Shop > Artists' Books

Out of Stock
#05332

Alternative Histories: New York Art Spaces 1960 to 2010

Date
2012
Publisher
MIT Press
Format
Artists' Books
Details
Hardcover
Size
20.5 × 25.3 × 3 cm
Length
408 
Description

Edited by Lauren Rosati and Mary Anne Staniszewski.

This groundbreaking book—part exhibition catalogue, part cultural history—chronicles alternative art spaces in New York City since the 1960s. Developed from an exhibition of the same name at Exit Art, Alternative Histories documents more than 130 alternative spaces, groups, and projects, and the significant contributions these organizations have made to the aesthetic and social fabric of New York City. Alternative art spaces offer sites for experimentation for artists to innovate, perform, and exhibit outside the commercial gallery-and-museum circuit. In New York City, the development of alternative spaces was almost synonymous with the rise of the contemporary art scene. Beginning in the 1960s and early 1970s, it was within a network of alternative sites—including 112 Greene Street, The Kitchen, P.S.1, FOOD, and many others—that the work of young artists like Yvonne Rainer, Vito Acconci, Gordon Matta-Clark, Ana Mendieta, David Wojnarowicz, David Hammons, Adrian Piper, Martin Wong, Jimmie Durham, and dozens of other now familiar names first circulated.

Through interviews, photographs, essays, and archival material, Alternative Histories tells the story of such famous sites and organizations as Judson Memorial Church, Anthology Film Archives, A.I.R. Gallery, El Museo del Barrio, Franklin Furnace, and Eyebeam, as well as many less well-known sites and organizations. Essays by the exhibition curators and scholars, and excerpts of interviews with alternative space founders and staff, provide cultural and historical context.

  1. Alternative Histories: New York Art Spaces 1960 to 2010
 

Related Items

  1. The Global Contemporary and the Rise of New Art Worlds
  2. David Robbins: Concrete Comedy: An Alternative History of Twentieth-Century Comedy
  3.  Larissa Hjorth, Sarah Pink, Kristen Sharp, and Linda Williams: Screen Ecologies
  4. Subject Matter of the Artist: Writings by Robert Goodnough, 1950-1965
  5. Archizines Catalogue
  6. Oliver Husain: Spoiler Alert
  7. Sam Falls: Visible Libraries
  8. Future Diasporas: Culture, Art, Identity, Space
  9. Hank Bull: Me/You
  10. Gwen Allen: The Magazine
  11. Johannes Wohnseifer: A Secret Show in a Secret Place
  12. Lee Lozano: Notebooks 1967-70
  13. Evelyne Leblanc-Roberge: Wall+Paper
  14. Richard Bolton: The Contest of Meaning: Critical Histories of Photography
  15. J. Parker Valentine: Fiction
  16. Jonathan Monk: Erotica
  17. Keren Cytter: D.I.E. Now The True Story of John Webber and His Endless Struggle with the Table of Content
  18. Kodwo Eshun: Dan Graham: Rock My Religion
  19. Provence Issue O
  20. Jonas Staal: Propaganda Art in the 21st Century
  21. Scull’s Angles
  22. Yishu May/June 2013 Volume 12, Number 3
  23. Claire Bishop: Participation
  24. Amanda Boetzkes: Plastic Capitalism
  25. Tadej Pogacar: Home Stories
  26. Olivier Foulon and Michael Krebber: The Soliloquy of the Broom
  27. Love Poems for Ceres
  28. Leon Qu: Glass
  29. On the Passage of a Few People Through a Rather Brief Moment in Time: The Situationist International 1957-1972
  30. Olafur Eliasson: Surroundings Surrounded: Essays on Space and Science
  31. Hans Schabus : Hans Schabus: Transport
  32. Waldemar Cordeiro and Franz Mon: Waldemar Cordeiro & Franz Mon
  33. Jennifer Allora, Andrea Bowers, Guillermo Calzadilla, Elvira Dyangani Ose, Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster, Joan Jonas, Stefan Kaegi, Philippe Rahm, and Lucy Raven: Resource Hungry: Our Cultured Landscape and its Ecological Impact
  34. After Berkeley
  35. Sylvia Matas: Objects in a Field
  36. Igor Zabel: Contemporary Art Theory