Friday, January 27, 2023

Hartmut Andryczuk, Covukrain, Redfox Press, Blue Fox Collection, Achill Island, County Mayo, Ireland, 2022, ed. 70


Another cool silk-screened accordion in the Blue Fox accordion series from the folks at Redfoxpress. There are two other accordions by this German artist in this blog, and like this one they all display his own unique visual poetry that combines words and images, coupled with the dark and brooding quality of his drawings. This work combines a text about Covid with the war in Ukraine, see complete texts below.

10 pages double-sided, individually 6.25" x 3.75", and when fully opened 3ft 1.5"

"Science has found a way to inflate coronaviruses as big as tennis balls. Finally the military 
had the opportunity to bomb them in eastern europe (ukraine)"



"After the war the military and virologists saved all the remaining variants."



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Maria Eichhorn, 72 Bilder (72 Pictures), supplement to catalogue 'Der zerbrochene Spieger: Positionen zur Malerei,' Museumquartier Messepalast, Vienna, 1993


This gatefold accordion catalogue was published as a supplement to the exhibition catalogue for Der zerbrochene Spiegel: Positionen zur Malerei (The Broken Mirror: Positions on Painting) co-curated by Kasper Konig and Hans-Ulrich Obrist and shown originally at the Museumquartier Messepalast, Vienna, 1993. 

These minimalist works were created during Eichhorn's 1992/93 exhibition Qui, Quoi, Ou, at the Musee d'Art Moderne de la Ville Paris. A German artist known for her site-specific works, she represented Germany at the 2022 Venice Biennale. While a relatively traditional gatefold accordion publication, however, I particularly enjoy the pure visuality of all these differently colored paintings when the catalogue is unfolded.

On the reverse side is information about each individual work including date and the title/color of each work in 3 languages

6 double-sided pages, individually 8.25" x 5.75" and when fully opened 2ft 10.5".



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Monday, January 23, 2023

Dorothy Iannone, Follow Me, DAAD, Berlin, 1978 [incl. 45 rpm record 'Follow Me', 1978]

front cover

A fascinating double-sided catalogue for Iannone's 1978 exhibition at the Haus am Lützowplatz gallery in Berlin where she was living & working after receiving a prestigious Berlin Artists-in-Residence fellowship from DAAD. 

While accordion exhibition catalogues have a long and distinguished history, this one departs from this tradition and moves closer to being an artists' book. Iannone would seem to confirm this when she thanks the editor Thomas Deecke for "... graciously permitting that the pain of making a catalogue be transformed into the pleasure of making a book." 

The catalogue contains a smorgasbord of Iannone's works including paintings, prints, sculptures as well as a 45rpm record, all of them created within her larger quest for what she called "ecstatic unity" through erotic love. One of the pinnacles in this quest was her meeting in 1967 with the Swiss artist Dieter Roth (1930-1998), and their intense 8 year relationship that followed. Her works during these years would revolve around the world they created between themselves with Iannone reflecting in a 2016 interview "...my work went into many new directions and took on many new forms. Because i was so much in love with him, Dieter was my muse..." 

I feel lucky to have found this accordion, as I'm only aware of one other that she published during her entire career. Iannone forged a totally unique painterly and illustrative style, that is soaked through with eroticism and sexuality, but it comes from a deep well of honesty about being a woman with erotic desires and living & interacting with the world of men. Ultimately, Iannone came to the realization that "ecstatic unity" could not be found through erotic love and that it had paradoxically led her "...to look for unity within myself."

Dorothy Iannone died almost a month ago on December 26th, 2022 in Berlin at the age of 89.

16 pages, double-side, individual pages 10" x 8", when opened 10ft 8 inches.






reverse side


45 rpm record in cover attached to the accordion



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