Printed board card and metal coin published in conjunction with show held January 6 - February 3, 1996. Coin has gallery and show information printed on it. [details]
Artist's book and CD by Arthur Kopcke housed in a box slipcase. Book consists of the text of WAS IST DAS (1958/59) and the CD is a recording of Arthur Kopcke reading the text, recorded in New York in 1974 and restored in Berlin in 1996. [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held at Matthew Marks Gallery, May 3 - June 30, 1996. The essay featured in the catalogue, "On the Sculpture," by William Tucker, was oroginally published in Art Journal 48 (Fall 1989): 244. ... [details]
Catalog 23 distributed in 1996 by the late San Francisco book dealer Steven Leiber offering for sale North American networkers and dadazines: artist's stamps, mail art, publications by mail artists, and more. ... [details]
Photographs of a Martin Kippenberger and Elfie Semotan's wedding party. Dedicated to Martin Kippenberger. Edited by Jörg Schlick. [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held at the Gallery of Art, Johnson County Community College, Overland Park, Kansas, M arch 10 - April 17, 1996. Traveled to David Zwirner New York City, May 4 - June 8, 1996. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held January 17 - March 2, 1996. Essay by Donald Windham. [details]
Single sided card / announcement published in conjunction with a documentary screening held September 27, 1996. Directed by Barbro Schultz, produced by Experiments in Art and Technology, and presented by Julie Martin and Billy Klüver. [details]
Single sided postcard and a stick of gum produced in [1996] advertising the $10 a month BBS [bulletin board system] service founded by Wolfgang Staehle called The Thing International, "an international bulletin board service offering discussions on art and critical theory, a virtual gallery of on-line projects, database archives, Internet E-mail, and live conferencing. ... [details]
Monograph on the work of Henry Darger with text by John M. MacGregor. Illustrated throughout in black and white and color. Text in French. [details]