|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Gwen Allen (Associate Professor, San Francisco State University)Publisher: MIT Press Ltd Imprint: MIT Press Dimensions: Width: 19.00cm , Height: 3.00cm , Length: 25.40cm Weight: 1.362kg ISBN: 9780262015196ISBN 10: 0262015196 Pages: 376 Publication Date: 04 March 2011 Recommended Age: From 18 years Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: No Longer Our Product Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews...amongst the most thorough discursions into the influence of little magazines upon late-twentieth-century visual culture...it is great to read for its well-researched history and analysis of a period when little magazines were testing the waters of art and publishing. Eye Beautifully written and brilliantly designed, Gwen Allen's book demonstrates how magazines from Avalanche and Art-Rite to File and Real Life opened a critical and creative alternative to the commercial gallery system and the mainstream art press. Best of all, Allen makes the magazines--and the history of conceptual art and collaborative publication--come alive again. Artists' Magazines is at once an indispensable visual archive, a superb scholarly feat, and a great read. Allen's ability to read artists' magazines with the same kind of close attention demanded by works of art is admirable, and the detailed appendix of journals founded between 1945 and 1989 is indispensable. No longer will artists' magazines be considered epiphenomena of artistic production. This book is essential reading for anyone who is concerned with art of the second half of the twentieth century. --Alexander Alberro, author of Conceptual Art and the Politics of Publicity Gwen Allen engagingly excavates the fertile ground of artists' magazines and brings key artifacts of historical innovation to light. Allen deftly details how, beginning in the early sixties, a range of artists and writers effectively activated the magazine form as vehicle and the page as medium, generating dynamic communities in the process. Allen's book is itself a page-turner! --Julie Ault, artist, writer, and cofounder of Group Material This study of several artists' magazines from the sixties to the eighties, centered mainly on the downtown New York art scene, usefully augments more familiar ways of regarding the events of that time. Most of these magazines were clearly nurseries for new talents that had no home in existing organs, and therefore took the initiative to make their work public on their own terms. Artists' Magazines is particularly valuable for the inclusion of extracts from interviews with editors and protagonists, who thereby put on record new information with the perspective of hindsight. Underlying the profiling of certain titles is an interwoven narrative that considers the functions and characteristics of the genre and its international significance during that period. --Clive Phillpot, writer, curator, and former art librarian Beautifully written and brilliantly designed, Gwen Allen's book demonstrates how magazines from Avalanche and Art-Rite to File and Real Life opened a critical and creative alternative to the commercial gallery system and the mainstream art press. Best of all, Allen makes the magazines--and the history of conceptual art and collaborative publication--come alive again. Artists' Magazines is at once an indispensable visual archive, a superb scholarly feat, and a great read. --Richard Meyer, Associate Professor of Art History and Director of The Contemporary Project, University of Southern California Author InformationGwen Allen is Associate Professor of History of Art at San Francisco University. She is the author of Artists' Magazines: An Alternative Space for Art (MIT Press). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |