As long as the red button is held, the Time Machine TM will print a receipt. The longer the button is pressed, the more extensive the printout becomes.

The Time Machine TM Network was launched in 2013 by artist Malte Bartsch. As part of the project, 69 time machines have been positioned in a total of 4 countries.

A total of 25,496 individual artistic works (receipts) were created in which the button was pressed for 157,566 seconds.

Each installation is:
thermal printer, button, person, time, 25 cm × 31 cm × 13 cm, 2013 – ongoing.

The machines are available here:
https://tm.maltebartsch.de/

Also read:
https://www.printedmatter.org/catalog/49231/

billy o’callaghan: “galileo’s drawings of our sun’s spots (1612)”

Galileo Galilei drew our Sun’s spots at about the same time each day over the course of 37 days in June and July of 1612 (skipping two days and yielding 35 drawings). He could not look directly at our Sun without significant damage to his eyes. His solution was to use the latest technology – a telescope – to project an image of the Sun onto a piece of prepared paper. Galileo drew a circle with a compass and positioned the paper so that the Sun aligned with the circle, allowing him to draw in the sunspots from a consistent perspective each day. A casual review of these drawings makes evident that our Sun rotates, and at a much slower rate than Earth’s 24-hour cycle. This cascading accordion presents those 35 drawings, side-by-side, in sequence, across 70 pages. This book may be read by by flipping through the pages, like a normal book, or played, like a flip-book crossed with a slinky, to animate one full rotation of our Sun (back and forth).

https://www.printedmatter.org/catalog/59749/

(take a look at this too)

“zone c”, by rosaire appel

ZONE C is a new visual book from artist Rosaire Appel. “The combination of drawings and asemic writing describe a location that alludes to the physical world as much as to realms of thought and emotion. If you know A and B, will you know C? The book contains a lot of noise, second thoughts and revisions. It’s the opposite of calm”.
Available Printed Matter and Amazon

concrete weekend at the artist’s institute: 11-12 dec., 2015

in New York (11-13 Dec.)

CONCRETE WEEKEND AT THE
ARTIST’S INSTITUTE

LIBRARY
DEC 11–12, 12:00– 6:00 PM
The Stockholm-based publishing platform OEI and artist Fia Backström present a temporary library of OEI publications and other printed matter related to avant-garde Swedish poetry of the 1960s and 70s. The library’s lenders will be on-site Saturday afternoon to share selections from their collections.

SOUND POETRY WITH JAMES HOFF AND C. SPENCER YEH
DEC 11, 7:00 PM
C. Spencer Yeh presents a performative elaboration on SOLO VOICE I-X, a collection of voice-based recordings published by Primary Information. Recognizing a faithful recital as being physically impossible, the concept of “playing a record in its entirety” is instead used as a springboard for a new composition working within and literally on top of the original pieces. Additionally, James Hoff will play a selection of audio works relating to the Swedish Sound Poetry movement in the 1960s.

CECILIA GRÖNBERG & JONAS (J) MAGNUSSON ON OEI
DEC 12, 4:00 PM
OEI magazine was founded in 1999 and has published 70 issues. Beautifully designed and thoroughly researched, the magazine is dedicated to extra-disciplinary spaces and de-disciplinizing moments – experimental forms of thinking, montages between poetry, art, philosophy, film, and documents; editorial enunciations, aesthetic technologies, and alternative historiographies. Join OEI editors Cecilia Grönberg and Jonas (J) Magnusson for a presentation on their work in the temporary library.

ÖYVIND FAHLSTRÖM FESTIVAL
DEC 13, 2:30 – 6:00 PM · A day of talks, live readings, and listening sessions dedicated to the work of the founder of the Swedish concrete poetry movement, Öyvind Fahsltröm (1928-1976). Including the exhibition of never before seen preparatory drawings for his ambitious painting Ade-Ledic-Nander from the collection of Jasper Johns. Participants include Antonio Sergio Bessa, Director of Curatorial and Education Programs at the Bronx Museum of the Arts and author of Öyvind Fahlström: The Art of Writing and Fahlström scholar Maibritt Borgen. A full schedule of events will be announced next week. Co-organized by Antonio Sergio Bessa and Maibritt Borgen.

ST. LUCY’S DAY CELEBRATION
DEC 13, 6:00 – 9:00 PM
The Öyvind Fahlström festival will conclude with an evening celebration of the Swedish winter solstice holiday St. Lucy’s Day with traditional food and refreshments.

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The Artist’s Institute
163 Eldridge Street, NYC 10002
http://theartistsinstitute.org/