Showing posts with label Hans-Peter Feldmann. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hans-Peter Feldmann. Show all posts

Sunday, March 24, 2024

Hans-Peter Feldmann | Bilder / Pictures






Hans-Peter Feldmann
Bilder / Pictures
München, Germany: Kunstraum München, 1975
344 pp., 15 x 21 cm., softcover
Edition of 500


Hans-Peter Feldmann studied painting at the University of Arts and Industrial Design in Linz, Austria, but 
abandoned the medium and gravitated towards artists’ books, following the realization that photographs were “entirely sufficient” to convey his ideas. From the age of five he had kept scrapbooks of carefully cut out images from books and magazines, and this act of accumulating, cataloguing and arranging became central to his practice. He was a photographer best known for found photographs, and didn’t begin working with his own photographs until he was in his fifties. 

Between 1968 and 1971 he produced about thirty little handmade booklets, all titled Bild or Bilder (Picture or Pictures). These typically focused on a single subject, ranging from women’s knees to airplanes off in the distance, from a hotel maid making a bed to images of ships and chairs. In 1972 he was invited to exhibit these bookworks at Documenta 5 in Kassel.

This 1975 volume collects all of these Bilder booklets, plus two postcard series. The book features an introduction by Hermann Kern, and a text by Josef Kirschbichler. 

A reissue followed, over a quarter century later, in 2002, which has itself become scarce and costly. 


“[Bilder] constitutes one of the most important bodies of artist’s bookworks in the twentieth century, along with those of [Ed] Ruscha and [Christian] Boltanski. The key lies in the books’ deadpan nature. Next to Feldmann, Ruscha is a galloping expressionst. Of all collections in this vein – and it is a popular genre of artists’ books – Feldmann’s are the most deadpan, the least expressive.”






















Saturday, February 3, 2024

Extra












The periodical that Sol LeWitt called "The only magazine not about art but as art" was not the first, and certainly not the only serial artists' publication, but produced five striking issues in a just over a year, fifty years ago. 

Edited by Walter Lippert, the magazine focused on more conceptual practices, EXTRA featured writings and artworks by artists from around the world. 

Hans Haacke wrote about the censorship of his Manet-PROJECT '74 (as he did in Avalanche Magazine that same year). The work was rejected by the museum just prior the opening and in response Daniel Buren pasted copies of Haacke’s panels onto his own black-and-white wallpaper to circumvent the museum’s attempt at censorship (the museum's response was to remove Buren’s wallpaper, also).

Buren contributed two pages of vertical stripes printed on vellum to EXTRA. Sol LeWitt provided Drawings, Duane Michals contributed Portrait of Andy Warhol and Hanne Darboven provided Manuscript for a Film

Other contributors included Art & Language, Terry Atkinson, Robert Barry, Lynda Benglis, Antonio Dias, Ralph Gibson, Joseph Kosuth, Roman Opalka, Giuseppe Penone, Anna & Patrick Poirier, Bernar Venet and Gilberto Zorio. 

The fourth and penultimate issue (from April 1975) was devoted to works by David Askevold, produced from 1968 to 1974. 

Hans-Peter Feldmann was a victim of censorship, not by the magazine but by their printer: 

"We are so late as our printer refused to print this issue because of Hans-Peter Feldmann's contribution. You can't believe it's possible? It is!" 

EXTRA was reportedly produced in an edition of 500 copies each. In 2016, a complete set sold at auction for $594 US, just below the low estimate of between six and nine hundred dollars. 





Monday, June 5, 2023

Hans-Peter Feldmann | Wackelbild 'Abschied' (Swinging picture, Good Bye)

 












Hans-Peter Feldmann 
Wackelbild 'Abschied' (Swinging picture, Good Bye)
Dusseldorf, Germany: Feldmann Verlag Shop
21 x 10,6 x 5,5 cm. 
Edition size unknown


Waving goodbye. 




Sunday, June 4, 2023

Hans-Peter Feldmann | Untitled (Bottle Openers)










Hans-Peter Feldmann
Untitled 
Shark Editions/303 Gallery, New York City, 1992
15.2 x 3.8 cm. (each)
Edition size unknown


Published by John Goodwin's Shark Editions of Gallery 303, this scarce work features three silver-plated bottle openers, mounted inside a felt-lined box.






Saturday, June 3, 2023

Hans-Peter Feldmann, RIP












Hans-Peter Feldmann died on May 30th, according to a shared announcement from his eight galleries—303 Gallery, Martine Aboucaya, Mehdi Chouakri Berlin, Konrad Fischer Galerie, Simon Lee Gallery, Galerie Francesca Pia, Projecte SD, and Barbara Wien:

“His unique personality and his artistic understanding of the world we are living in will stay alive in the art he has left behind,” the galleries wrote in their statement. “Our hearts and thoughts are with his beloved wife Uschi, with whom he shared art and life for many years.”

He was 82 years old. 


Saturday, April 30, 2022

Hans-Peter Feldmann















Hans-Peter Feldmann turns 81 today. 

"If there‘s one thing I know how to do, it‘s look.”