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OHO GROUP. - Suvakovic, Misko:

The Clandestine Histories of the OHO Group - A Cold War Era Transgressive and Subversive Artistic Practice - Transgression, sexuality, and politics in the pursuits of the OHO Grop and the movement OHO-Katalog1965-1971.

Kirkegaards Antikvariat
kir43739
Ljublijana, Slovenia, Zavod P.A.R.A.S.I.T.E, 2010. 8vo in original wraps. 150 pp. Illustrated. Wear to cover edges.

First edition. "The book ‘The Clandenstine Histories of the OHO Group’ holds a new light to the problem of the character of neo-avant-garde excess and the experimental work of the OHO Group – leading neo-avantgard group in the region – in the second half of the 1960s. The book focuses on the practices, works, and instances with which – under the conditions of socialistic modernism – the OHO Group problematised, provoked, and destroyed the socialistic order of the vision of the autonomy of art. The book exposes the activity of the OHO Group (1966-1971) and of the movement OHO-Catalogue (1966-1970) in the context of Slovene national culture, Yugoslavian socialistic culture and international youth culture of the late 1960s and early 1970s, particularly in relation to the following paradigms: 1.‘Transgression’ – in terms of the breach in relation to Catholic traditions and morals as well as to the socialist work ethic that the young artists carried out at that time; 2.‘Sexuality’ – in style with the Zeitgeist and in connection with the worldwide sexual revolution on one side and the use of sexuality as a critical and subversive instrument rising up against the opportunism and hypocrisy of real-socialism on the other. 3.‘Politics’ – the provoking and mixing of practices from contexts – which were allowed by politics – to the context of a serious understanding and practice of the revolution and emancipation from ‘the everyday grey’ of real-socialism. At the end of the 1960s, the writer of new arts and activist, Bora Cosic, wrote about the OHO Group: ‘I call it a movement. The group looks like something static, something rooted, something buttoned up. The Group still holds firm, just like a machine-gun bunker; that a movement can operate as an illegal organisation, equipped with medicine, good will, and a feeling of freedom.’ The OHO Group was created in an atmosphere of new artistic practices: from the aesthetic, philosophical and social movements of reism, structuralism, poststructuralism and Tel Quel across to the New Left, hippy culture all the way to arte povere, body art, experimental film, conceptualism, processualism, post-object arts and ludism (...)"
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Nylig lagt til av Kirkegaards Antikvariat

Hansen, Thorkild:
Kirkegaards Antikvariat
kir03266
London, Collins, 1964. Original full cloth, no dustjacket. 381 pp. A sticker to inner cover, else clean. First British edition.
I CHING:
Kirkegaards Antikvariat
kir45339
Strubes Forlag, 1988 (1981). Hardcover. 344 sider. Omslag med lidt brugsspor. Richard Wilhelms udgave på dansk.
HAVE, Henrik:
Kirkegaards Antikvariat
kir59943
Edition After Hand, 1973. 8vo in printed illustrated wraps as issued. (52) pp. Illustrated throughout. Cover discolored with some foxing. First edition. Rare concrete poetry item.
WARHOL, Andy
Kirkegaards Antikvariat
kir59946
Moderna Museet, 1969 (1968). 4to. Original wrappers as issued. (638 pp.). Illustrated throughout with photos by Billy Name and Stephen Eric Shore among others. Very worn copy but complete. First edition, second printing, acceptable reference copy of the famous Warhol Stockholm-catalog - this most iconic of artists books. The catalogue for Warhol's first major European retrospective. Illustrated card covers, with a design after Warhol's 'Flowers' silk-screen. 614 black-and-white reproductions, divided into three sections: black-and-white reproductions of Warhol's work, followed by two sections of photographs of Warhol and his associates by Billy Name and Stephen Shore. "“As soon as the Factory opened, it became a hyperactive place. People began flocking there in droves for parties, to interview Andy, to take pictures, to make films, to become a part of it... Billy [Name] ran it like a theatre, vacuuming up after each performance and continually repainting the tinfoiling. He also became the Factory’s official recorder when Andy gave him his 35-mm camera and Billy began taking great photographs of the action, which he developed in an impromptu darkroom converted from one of the toilets. These photographs, as collected in the 1968 Moderna Muséet catalogue of Warhol’s first European retrospective in Stockholm, constitute the best visual documentary of the Silver Factory.” -Voctor Bockris, Warhol: The Biography. Warhol’s Moderna Muséet catalog “is a fine example of the catalogue-as-artist's-book, a form that ostensibly began with the Dadaists and Surrealists, and is produced with some of the roughest reproductions ever seen, which are entirely appropriate, and supplemented by a long section of Factory snapshots by Billy Name. The genre was revitalized by the Pop movement, and Warhol in particular, which demonstrates his position as a latter-day Dadaist. The Moderna Museet publication especially had a great influence upon Japanese photography in the late 1960s and 1970s, particularly the photobooks of the Provoke era” (Parr and Badger, Vol II). Published first by Moderna Muséet, Sweden, in 1968 as an exhibition catalogue for the show "Andy Warhol" at the Moderna Muséet in Stockholm, February - March, 1968, this the second printing, identical to the first.
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Hansell, Mike:
Kirkegaards Antikvariat
kir59948
Oxford University Press, 2007. Hardcover, w jacket. VIII, 268 pp. With illustrations. Fine clean copy. 1st edition.
Steinbach, Haim:
Kirkegaards Antikvariat
kir55237
Copenhagen: SMK - 2013. 8vo in stapled wraps as issued. 30 pages. Text in English and Danish. Illustrated. Fine copy. 1. ed. "What are quirky salt and pepper shakers doing next to some of the main masterpieces of art history? Haim Steinbach is deeply interested in objects and how they are displayed. In this exhibition he challenged our perception of the art museum as an institution by showing important works of art side by side with small everyday objects. In his works Haim Steinbach arranges objects from all sorts of contexts on shelves and walls and in display units. In fact we all collect things and place them next to each other – on a windowsill, the kitchen worktop, or a bathroom shelf. On a previous occasion Steinbach has explained that he regards the act of collecting and displaying things as a fundamental human practice: With my work, the bottom line is that any time you set an object next to another object you´re involved in a communicative, social activity. Haim Steinbach includes works of art from different eras and genres in his exhibition, presenting them in a way that is completely different from the usual approach taken by museums, which typically display art in accordance with chronological, thematic, or monographic principles. By making a break with those principles Steinbach creates a whole new contex".
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