KATE LEVANT, Untitled, 2013 [artist’s book]


KATE LEVANT, Untitled, 2013
19 x 14 cm
hand made artist’s book (nr 4/15), 16 pp., plasticized cover, hand written texts in pencil
(here including text of Leon Trotsky from 1924 and text of Kate Levant on ‘The malignant narcissist’)
edition 15
published by the artist, Amsterdam

 

 


 

 

KATE LEVANT, Untitled, 2013
19 x 14 cm
hand made artist’s book (nr 5/15), 12 pp. (sic), plasticized cover, hand written texts in pencil
(here including cover image and excluding 4 pages of texts by Leon Trotsky from 1924 and text of Kate Levant on ‘The malignant narcissist’)
edition 15
published by the artist, Amsterdam

CUT magazine about art, issue # 9, 2013

CUT magazine about art, issue # 9, 2013
29,7 x 21 cm
digital print, tipped in program of 2nd set of performances, 16 pp.
edition 80, incl. 6 signed by Sigurdur Gudmundsson

‘CUT magazine about art appears irregularly however often’ and is published by Galerie van Gelder. This issue opens with a part of the diary of Sigurdur Gudmundsson together with color reproductions of new sculptures he made in China. Further more a visual report of gallery performances by Roderick Hietbrink, Kate Levant, Ekko Lokkwa and Kroôt Juurak invited by Aditya Mandayam.

MARC BAUER, Untitled, 2013 [shopping paper bag]

MARC BAUER, Untiled, 2013
paper bag
signed, numbered
edition 100
published by Migros Museum, Zurich, Switzerland                            € 100,-   January 2013

Marc Bauer lives and works in Amsterdam and Berlin. His drawings, installations and videos suggest a mix of childhood memories and fantasies that repeatedly transgress taboos. His works unsettle a traditional understanding of morality. The lines in his drawings are so out of focus, in fact, that here and there they barely give shape and definition, blending and dissolving often into a mist of gray. With all their blurring and smudging, his drawings seem to emulate painting. In this, technically, Marc Bauer plots a new twist in the classical story of drawing versus painting. Here butterflies are symbolizing freedom or innocence, yet this depicted beauty of nature is paradoxically put in order and apparently framed.

ANAHITAR RAZMI, States, 2013

ANAHITA RAZMI, States, 2013
DVD, 36 min., loop
edition 10 + 2 AP, numbered, signed
published by Kunstverein Hannover, Hanover, Germany                       € 450,-    December 2013

Anahita Razmi has a special relationship with Iran, the homeland of her father. She connects with it on the level of a stranger, as she explains, “Somebody who is on the outside, but who at the same time finds herself in some kind of indefinable relationship with this alien place.” Here she focusses on the question of what happens when ‘Haram'(i.e. sinful in Islamic jurisprudence/forbidden) and ‘Halal'(i.e. lawful/permissable) are transplanted into a different cultural, as well as aesthetic, political context.

PETRIT HALILAJ, Poisened by men in need of some love, 2013

PETRIT HALILAJ, Poisened by men in need of some love, 2013
color photo, semi-transparant envelope
series of 1 (+ 1AP) of 80 different color photographic
signed
published by Wiels, Brussels, Belgium              € 200,-    December 2013

color photo in semi-transparant envelope (verso):

 

 

 

Singular photos in edition of 1 (+1AP) unique series of 80 photographs that are reproductions of images found in the archive of the former Museum of Natural History in Kosovo.

 

 

 

Examples of unique series of 80 photographs:

CHRISTIAN MARCLAY, Klak, Klak, Klak, 2012

CHRISTIAN MARCLAY, Klak, Klak, Klak, 2012
37 x 28,1 cm / 14 9/16 x 11 1/16 inches
photogravure
edition 25
published by Graphic Studio, Tampa, USA
temporarely not available

Continuing his exploration of collage and the visualization of sound this print utilize imagery from Manga comics (originally published in Japan and translated for the US market) and onomatopoeic words. Since the late 1990s, Marclay has created “graphic” scores, non-traditional forms of notation, for improvisational interpretation by musicians and vocal performers.

History of prices:
Graphic Studio, Tampa, USA     € 2.900,- / $ 4,000.- July 2013

GARY HUME, Misery, 2012

GARY HUME, Misery, 2012
49,8 x 32 cm
silver paper, acrylic paint, collage on hand made paper
series of 25 unique collages
numbered, signed
published by Monopol – Magazin für Kunst und Leben, Berlin
not available

Gary Hume once said: ‘The surface is all you get of me’, and one can see in this collage what he means given that his applied material is not only smooth and polished, but above all very present. He is known for paintings between figuration and abstraction on aluminum panels, which often feature colour combinations made with industrial paints.

Gary Hume was one of the very first of the Young British Artists to be embraced by the art establishment – the first to win the Jerwood Prize in 1997, the first to represent Britain at the Venice Biennale in 1999, the first to be elected to the Royal Academy in 2001.

History of price:
Monopol/Magazin für Kunst und Leben, Berlin  € 3.900,- December 2012

JONATHAN MONK, A controlled chance encounter, 2012

JONATHAN MONK, A controlled chance encounter, 2012
74 x 36 x 2 cm
spray paint, cardboard mailing wrap
signed, numbered
edition 14 + 4 AP
published by Monopol – Magazin für Kunst und Leben, Berlin, Germany
not available

Jonathan Monk has chosen to use the inner side of a cardboard mailing envelope after he walked in his studio over such a mailing wrap protecting the floor for paint stains. In this envelope a recent Monopol Magazine is send to the addressee. The 14 copies + 4 AP’s of the edition differ slightly from each other. The work is finished when the magazine and envelope is mailed and after receipt is opened, the magazine may be taken out and is either pinned on a wall, framed or merely put on the table. Jonathan Monk comments: ‘Eventuelle Dellen oder Kratzer auf dem Postweg machen das Werk nur schöner!’

History of price:
Monopol – Magazin für Kunst und Leben, Berlin € 900,- December 2012 (year of issue)