HANNES VAN ES, Hannes van Es Talks To Louwrien Wijers, 1986 (8 November)
29,7 x 21 cm,
machine typed text, 4 loose sheets
English interview – resume
inv.HvE 751-754
Also available:
– original carbon copy from 1986
– original photo stats from 1986
HANNES VAN ES, invitation, 1980
29,7 x 21 cm
offset, 4 pp.
published by Fundació Joan Miró, Madrid, Spain
condition: used, slightly aged and dodges at top and lower part
rare
€ 150,- plus € 12,- Track & Trace registered mail
inv.HvE 750
HANNES VAN ES, Performance [1977]
43 x 30 cm
poster, black and white
not dated
produced on the occasion of Hannes van Es’s ‘Performance’ at Agora Studio, Maastricht, Netherlands
extremely rare
inv.HvE 000-pr
TAKAKO SAITO, Games, 1976
ca 50,4 x 35,3 cm
handmade cardboard folio with 21 offset prints, ink stamp, collage
signed, numbered, dated in print
nr 4/200, only ca 20 have been made
published by Noodle Edition, Düsseldorf, Germany
condition: excellent, lightly discoloured on the outside extremely rare
ask for details
€ 4.800,- plus € 32,- Track & Trace registered mail
Priavate collecion, Amsterdam, Margin scheme
inv.TSait 344-pr
Each sheet is provided with a speech cloud and shows instructions of the game that may be played. This folder contains 7 different prints colored-in by the artist. Each print comes with 2 extra blank black and white prints, obviously meant for colouring them yourself. This game was designed to be played with other objects or pieces, as stated in Saito’s notes.
Two hundred signed and numbered copies were planned but ONLY circa 20 were made by Takako and sold (hence an early number from the edition). The amount of prints may vary from copy to copy. Fondazio Luigi Bonotto in Colseresa in Italy has a copy (number 5/200) with 8 different prints in its collection.
Ref. Takako Saito Fondazione Bonotto.
Introduction print in folio:
Example of coloured-in print plus two black and white copies
BEN VAUTIER, La vie est un film, 2019
ca 50 x 40 cm
signed, numbered
edition 100
published by Editions Galerie Eva Vautier, Nice, France
inv.BVau 000-pr
This screen print was made parallel with the introduction of a film about Ben Vautier “la vie est un film”.
History of price:
Galerie Eva Vautier, Nice June 2019 € 450,-
MARIJKE VAN WARMERDAM, “Weather forecast”, film still on coaster, 2019
9.4 x 9.4 cm
edition unknown
issued on behalf of group exhibition “Videoland” at Kunsthal Kade, Amersfoort, Netherlands
Kunsthal KADE in Amersfoort is celebrating a 10 years anniversary with “Videoland”, a group exhibition with videos of Matt Calderwood, IsaacJulien, Ragnar Kjartansson, Christian Marclay, Hans Op de Beeck, Nira Pereg, Tom Pnini, Martin & Inge Riebeek, Guido van de Werve and Marijke van Warmerdam.
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.
GERHARD RICHTER, cake plate, 1992
diameters 32 cm
porcelain
signed and dated in glazing
published by Edition Obelisco, Cologne, Germany rare
mint
€ 800,- plus € 24 Track & Trace registered EU mail
inv.GR 000-pr
History of price:
eBay-mva130878, Emmerich, Germany € 899,- 8 May 2025
JOËLLE TUERLINCKX, X X, 1999
diameter 14,8 cm
2 parts, felt pen on glass
signed, dated sample number 1, certificate (27,5 x 21,5 cm) with instructions
provenance: The Kersten van Steenbergen Collection and acquired from Stella Lohaus Gallery, Antwerp, Belgium
sold
The work ‘X X’ is a series of glass discs that each time is produced on demand, or is for whatever reason by the artist. This sign of a cross “X” is drawn by hand with felt pen, made in duplo on two discs of glass and put on top of each other. This sample is the basis for reproduction of a series of unlimited pairs of discs and seen as such this piece is unique. For display Joëlle Tuerlinckx suggests in the accompanying certificate to use a furniture piece, a desk, a window sill, to hold it in one’s hand or to put it on a shelf. The two discs are shown on top of each other with the crosses not necessarily perfectly fitting, i.e. all positions are right. Right at the top of he certificate it is emphasized by Tuerlinckx that each cross is unique; ‘…considering the manual process of reproduction by hand’.
The work of Joëlle Tuerlinckx should be considered as Fundamental art. Through exhibition interventions she aims to demonstrate how the place in which things are seen shapes our perception of them. It incorporates projections, audio recordings, videos, drawings, collages, photographs, found and crafted objects, and her own writings. She says: ‘An exhibition is an experience of space that proposes action, or reaction, as a means of reflection, of thinking on our human condition…’.
This copy is the basic model for making “X X” in an unlimited edition. This is most likely the only copy from the planned series of unique works, as no second copy has ever been shown or published anywhere.