Technische Angaben
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[12-16] S., 20,6x13,5 cm, Auflage: 100, signiert, 12 Teile. keine weiteren Angaben vorhanden
11 Hefte, Schwarz-Weiß-Laserkopien, Drahtheftung, Aufkleber
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About the series:
The For Everard zine series chronicles the 1977 fire at New York's Everard Baths, combining archival research with imagined narratives to re-focus attention to obscured histories. The series explores the media coverage of the subsequent investigation of the fire, and the lives of the nine men who perished. The zines bring together photographic images with primary news sources, as well as personal anecdotes collected from eyewitness testimonials.
About the individual zines:
For Everard, Vol. 1, 2013, ed. 100 (nr. 65)
This zine chronicles the May 25, 1977 fire at New York's Everard Baths and the media coverage of the subsequent investigation.
For Everard, Vol. 2 (Bloodbrothers), 2013, ed. 100 (Nr. 81)
In the second volume of his series chronicling the 1977 fire at New York’s Everard Baths, Anthony Malone focuses on Bellevue Hospital’s blood drive for the victims of the great bathhouse tragedy. Malone draws parallels between the 1977 restrictions placed on gay men for donating blood to their “brothers” and current FDA guidelines that indefinitely defer donations from men who have had sex with men since 1977. This black and white photocopied zine (ed 100) juxtaposes archival images, news clippings, and just a touch of fantasy.
For Everard, Vol. 3 (Remembering Jimmy), 2015, ed. 100 (Nr. 94)
Volume 3 of the series, For Everard is dedicated to the memory of Jimmy Stuard, who died in the tragic fire at the Everard Baths in 1977. Stuard was a rising star in the disco music scene. He spun records first at Boston’s 1270 Club, and later at New York’s 12 West, where he inspired an entire generation of musical artists and DJs. In this particular volume, Anthony Malone assembles images and archival texts that serve as a tribute to the great Jimmy Stuard.
For Everard, Vol. 4 (A Lovely Show), 2016, ed. 100 (Nr. 62)
For Everard, Vol. 4 (A Lovely Show) is a tribute to Kenneth Hill, one of the nine men who died in the devastating fire at the Everard Baths in 1977. Kenn played a vital role in the East Village/Lower East side countercultural movement in the late ‘60s and 1970s. He was a hippie, a bar tender at Phebe’s (a watering hole and salon for the experimental theater community in the 1970s), one of the founders of the Old Reliable Theatre Tavern, House Manager at La Mama Experimental Theatre Club, and a photographer. This zine celebrates Kenneth Hill by collaging archival documents with personal artifacts and pictures of Kenn from meaningful moments in his life.
For Everard, Vol. 5 (A Dearly Loved Man), 2017, ed. 100 (Nr. 95)
For Everard, Vol. 5 (A Dearly Loved Man) assembles images and stories from the life of Ira Landau, a gifted and dedicated teacher who died in the tragic fire at the Everard Baths in 1977. Ira left behind a devoted family (his mother, brother, niece, and lover) and is still greatly missed by his loved ones. This zine is a tribute to the life and accomplishments of a remarkable man who served in the Peace Corps and committed himself to educating young minds both abroad (in the Middle East) and at home in the US. It contains family photos and personal images generously contributed by Ira’s niece.
For Everard, Vol. 6 (Yosef’s Song), 2017, ed. 100 (Nr. 94)
Volume 6 of the series For Everard celebrates the life of a remarkable musical prodigy, Yosef Synovec. This zine tells the story of a young man with great aspirations who emigrated to the United States from Czechoslovakia to study classical violin. In 1976, Holly Woodlawn overheard Synovec vocalizing as he was painting the bathroom of his East Village apartment, and determined on the spot that she had discovered an emerging star. As a singer, Synovec used his extreme vocal range to imitate the voice and persona of Peruvian diva Yma Sumac. He performed Sumac’s exotic musical numbers at several New York City cabarets and show venues. Sadly, on May 25, 1977, Yosef perished in the tragic fire at the Everard Baths.
For Everard, Vol. 7 (Tony from the Bronx), 2017, ed. 100 (Nr. 86)
This zine brings together images and stories from the life of Tony Calarco, one of the nine men who died in the fire at the Everard Baths in 1977. Tony was only 26 when he died. He lived with his parents and siblings in a modest house in the Bronx. He had recently graduated from college and was working as a social worker in New York city at the time of his death. Tony had aspirations to become a lawyer and was scheduled to begin law school in September of 1977. This zine celebrates Tony Calarco’s memory through photos of Tony, artifacts from his high school and college years, and recent photographs of his home and final resting place.
For Everard, Vol. 8 (Looking for Amado), 2017, ed. 100 (Nr.84)
Amado Alamo, a young man only 17 years old, lost his life in the fire at the Everard Baths in 1977. In Volume 8 of For Everard, Anthony Malone documents his search for the identity of the youngest victim of the Everard fire. The zine is an abstracted portrait of Alamo that assembles the few extant fragments of his story culled from newspaper articles and documentary sources glued together with the artist’s imagination.
For Everard, Vol. 9 (Last Call), 2017, ed. 100 (Nr.72)
Life was difficult for Hillman Wesley Adams. He was born in Jacksonville FL in 1938. His mother died just a few months after his birth, and by the age of nine, he found himself in an orphanage with his older brother. Fast forward 30 years: Hillman moved to NYC, struggled to make ends meet while working on and off as a bartender, and he met his lover, Ralph, with whom he shared a modest apartment in New Jersey. On May 25, 1977, Hillman died in the fire at the Everard Baths. Vol. 9 of For Everard is an assemblage of newspaper articles and vintage photos chronicling the life and untimely death of Hillman Wesley Adams.
For Everard, Vol. 10 (In Memoriam: Patrick Nott), 2018, ed. 100 (Nr. 64)
Volume 10 of For Everard memorializes the life of Patrick Nott, one of the nine men who died in the fire at the Everard Baths. Nott, a native of Wales with a passion for theater, literature, and music, pursued a successful career in hairdressing. He fell in love with his pen pal (a young woman from Brooklyn) and after their marriage, they moved to New York City, where Nott worked at the Vidal Sassoon Salon. This zine weaves together elements from his story (shared with the artist by Patrick Nott’s wife), with photographs, newspaper clippings, and artifacts. It acts as a humble tribute, an “In Memoriam” for this greatly loved man.
For Everard, Vol. 11 (Thunderbird), 2019, ed. 100 (Nr. 79)
Brian Duffy was an aspiring artist. In 1966 he was accepted to Pratt Institute of Art and although he declined admission to the school, he seized the opportunity to move to NYC and start a new life for himself. In the city, he worked hard at various retail jobs and tried to break into the theater, but everything changed when he met the love of his life, Bradley. The couple moved to a “quieter life” in Boston. They worked in restaurants in the Back Bay area and created a community for themselves amongst their chosen family of friends. Volume 11 of For Everard celebrates the brief life of Brian Duffy, a young man who died in the fire at the Everard Baths in 1977. This zine compiles photographs and stories shared with Malone by Brian’s sister and dear friend.
The pseudonym "Anthony Malone" comes from a novel by Andrew Holleran (Dancer from the Dance). In this novel, Malone is the protagonist and at the end he disappears. Some of his friends believe that he may have committed suicide, others feel that he may have run away from New York, while some say that they saw him at the Everard Baths on the night of the fire. I imagine that Malone survived the fire and he is now making books and zines telling the story of the tragedy.
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Technische Angaben
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106 S., 21x14,8 cm, Auflage: Print on Demand, keine weiteren Angaben vorhanden
Broschur
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Schwarz-Weiß-Drucke
Jens Schwarz was born 1968 in Berlin and studied history of arts in Paris and photography in Munich. He works in the field of portraiture and reportage on german and international assignments. In his personal projects he focuses on sociopolitical issues that often deal with questions of both personal and collective social identity. 2014 his first monograph ›Beirut Eight Thirteen‹ has been published documenting a photographic long-term project on social instability in Beirut. His projects received several grants throughout his career and his work has been nominated, among others, for the German Henri-Nansen-Prize.
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Personal Identity Research Art (p i r)
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10,5x14,7 cm, Auflage: 300, numeriert, signiert, keine weiteren Angaben vorhanden
Notizblock mit eingeklebten Fotos, Filzstift auf Fotos, Spiralbindung
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no one should call you a dreamer / 60 Minutes Later - A Collaborative Zine about Identity / ok werner / We Need Our Days To Be Quiet / days of each other,
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[20-36] S., 21x14,8 cm, 5 Teile. keine weiteren Angaben vorhanden
Drahtheftung, Schwarz-Weiß-Fotokopien
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"Ok Werner" is a handmade fanzine made in collaboration with my brother, Glasgow-based musician Brian McEwan about our favourite filmmaker, Werner Herzog.
The zine was made over a period of 4 days in late July 2012 at my house in Yorkshire on a self appointed 'Herzog holiday' and contains our personal and collaborative responses to Herzog and his films via interviews, quotes, images and writing.
"We Need Our Days To Be Quiet" is a sketchbook in zine format, containing collected drawing and collage, text and photography and thoughts, reading and findings from summer 2012.
Text von der Webseite
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We are Cypriots - Wir sind Zyprer - 28 Cypriots Tell Their Stories: Reports and Photographs from a Devided Island
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416 S., 23x15,5 cm, Auflage: 300, 2 Stück. ISBN/ISSN 9783928804950
Klappbroschur, Fadenheftung, HP-Indigodruck auf Munken White 115 g. 1,5. 114 Farbabbildungen
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“We Are Cypriots” is a chronicle that takes us behind the scenes sharing personal histories that official histories often ignore.
Between 2015 and 2018, during the reunification talks and after they failed, the author Lisa Fuhr visited Cypriots from both communities and photographed them in their surroundings. These intimate photographs and accompanying in-depth conversations shed light on life in Cyprus today.
Travellers, Cypriots living abroad, foreigners who have chosen to settle there, and last but not least, the people of Cyprus itself just might discover in these pages something they did not expect.
This book, furthermore, is intended as a contribution to the current European-wide discussion on national identity, separatism, nationalism or unification, and reconciliation.
In his comprehensive preface, the Berlin journalist, Klaus Hillenbrand, traces the historical and contemporary, as well as the social and political developments that have so profoundly shaped this island and Cypriots today.
Photo Exhibition and Book Launch at Goethe-Institut Nicosia, Cyprus, in the buffer zone next to Ledra Palace. Opening Wednesday 15 May 2019. Duration of the exhibition until 11 June 2019
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Technische Angaben
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2 S., 10x21 cm, signiert, keine weiteren Angaben vorhanden
Klappkarte innen und außen bedruckt, signiert von A. Soltau mit "Annegret Soltau 2020"
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Einladungskarte zur Ausstellung vom 13.03.-18.04.2020 sowie zur Ausstellung im Rahmen von düsseldorf photo+ 2020 vom 13.03.-15.03.2020
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40 S., 21x14,8 cm, Auflage: 100, numeriert, keine weiteren Angaben vorhanden
Fadenheftung
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My photography is a process of a self-study. I am always interested when both sides are involved: my personal inside and environment around. people’s own identity and the beauty of human body. depth of intimate desires and their artistic reconstruction.
Von der Webseite
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[40] S., 32x22 cm, 2 Stück. ISBN/ISSN 7629999015104
Drahtheftung. Verschiedene farbige Papiere. Eingelegt ein gefaltetes Poster
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The publication Spheres is the creative documentation of a close collaboration between an artist and the editor, graphic designer Philippe Karrer. Every issue is dedicated to a young artist and their work, in each case exploring character, surroundings, every-day life, inspirations and ideas using unconventional innovative formats so as to create a different, more visual approach and understanding of the artist and his or her work. The focus lies on what is important to the artist during the time period of working together for the publication, hereby capturing a certain essence of the artists work at the moment. Not only can the reader dive in to the artist‘s world, receiving little personal snippets of the life in and around his or her art, but also (and perhaps even more importantly) — how the artist chooses to present things in the publication gives the reader an idea of his or her whole artistic sphere.
Melanie Bonajo explores the relationship of the individual to its surroundings in a commodified, globalised culture. In her work, she uncovers how our ideas of identity, genre, value and such structures formed by conventions are ever shifting to feelings of uncertainty and instability. She approaches these issues by trying to newly create, to turn around overpowering views and conditions that are today so influenced by our consumer society and tries to get nearer to traits that are rooted in human nature.
Text von der Webseite
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Titel
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Annegret Soltau - Personal Identity
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6 S., 29,7x21 cm, keine weiteren Angaben vorhanden
geklammert, Pressemitteilung zur Open Art München, sw-Laserdruck nach PDF
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Annegret Soltau - Personal Identity
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2 S., 12,4x23,5 cm, signiert, 2 Stück. keine weiteren Angaben vorhanden
Einladungskarten, ein Exemplar frankiert, gestempelt, mit handschriftlichem Text auf Rückseite
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zur Ausstellung im Rahmen der Open Art München vom 11.09.-31.10.2015 in der Galerie Maurer Zilioli - Contemporary Arts, München
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Fahren ohne Ticket - In den Zwischenräumen der Sprache
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72 S., 23,7x17 cm, Auflage: 1.000, signiert, keine weiteren Angaben vorhanden
Drahtheftung, beiliegend ein Veranstaltungsflyer zur Ausstellung. In der Mitte des Heftes befindet sich ein vom Format her größerer Teil mit Fotoabbildungen verschiedener Werke.
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Broschüre anlässlich der Gruppenausstellung Fahren ohne Ticket - In den Zwischenräumen der Sprache vom 27.11.2021-16.03.2022
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