CANDACE COMPTON, I Would Like to Introduce Myself, n.d. [ca 1970-’75]
57,2 x 44,5 cm / 22.5 x 17.5 inches
offset, poster
published by The Woman’s Building, Los Angeles, USA
fine condition extremely rare
p.o.r.
inv.CCom 000-pr
This poster depicts a pair of hands in various stages of putting on and taking off a black glove, with pieces of text introducing the artist:
‘I would like to introduce myself. My name is Candace Compton – Your name?’
‘I am an artist. I am really a very good one, quite sincere – Are you an artist? What kind of artist?’
‘I often forget to visit galleries or read art magazines – Are you involved in any sort of art community?’
‘So I wonder about artists and what they wonder about – What do you wonder about?’
‘My work, actually, is more about wondering about questioning than invention – What is your art about?’
‘My art is about me. It is about communication. It is about interchange
Please respond and mail to: Candace Compton c/o The Woman’s Bldg, 1727 No. Spring St. LA Calif. 90012′
In 1973 The Woman’s Building was founded by graphic designer Sheila Levrant de Bretteville, art historian Arlene Raven and artist Judy Chicago (from left to right). In the same year they founded SFW / Feminist Studio Workshop.
Arlene Raven, Judy Chicago and Sheila Levrant de Bretteville (from left to right).
‘It was a house large enough for everyone, all women, we claimed. It was Womanspace, Womanhouse, and the House of Women, “At Home,” Everywoman’s space, and Femme/ Maison. It was female space, safe space, sacred space, contested space, occupied space, appropriated space, and transformed space. It was revolution and revelation. We were squatters and proprietors, renegades and healers; we dichotomized and fused. We had one commonality: we were convinced that we were transforming culture by offering alternatives, as women, not only in the arts and culture, but also in the way we used space and conducted politics in that space. In its theory and praxis, the Los Angeles Woman’s Building, a material site for nearly two decades, appeared to epitomize much of what is sometimes referred to as second-wave feminism.’
Sondra Hale
The Woman’s Building was a public center for women’s culture in Los Angeles from 1973-1991, and housed the Feminist Studio Workshop, a two year program for women in the arts; the Women’s Graphic Center; galleries; performance space adjacent to a café and thrift store; Chrysalis: a Magazine of Women’s Culture; Sisterhood bookstore; a feminist travel agency, and the LAWVC / Los Angeles Women’s Video Center. The LAWVC was cofounded at the Woman’s Building by Nancy Angelo, Candace Compton, and Annette Hunt in 1976 and joined by Jerri Allyn in 1977. In the same year Candace Compton, Nancy Angelo, Cheri Gaulke and Laurel Klick founded the Feminist Art Workers, a collaborative performance art group doing performances in museums and busses. Later on Vanalyne Green joined the group.
Ref. 1
Lucy R. Lippard (forword) with authors: Terry Wolverton, Sondra Hale, Laura Meyer, including dialogue between Arlene Raven and Terry Wolverton, Betty Ann Brown, Michelle Moravec, Jennie Klein, Sheila Levrant de Bretteville/Bia Lowe, Cecilla Dougherty, Michele Kort and Theresa Chavez From Site to Vision – The Woman’s Building in Contemporary Culture
Ref. 2
Documentary on Feminist Art Workers founded in 1976.
ZOE LOENARD / Fierce Pussy, “List” posters, 1991
each 43,1 x 48 cm
Xeroxgraphy, stack of posters with sticker as issued
some slightly yellowed due to age
provenance: Printed Matter, New York, USA
inv.ZLoe 000
‘During the collective’s first meeting, at Zoe Leonard’s apartment in East Village in 1991, its members adopted Robert’s Rules of Order * and produced a no-frills poster on the spot using paper, scissors, a typewriter and inserted texts in between a matrix with capitals: “I AM A …… AND PROUD!”, i.e. words like “I AM A lezzie, butch, pervert, girlfriend, bulldagger, sister, dyke AND PROUD!” were used.
This is a stack of one of the first “List” posters printed by a New York-based collective with Nancy Brooks Brody and Zoe Leonard in 1991. The latter were respectively working in the design departments at GQ and Traveller magazines in the group’s early days. During quiet moments around the office, they ran off hundreds of patchy Fierce Pussy posters on the available copy machines.’
* Robert’s Rules of Order is the most widely used manual of parliamentary procedure in the United States. It governs the meetings of a diverse range of organizations — including church groups, county commissions, homeowners associations, nonprofit associations, professional societies, school boards, and trade unions — that have adopted it as their parliamentary authority.
ELISE ‘T HART, Instituut voor Huisgeluid, 2019
21 x 14,5 x 2 cm
52 cards, 52 digital prints, USB stick with 52 sounds, comes in sleeve of tracing paper
texts in Dutch
open edition
published by the artist
info abonnement op uitgaven van Instituut voor Huisgeluid
PAULINE BOUDRY / RENATE LORENZ, Untitled (Moving Backwards), 2019
60 x 65 cm
edition 50 + 6 AP
sequin textile, wooden stick, accompanying postcard as certificate
signed, numbered, here nr 20/50
published by the Swiss Pavilion of Biennale di Venezia, Venice
issued on behalf of the Venice Biennale 2019
Here, comes with handmade customised light weight box.
inv.PBou 160
The exhibitions of this artists duo reflect on the current political situation, that is characterised by its regressive and reactionary forces of closure towards the other and towards difference. Faced with the scale of this recent backlash, the artists, instead of practicing an outright opposition, suggest «backward movements» as a potential tool for producing alternative forms of resistance and action.
As Charlotte Laubard observes: «Pauline Boudry / Renate Lorenz conceive their installations as devices that lead us to renegotiate our representations. Their work produces a double inversion: it introduces gestures, images and objects that refer to current political and social issues. At the same time, it grants these elements a high degree of autonomy so that they can interact with the public and establish interrelations that challenge our modes of perception and identification.»
“Long-term symbol of attention-grabbing glamour – from hollywoodian icons’ outfit, cabarets and drag performances – the sequin fabric inhabits the work of Pauline Boudry / Renate Lorenz. Used often as a curtain in their installations and films, its glittering and reflecting texture enhences the physical presence of the canonnical stage material. The curtain refers to roleplay and to the performative dimension of the construction of identities. When touched, abstract and moiré shapes appear. The surface can also completely change color.”
PAULINE BOUDRY / RENATE LORENZ, Wig Piece, 2019
60 x 45 cm
edition 10 + 2 AP signed, numbered
published by the Swiss Pavilion of Biennale di Venezia, Venice
issued on behalf of the Venice Biennale 2019
inv.PBou 000
“By introducing hair in a painting’s visual space, the artists comment here on the tactile, bodily, and even an uncanny aspect of painting. The meeting between a hairpiece as painting creates a composition, an assemblage that is reminiscent of characters in their films like Salome in “Salomania” which gathers in one figure the stories of Alla Nazimova, Wu Tsang, Yvonne Rainer, Oscar Wide or Aida Walker. The hair materiality makes us aware of our sexual bodies as spectators in an exhibition. As a structure that hides and unveils altogether, this curtain of hair refers to role play and to the performative dimension of the construction of identities.”
The exhibitions of this artists duo reflect on the current political situation, that is characterised by its regressive and reactionary forces of closure towards the other and towards difference. Faced with the scale of this recent backlash, the artists, instead of practicing an outright opposition, suggest «backward movements» as a potential tool for producing alternative forms of resistance and action.
Additional information
PAULINE BOUDRY and RENATE LORENZ, Untitled (Wig Painting), 2016
50 x 50 cm
artificial hair, aluminum
edition 5 + 2 AP
numbered, signed
published by Kunsthalle Zurich, Switzerland, € 1.900, April 2019
MAURIZIO CATTELAN, Blah, blah, blah, 2018
190 x 20 cm, scarf
polyacrylic fibres, cardboard hanger, offset
limited edition 400
published by Made in Catteland, Italy
inv.MCat 000
Maurizio Cattelan’s address for contacting Made in Catteland shows the following image:
TAKAKO SAITO, You and Me, 1981
3,6 x 8 x 8 cm
yarn spools, coloured threads, wooden box, ink stamps
signed, dated, numbered, here No. 32
€ 960,- plus € 18,- registered mail Track & Trace
inv.TSait 691
Ink stamped instructions on the reverse of the lid read ‘Put something in the box and sign. Then, this is a work of us.’.
TAKAKO SAITO, Do it Yourself, 1990
10 x 23 x 15.3 cm
17 hand made paper cubes, shredded paper, wooden box, felt pen ink on perspex lid video tape is lacking
signed, dated, numbered
edition 30, here number 8/30
published by Bonner Kunstverein, Bonn, Germany
HREINN FRIDFINNSSON, invitation cards of exhibitions 1972-2010
32 x 26 x 5 cm
ring binder with most probably a complete set of exhibition invites in plastic sleeves
inv.HF 000-pr
The invites in this binder have been collected during a period of 28 years and as such a rarety. It includes a hand written hand-out invite for an exhibition at In-Out Center in Amsterdam in 1972. The card could be considered a self made multiple in tiny envelope, both hand written in pencil. It is unknown if there are any left apart from this one.
JAN HENDERIKSE / ALEXANDRA PHILLIPS, Pure Propaganda Magazine, 2015
each ca 11 x 14 cm, unfolded 27.7 x 21.5 cm, 2 parts
pop-up card mounted on cardboard, blind and ink stamped envelope with gold seal, colour illustration, text
signed, numbered, here number 3/10
edition 10
published by Antoon Melissen, Amsterdam