Single sided flyer announcing a series of concerts held at Bert Stern's Studio with support from Leo Castelli, New York City, May 25 - 28, 1968. Performances, artwork, including "Topsoil" by Alex Hay; "Nobody Knows the Trouble You've Seen" by Charles Silver and Edward Lonchike; "Code Poems" by Hannah Weiner with performances by Michael Kirby, Carter Ratcliff, Weiner, Erich Rogers, John Neal and assist of Tom Trengrove, Dan Graham and Marjorie Strider; "Song and Face Book" by Simone Whitman; "Linoleum" by Robert Rauschenberg featuring Tony Holder, Julie Martin, Steve Paxton, Rauschenberg, Dorothea Rockburne, Dick Van Buren, Simone Whitman with sculpture by Robert Breer and Maxfeeder by Max Neuhaus; "Duchamp Segment of Hans Richter's Dreams Money Can Buy" by Elaine Sturtevant with pianist Lorne Hollander; and "Hitch" by Tom Gormley" with Eldridge Cooke, Michael Kirby, Gormley and assist by Christos Gianakos and Barbara Gormley. [details]
Artist's project by Ira Joel Haber, artist and employee of Norbert J. Prager Associates, a company that dealt with mailed surveys. Haber asked 27 artists to check two sets of numbers "to share with them my immediate environment in some of its visual and process forms. ... [details]
Issue Number Five of the irregularly issued periodical "0 to 9" edited by Bernadette Mayer and Vito Hannibal Acconci. Contains texts "Sentences on Conceptual Art," by Sol LeWitt; "Seneca Songs," by Richard Johnny Jon and Jerome Rothenberg; "Non-Site Map of Mono Lake, California," by Robert Smithson; "Three Poetry Events," by John Perreault; "Lecture for a Group of Expectant People," by Yvonne Rainer; "Untitled," by Bernadette Mayer; "Sonnet XXI" and "Suite VII ('triplicates')" by Clark Coolidge; "Four Pages," by Vito Hannibal Acconci; "Poems," by Hannah Weiner; "The Disposable Transient Environment," by Les Levine; "Poem," by Bernadette Mayer; "Untitled," and "Untitled," by Adrian Piper; "The Fashion Show Poetry Event Essay," by Eduardo Costa, John Perreault, and Hannah Weiner; "The Conquest of Pizarro," by Kenneth Koch; "I Can Walk Through the World as Music," by Philip Corner; "Poems," by Jack Anderson; "Scramble," and "Sonnet," by John Perreault; "Act 3, Scene 4," by Vito Hannibal Acconci, "Warhol," by Clark Coolidge; "Firecrackers," by Rosemary Mayer; "Poem," by John Inslee; "Moon in Three Sentences," by Bernadette Mayer; and "Alternatives," by John Perreault. ... [details]
Poetry and fiction 'zine edited by Donald Phelps. Contributors to issue #8 include Jack Anderson, Harry Lewis, Donald Gardner, Robert Newman, Fielding Dawson, Jerrold Greenberg, Barbara Lewis, Murray Mednick, John Ceely, Joe Early, Ross Feld, Harriet Zinnes, David Evanier, Hannah Weiner, Michael Perkins, Richard Grossinger, Roy Finch, C. ... [details]
Four part set of ephemera housed in a printed envelope. Vol. 1 includes a double sided folded flyer / announcement for "Some Sky and Other Things for Newark," by Geoff Hendricks screened March 17, 1969 on WNDT Channel 13 featuring music by Kenneth Werner and contributions by Milan Knizak, Sioux Bettman, Laurie Franklin, Joan Friedman, John Hanson, Sarah Hole, Anita Jones, Mary Anne Kephart, Stan Magnan, Chas May, David Stackhouse, and Kathy Weintraub, with the help of Paul Ryan. ... [details]
Staple bound two sheet manifesto by Hannah Weiner drafted in June 1969. "My purpose is to explore methods of communication. I believe that, for these purposes, the current verbal system is outmoded, cumbersome, inaccurate and, in many cases, irrelevant. ... [details]
Single sided poster published in conjunction with happening / performance by Hannah Weiner, Marjorie Strider and John Perreault, "World Works," held March 21, 1970. "Artists & people everywhere are invited to do a street work in the street of their choice. ... [details]
Two press Release's and program for "The Fashion Show Poetry Event" held at the Center for Inter-American Relations, New York City, January 14, 1969. Organized and conceived of as an artwork in itself by Eduardo Costa, John Perreault, and Hannah Weiner. ... [details]
Press release for World Works (Street Works VI) a project where artists from all over the world were invited to make a "street work" in any street on March 21, 1970, at Noon. Organized by Marjorie Strider, John Perreault, and Hannah Weiner as a continuation of their "Street Works" project, documentation of the street works was solicited from participants to be part of a book to be published called "Book Works," claiming to potentially be the very first successful global art work. [details]
Exhibition brochure published in conjunction with show held at The Whitney Museum of Art, Downtown at Federal Reserve Plaza, New York, July 29 - September 23, 1988. Texts by Michael Waldron, Tom Hardy, and Ingrid Periz. ... [details]