ZEGER REYERS, All The Stars in the Sky, 2007 [vinyl, signed]

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ZEGER REYERS, All The Stars in the Sky, 2007
vinyl, EP
recto: glued on special plate, verso: ink stamped text
special edition 60, here nr 46/60
signed, numbered
published by ZKM, Karlsruhe, German
mint, although slight bump at lower left part of cover
Zeger Reyers talks about this record related to used fungi and Paul Thek.
€ 180,- plus € 18,- Track & Trace registered mail
inv.ZRey 000-pr

This limited and special vinyl EP cover with glued on art plate by Zeger Reyers was for sale at the ZKM museum. An additional release of 150 copies without an art plate on the cover was issued at other venues.

 

History of prices:
Discogs, 23 April 2020, € 489,-

FELIX GONZALEZ-TORRES, Catalogue Raisonné, 1997 [Vol. 1 + 2]

FELIX GONZALEZ-TORRES, Catalogue Raisonné, 1997
each 31.4 x 25.4 cm
Vol. 1 and 2, 280 pp., HC
weight: 2,3 kgs
published by Cantz Verlag, Ostfieldern-Ruit, Germany
condition: splendid, cover of Vol. 1 has very tiny bumps at the right top en lower corners, hardly noticeable
€ 620,- plus € 28,- Track & Trace registered mail
inv.FGT 483-pr

 

Felix Gonzalez-Torres was born in 1957 in Cuba, and grew up in Puerto Rico before moving to New York City. He died of AIDS in 1996. Gonzalez-Torres had his first one-man exhibition at Andrea Rosen Gallery in 1990, where he continued to show his work until his death. The estate of Felix Gonzalez-Torres is represented by Andrea Rosen Gallery, N.Y.

His work was the focus of several major museum solo exhibitions in his lifetime and after his death. Retrospectives of his work have been organized by the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York (1995), the Sprengel Museum in Hannover, Germany (1997) and the Serpentine Gallery in London (2000) and there are currently several of Gonzalez-Torres’ works in the “Open Ends” exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, New York through Feb 2001.

Felix Gonzalez-Torres combined the impulses of Conceptual art, Minimalism, political activism, and chance to produce a number of “democratic artworks”— including public billboards, give-away piles of candies, and
stacks of paper available to the viewer as souvenirs. These works, often sensuous and directly audience-centered, complicate the questions of public and private space, authorship, originality and the role of institutionalized meaning. He used the stuff of interior design–electric light fixtures, jigsaw puzzles, paired mirrors, wall clocks and beaded curtains–to queer exhibition spaces in the most simple and poignant ways. His primary audience, as he explained in an interview reproduced here, was his lover, Ross (who died of AIDS 6 years before his own death in 1996). Yet his work clearly appeals to a large audience for its combination of formal restraint and emotional lushness. The theme of lovers is comingled with themes of mortality, loss and absence which surface in the later work. Always charged with the sensibility of an overtly queer man, his art nonetheless often passed under the radar of the self-appointed moral guardians in both the political and art worlds. Felix Gonzales-Torres was a not-so-secret agent, able to infiltrate mainstream consciousness in a most beautiful and poetic way. Activist without being didactic, a catalyst of that rare combination of sensuality and political empathy, he raised the bar on future queer art making, and continues to be one of the most influential artist of his generation.

 

History of prices:
Saint-Martin Bookshop, Brussels, Belgium € 390,- November 2024 (discoloured copy)
Panoply, US$ 950.- 14 April 2020
Ursus Books, US$ 750.- 14 April 2020
eBay-bvendre, The Hague, Netherlands € 102,19 November 2007

THE ARCHIVES – Art Information Centre Peter van Beveren, 1981

THE ARCHIVES-Art Information Centre Peter van Beveren, 1981
30,4 x 21,7 cm
artists book, HC, 30 pp., stamp numbered
edition 500, here nr 95/100
signed by all contributors; some stamp signed,
here also signed – only first 100 copies – by Peter van Beveren
inlay with list of artists
condition: more than splendid, hardly discoloured pages, although with a yellowed loose inlay with index,
like in all cases several metal parts by Klaas Gubbels have a finger print patina appearing due to aging
€ 885,- plus € 20,- Track & Trace registered mail
inv.PvBe 1077-pr

 

Peter van Beveren (born in 1952) started in the early 1970’s as conceptual artist, developed his passion for collecting by sending and also acquiring mail art. He initiated and managed The Archives / Art Information Centre and considered this part of his art practice. Later on in the mid eighties he became gallery owner of Galerie Van Beveren in Rotterdam. In 1981 for the Provincial Museum in Hasselt (Belgium) Peter van Beveren assembled contributions of the following artists: Robert Jacks, Woody van Amen, Carl Andre, Joseph Beuys, Marinus Boezem, Christian Boltanski, Daniel Buren, Michel Cardena, Christo, Robin Crozier, Geurt van Dijk, Pieter Engels, Hans Eijkelboom, Ken Friedman, Ad Gerritsen, Klaas Gubbels, Wim Gijzen, Richard Hamilton, Dick Higgins, Tommy Mew, Maurizio Nannucci, Richard Nonas, Arnulf Rainer, Dieter Roth, Yves De Sme, Al Souza, Endre Tot, Timm Ulrichs, Ben Vautier and Wolf Vostell.

This iconic book contains an exuberant amount of various materials and techniques. The first hundred copies are signed by Peter van Beveren.

History of prices:
John Benjamins Antiquariat, Amsterdam December 2022 € 1.500,-
William Allen Words & Image, London, UK November 2022 US$ 913.-
Venduehuis, The Hague, Netherlands 14 April 2022 € 325,- (hammer price)
William Allen Words & Image, London, UK February 2022 US$ 1,045.-
Prentwerk, Groningen, Netherlands February 2022 € 550,-
William Allen Words & Images, London, UK January 2021 € 869,-

BILL MITCHELL, Azonic I – A drawing by Bill Mitchell, 1974

BILL MITCHELL, Azonic I – A drawing by Bill Mitchell, 1974
19,8 x 14,9 cm
artist’s book, SC, 26 pp., punched holes in each page, yarn thread tape
published by 50 Hilton Rd. Newton Abbot. Devon, England
condition: excellent, apart from dried out piece of tape on front cover
very rare

 

This artist’s book was published in two versions. Here “Azonic I” comes with a foul blue cover and contains 26 pages. “Azonic II” was published in ca 1978 and has 16 pages with a foul red cover, probably meant as a second edition with a slightly changed title.

 

cover recto:

ELVIRE BONDUELLE, Youpie, 2013 [hand made tote bag]

ELVIRE BONDUELLE, Youpie, 2013
hand made tote bag: linen, screen print
ca 47 x 30 cm
incl. double-sided letter on stiff paper
Collection K. van Gelder, Amsterdam

‘This tote bag is not meant as an art work’ Elvire Bonduelle says. Therefore it is neither of work of art nor an edition. It is meant as a try-out to use the word “Youpie”. Here this object has been archived nevertheless because sometimes ambiguity is worthwhile to show since it tells something about the attitude of the artist involved. This work may be compared to another ambiguous ‘object’ given to me by Olivier Mosset. See heap of confetti in envelope: Olivier Mosset, .

OLIVIER MOSSET, Untitled, 1998 [dollar sign]

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OLIVIER MOSSET, Untitled, 1998 [dollar sign]
70 x 70 cm
screen print
edition 40
mint
€ 1.500,- plus € 32,- Track & Trace registered mail

 

History of prices:
Place des Arts, Paris, France US$ 1,784 January 2023
Place des Arts, Paris, France € 1.650,- August 2021
Artsnap.net GBP 1,200.- March 2020
Place des Arts, Paris, France € 1.875,- April 2020
ArtCurial, Paris, France € 520,- auction 19 September 2016, incl. premium
ArtCurial, Paris, France € 650,- auction 12 December 2016

JAROSLAW KOZLOWSKI, “Reality”, 1972

JAROSLAW KOZLOWSKI, “Reality”, 1972
20,4 x 14,6 cm
SC, stapled, 24 pp.
published by the artist
condition: both cover and inside discoloured due to aging
sold
 

The pages of “Reality” are taken from Emmanuel Kant’s ‘Kritik der reinen Vernunft’ of which the words lack. The pages merely show punctuation marks. Kant argues that our knowledge can never transcend experience.