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	<title>Visual Artists Ireland &#187; Printed Project</title>
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		<title>Printed Project 14: ‘the conceptual north pole’, Curator/Editor Lytle Shaw</title>
		<link>http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed_project/pp14/</link>
		<comments>http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed_project/pp14/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Nov 2010 16:50:44 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Printed Project]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed_project/printed-project-14-%e2%80%98the-conceptual-north-pole%e2%80%99-curatoreditor-lytle-shaw/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[  [1]“Passing frozen explorers from the 1960s and 70s, new parties from the camps of art and writing have recently set out for a still poorly mapped disciplinary territory we might call the Conceptual North Pole: there, antiquated terms like ‘inspiration’ or ‘influence’ would give way to a cross-disciplinary poetics involving nominally shared though constantly remade strategies, structures, and terms – installation, site, document, procedure and history are just a few”.

Printed Project 14:  'the conceptual north pole' encompasses new developments in conceptual poetry, meta-documentary; and artists who restage or reframe the idea of literature. Through a series of interviews with a range of visual and textual practitioners, The Conceptual North Pole explores a range of shifting categories and conceptualisations.

Contributors: Heriberto Yepez, Jeff Derksen, Lisa Robertson, Matthew Buckingham, Monica de La Torre, Emilie Clark, Gerard Byrne, Matthew Coolidge, Rob Fitterman, Kenneth Goldsmith, Cabinet

Curator /Editor: Lytle Shaw lives and works in New York.  His poetry books include Principles of the Emeryville Shellmound, Low-Level Bureaucratic Structures: A Novel, Cable Factory 20, The Lobe, and 19 Lines: A Drawing Center Writing Anthology.  Among his critical writings are Frank O’Hara: The Poetics of Coterie, two forthcoming books (Fieldworks: From Place to Site in Postwar Poetics and Specimen Box), and catalogue essays on Robert Smithson for DIA Center, Gerard Byrne for Koenig Books, and The Royal Art Lodge for The Drawing Center.  Exhibitions of Shaw’s collaborative work with Jimbo Blachly (thechadwickfamilypapers.blogspot.com) have included EV+A 2010, PS1/MoMA, Tate Modern, ICA Philadelphia/Bartram’s Garden, Wave Hill, David Nolan Gallery and Winkleman Gallery in New York, where their next solo exhibition will be in February 2011.  The catalog, The Chadwick Family Papers: A Brief
Public Glimpse, collects the first 5 years of their work together.  A contributing editor for Cabinet magazine, Shaw teaches theory in the School of Architecture at the University of Limerick and American literature at New
York University.


Launch/Discussion Event
Art / Writing: Place and Possibility
In partnership with The Art / Writing Talks Series  Curated by Fiona Fulham
2.00pm 11 December 2010
Goethe Institute, Dublin

.............................................................................................................

PURCHASE THIS ISSUE OF PRINTED PROJECT:
Please select ONE of the following options. (Price is inclusive of shipping fees)

   Ireland and Northern Ireland €9.50 Euro    UK, Europe, USA, and Rest of World €12.50 Euro    .............................................................................................................

Special Purchase Price for Members of Visual Artists Ireland

    €5.00 Euro ............................................................................................................. SUBSCRIBE TO PRINTED PROJECT:

You can subscribe to Printed Project and receive two issues a year. In addition, there are preferential subscription rates for members of VAI.  Full details here: http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed-project/subscribe-to-printed-project [2]

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[1] http://visualartists.ie/http://visualartists.ie/wp-admin/options-misc.php/2010/11/PP14_cover.jpg
[2] http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed-project/subscribe-to-printed-project]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-family: Arial;"> </span><a href="http://visualartists.ie/http://visualartists.ie/wp-admin/options-misc.php/2010/11/PP14_cover.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-19138" title="Printed Project 14 Cover " src="http://visualartists.ie/http://visualartists.ie/wp-admin/options-misc.php/2010/11/PP14_cover.jpg" alt="" width="134" height="176" /></a><em>“Passing frozen explorers from the 1960s and 70s, new parties from the camps of art and writing have recently set out for a still poorly mapped disciplinary territory we might call the Conceptual North Pole: there, antiquated terms like ‘inspiration’ or ‘influence’ would give way to a cross-disciplinary poetics involving nominally shared though constantly remade strategies, structures, and terms – installation, site, document, procedure and history are just a few”.</em></p>
<p><strong>Printed Project 14:  &#8216;the conceptual north pole&#8217;</strong> encompasses new developments in conceptual poetry, meta-documentary; and artists who restage or reframe the idea of literature. Through a series of interviews with a range of visual and textual practitioners, The Conceptual North Pole explores a range of shifting categories and conceptualisations.</p>
<p><strong>Contributors:</strong> Heriberto Yepez, Jeff Derksen, Lisa Robertson, Matthew Buckingham, Monica de La Torre, Emilie Clark, Gerard Byrne, Matthew Coolidge, Rob Fitterman, Kenneth Goldsmith, Cabinet</p>
<p><strong>Curator /Editor: </strong>Lytle Shaw lives and works in New York.  His poetry books include Principles of the Emeryville Shellmound, Low-Level Bureaucratic Structures: A Novel, Cable Factory 20, The Lobe, and 19 Lines: A Drawing Center Writing Anthology.  Among his critical writings are Frank O’Hara: The Poetics of Coterie, two forthcoming books (Fieldworks: From Place to Site in Postwar Poetics and Specimen Box), and catalogue essays on Robert Smithson for DIA Center, Gerard Byrne for Koenig Books, and The Royal Art Lodge for The Drawing Center.  Exhibitions of Shaw’s collaborative work with Jimbo Blachly (thechadwickfamilypapers.blogspot.com) have included EV+A 2010, PS1/MoMA, Tate Modern, ICA Philadelphia/Bartram’s Garden, Wave Hill, David Nolan Gallery and Winkleman Gallery in New York, where their next solo exhibition will be in February 2011.  The catalog, The Chadwick Family Papers: A Brief<br />
Public Glimpse, collects the first 5 years of their work together.  A contributing editor for Cabinet magazine, Shaw teaches theory in the School of Architecture at the University of Limerick and American literature at New<br />
York University.</p>
<p><strong><br />
Launch/Discussion Event</strong><em><br />
</em><span style="color: #000000;">Art / Writing: Place and Possibility<br />
In partnership with The Art / Writing Talks Series  Curated by Fiona Fulham<br />
2.00pm 11 December 2010<br />
Goethe Institute, Dublin</span></p>
<p>&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;.</p>
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		<title>Printed Project 11: &#8216;Farewell to Post-Colonialism &#8211; Querying the Guangzhou Triennial 2008&#8242;, curated / edited by Sarat Maharaj</title>
		<link>http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed_project/pp11/</link>
		<comments>http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed_project/pp11/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 28 Sep 2010 14:47:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Printed Project]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Printed Project 11, curated / edited by Sarat Maharaj, is a series of reflections, extensions and musings emerging from and around the Guangzhou Triennial 2008. The critical thinking and lines of inquiry explored include the global shifts in political and economic focus; mapping post-western modernity; and how this relates art practice and theory in China and beyond.

Launch / Discussion Event in Venice
'Farewell to Post-Colonialism - Querying the Guangzhou Triennial 2008' was launched with a discussion event at the 2009 Venice Biennale. Chaired by Noel Kelly, Sarat Maharaj, along with Chris Dercon, Charles Eshe, Daniel Birnbaum, Homi K Bhabha and Gao Shiming, explored issues arising from and relevant to this edition of Printed Project. The event took place on 5 June 2009 at Istituto Santa Maria della Pietá, Calle della Pietá, Castello Venice, and was supported by the Republic of Ireland &#38; Northern Ireland exhibitions in Venice.

Curator / Editor
Sarat Maharaj is Professor of Art History and Theory at Goldsmiths College and Professor of Visual Art and Knowledge Systems, Lund University, Sweden. His specialist research covers Marcel Duchamp, James Joyce and Richard Hamilton. Current research includes ‘visual art as knowledge production and non-knowledge’ and the concept of ‘thinking through the visual’. Sarat Maharaj was a co-curator of the Third Guangzhou Triennial (together with Gao Shiming and Johnson Chang) 2008 and a co-curator for Documenta 11, 2002.

Co-Editor: Dorothee Albrecht. In collaboration with the GT-Curators: Johnson Chang Tsong-Zung and Gao Shiming; with the GT08 Research Curators: Sopawan Boonnimitra, Stina Edblom, Tamar Guimarães, Steven Lam, Khaled D. Ramadan.

Contributors
Avi Alpert, Maria Thereza Alves, Saleh Barakat, Ulrich Beck, Ecke Bonk, Conrad Botes, Zoe Butt, Lyn Carter, Amy Cheng, Amy Cheung, Chen Chieh-Jen, Joseph DeLappe, Johnson Chang Tsong-Zung, Paul Gladston, Khaled Hafez, Huang Xiaopeng , Du Keke, Michael Lee, Simon Leung, Trinh T. Minh-ha, Paul O'Kane, Annie Paul, Hans Hamid Rasmussen, Gertrud Sandqvist, Stuart Sim, Gilane Tawadros, Hu Xiang-cheng, ChenYun, Yi Zhou.

……………………………………………………………………………………………….

PURCHASE THIS ISSUE OF PRINTED PROJECT: 
Please select ONE of the following options. (Price is inclusive of shipping fees)

    Ireland and Northern Ireland €9.50 Euro     UK, Europe, USA, and Rest of World €12.50 Euro ……………………………………………………………………………………………….

Special Purchase Price for Members of Visual Artists Ireland

     €5.00 Euro ……………………………………………………………………………………………….

SUBSCRIBE TO PRINTED PROJECT:
You can subscribe to Printed Project and receive two issues a year. In addition, there are preferential subscription rates for members of VAI.  Full details here: http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed-project/subscribe-to-printed-project [1]

……………………………………………………………………………………………….

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[2] http://www.docstoc.com/docs/document-preview.aspx?doc_id=13291701]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-942" style="border: 0pt none; margin: 5px;" title="Printed Project 11" src="http://visualartists.ie/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/pp11_coversized.jpg" alt="" width="134" height="175" />Printed Project 11, curated / edited by Sarat Maharaj, is a series of reflections, extensions and musings emerging from and around the Guangzhou Triennial 2008. The critical thinking and lines of inquiry explored include the global shifts in political and economic focus; mapping post-western modernity; and how this relates art practice and theory in China and beyond.</p>
<p><strong>Launch / Discussion Event in Venice<br />
</strong>&#8216;Farewell to Post-Colonialism &#8211; Querying the Guangzhou Triennial 2008&#8242; was launched with a discussion event at the 2009 Venice Biennale. Chaired by Noel Kelly, Sarat Maharaj, along with Chris Dercon, Charles Eshe, Daniel Birnbaum, Homi K Bhabha and Gao Shiming, explored issues arising from and relevant to this edition of Printed Project. The event took place on 5 June 2009 at Istituto Santa Maria della Pietá, Calle della Pietá, Castello Venice, and was supported by the Republic of Ireland &amp; Northern Ireland exhibitions in Venice.</p>
<p><strong>Curator / Editor</strong><br />
Sarat Maharaj is Professor of Art History and Theory at Goldsmiths College and Professor of Visual Art and Knowledge Systems, Lund University, Sweden. His specialist research covers Marcel Duchamp, James Joyce and Richard Hamilton. Current research includes ‘visual art as knowledge production and non-knowledge’ and the concept of ‘thinking through the visual’. Sarat Maharaj was a co-curator of the Third Guangzhou Triennial (together with Gao Shiming and Johnson Chang) 2008 and a co-curator for Documenta 11, 2002.</p>
<p>Co-Editor: Dorothee Albrecht. In collaboration with the GT-Curators: Johnson Chang Tsong-Zung and Gao Shiming; with the GT08 Research Curators: Sopawan Boonnimitra, Stina Edblom, Tamar Guimarães, Steven Lam, Khaled D. Ramadan.</p>
<p><strong>Contributors</strong><br />
Avi Alpert, Maria Thereza Alves, Saleh Barakat, Ulrich Beck, Ecke Bonk, Conrad Botes, Zoe Butt, Lyn Carter, Amy Cheng, Amy Cheung, Chen Chieh-Jen, Joseph DeLappe, Johnson Chang Tsong-Zung, Paul Gladston, Khaled Hafez, Huang Xiaopeng , Du Keke, Michael Lee, Simon Leung, Trinh T. Minh-ha, Paul O&#8217;Kane, Annie Paul, Hans Hamid Rasmussen, Gertrud Sandqvist, Stuart Sim, Gilane Tawadros, Hu Xiang-cheng, ChenYun, Yi Zhou.</p>
<p>……………………………………………………………………………………………….</p>
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		<title>Printed Project 13: ‘Virtual Fictional’, Curator/Editor Kevin Atherton</title>
		<link>http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed_project/pp13/</link>
		<comments>http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed_project/pp13/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Jun 2010 10:24:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Printed Project]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://visualartists.ie/?page_id=10665</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ Printed Project 13 Virtual Fictional brings together a range of artists practices that both reflect upon and utilize strategies drawing upon notions of meta -fiction, virtual space, hoaxes and misdirection. As Kevin Atherton has observed,  ­ as a consequence of the emergence of virtual reality technology in the 1990s, the age-old relationship between truth and fiction was cast into a new light. Now, two decades later, when the hype has largely subsided surrounding VR, we can see that the true alternative world that was emerging twenty years ago, was not after all, the one to be found by each of us individually through the act of putting a helmet over our heads, but rather the one that would collectively contain us all. Perhaps the lasting contribution that virtual reality technology has made is as a poetic metaphor serving to underscore and sharpen our awareness of the virtuality of existence itself, rather than, as so much of the hype wanted us to believe; as an alternative to it.
 

Curator /Editor
Kevin Atherton (born Isle of Man in 1950) is an artist and fine art educator with an ongoing interest in the relationship between the virtual and the fictional. Based in Dublin, he is the Head of the Sculpture Department and Fine Art Post-Graduate Coordinator at the National College of Art and Design (NCAD). He has exhibited in museums and galleries through out Europe and North America, most recently in 2009 in ‘The Studio Dialogues’ at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and in 2010 in ‘Changing Channels – Art and Television’ at the Museum of Modern Art Vienna, and from May – June this year at Tate Britain in ‘Rewind and Play’.Since the early eighties he has carried out over a dozen large-scale public sculpture commissions throughout Britain and Ireland including in 2009 Another Sphere, a surveillance sculpture, in Ballymun.He is currently completing a PhD in the Faculty of Visual Culture at NCAD.

Contributors
Printed Project 13: Virtual Fictional, curated / edited by Kevin Atherton, features contributions by Ciara Moore, Liz Lee, Peter Hill, Tim O¹Riley, David Crichley, John Smith, David Garcia, The Television, Priscila Fernandes and Keith Hopper.

Launch/Discussion Event
Artists Talk / Printed Project Launch Event
‘Virtual Fictional’
Void, Patrick Street, Derry
3 July 2010, 12.30 – 15.00hrs

Kevin Atherton in conversation(s) about curating / editing ‘Virtual Fictional’.


 A two-part discussion, led by Void curator Susanne Stich and artist Sarah Pierce ranging broadly across the subjects of meta-fiction, virtual space, humour, fabrications and authorship in relation to contemporary visual art,  prompted by overlapping concerns in both Atherton's interests and the exhibition 'What Remains' by Christian Jankowski, on show at the Void.

The second element of the talk featured Kevin Atherton and Sarah Pierce: In Conversation. Since 2008, Atherton and Pierce have developed performances using Atherton's original works, In Two Minds (1978) and Any Questions (1979).

PURCHASE THIS ISSUE OF PRINTED PROJECT: 
Please select ONE of the following options. (Price is inclusive of shipping fees)

   Ireland and Northern Ireland €9.50 Euro    UK, Europe, USA, and Rest of World €12.50 Euro ………………………………………………………………………………………………. Special Purchase Price for Members of Visual Artists Ireland


   €5.00 Euro ……………………………………………………………………………………………….

SUBSCRIBE TO PRINTED PROJECT:
You can subscribe to Printed Project and receive two issues a year. In addition, there are preferential subscription rates for members of VAI.  Full details here: http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed-project/subscribe-to-printed-project [1]

……………………………………………………………………………………………….

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[2] http://www.docstoc.com/docs/46516793/Printed-Project-13-Virtual-Fictional]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-10662" style="margin-left: 5px; margin-right: 5px;" title="PP13 cover" src="http://visualartists.ie/http://visualartists.ie/wp-admin/options-misc.php/2010/01/pp13_cover3.jpg" alt="" width="134" height="179" /><span style="font-family: Arial;"> </span><strong>Printed Project 13 Virtual Fictional</strong> brings together a range of artists practices that both reflect upon and utilize strategies drawing upon notions of meta -fiction, virtual space, hoaxes and misdirection. As Kevin Atherton has observed,  <em>­ as a consequence of the emergence of virtual reality technology in the 1990s, the age-old relationship between truth and fiction was cast into a new light. Now, two decades later, when the hype has largely subsided surrounding VR, we can see that the true alternative world that was emerging twenty years ago, was not after all, the one to be found by each of us individually through the act of putting a helmet over our heads, but rather the one that would collectively contain us all. Perhaps the lasting contribution that virtual reality technology has made is as a poetic metaphor serving to underscore and sharpen our awareness of the virtuality of existence itself, rather than, as so much of the hype wanted us to believe; as an alternative to it.</em><br />
<strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong>Curator /Editor<br />
</strong>Kevin Atherton (born Isle of Man in 1950) is an artist and fine art educator with an ongoing interest in the relationship between the virtual and the fictional. Based in Dublin, he is the Head of the Sculpture Department and Fine Art Post-Graduate Coordinator at the National College of Art and Design (NCAD). He has exhibited in museums and galleries through out Europe and North America, most recently in 2009 in ‘The Studio Dialogues’ at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and in 2010 in ‘Changing Channels – Art and Television’ at the Museum of Modern Art Vienna, and from May – June this year at Tate Britain in ‘Rewind and Play’.Since the early eighties he has carried out over a dozen large-scale public sculpture commissions throughout Britain and Ireland including in 2009 <em>Another Sphere</em>, a surveillance sculpture, in Ballymun.He is currently completing a PhD in the Faculty of Visual Culture at NCAD.</p>
<p><strong>Contributors<br />
</strong>Printed Project 13: Virtual Fictional, curated / edited by Kevin Atherton, features contributions by Ciara Moore, Liz Lee, Peter Hill, Tim O¹Riley, David Crichley, John Smith, David Garcia, The Television, Priscila Fernandes and Keith Hopper.</p>
<p><strong><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-11209" style="margin-right: 6px;" title="pp13_event_void" src="http://visualartists.ie/http://visualartists.ie/wp-admin/options-misc.php/2010/06/pp13_event_void.jpg" alt="" width="250" height="167" />Launch/Discussion Event</strong><em><br />
</em><span style="font-family: Arial;">Artists Talk / Printed Project Launch Event<br />
‘Virtual Fictional’<br />
Void, Patrick Street, Derry<br />
</span><span style="font-family: Arial;">3 July 2010, 12.30 – 15.00hrs</span></p>
<p>Kevin Atherton in conversation(s) about curating / editing ‘Virtual Fictional’.<strong><br />
</strong></p>
<p><strong> </strong>A two-part discussion, led by Void curator Susanne Stich and artist Sarah Pierce ranging broadly across the subjects of meta-fiction, virtual space, humour, fabrications and authorship in relation to contemporary visual art,  prompted by overlapping concerns in both Atherton&#8217;s interests and the exhibition &#8216;What Remains&#8217; by Christian Jankowski, on show at the Void.</p>
<p>The second element of the talk featured Kevin Atherton and Sarah Pierce: In Conversation. Since 2008, Atherton and Pierce have developed performances using Atherton&#8217;s original works, In Two Minds (1978) and Any Questions (1979).</p>
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		<title>Printed Project 12: &#8216;Circulation&#8217;,  Curator / editor Katya Sander</title>
		<link>http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed_project/pp12/</link>
		<comments>http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed_project/pp12/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Feb 2009 13:31:22 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[ In the light of the recent crash in the global financial system, this issue of Printed Project takes a timely look at the notion of ‘circulation’ – not only circulation of goods, bodies, knowledge, ideas, images and money, i.e. the movement of certain forms – but also, and maybe more so, an idea of circulation as a form in itself.

Curator / editor Katya Sander has taken her cue from a number of recent sociologists and anthropologists, who have sought to understand and describe the market "as one form of circulation central to western imaginary of modernity". As Sander notes "along with the market as one such matrix for western modernity, the notion of the public sphere and the idea of the nation state can also be understood as seminal forms of circulation for western modernity and the ways in which it is understood and imagined.”

Curator / Editor
Katya Sander (born 1970 Copenhagen) lives and works in Berlin and Copenhagen. Sanders most recent solo exhibitions include Production of Future. A Science Fiction About Counting at Künstlerhaus Stuttgart, TIFO (event) at Generator in Trondheim, and The Most Complicated Machines are Made of Words at Museum Moderner Kunst (MuMoK) in Vienna. Moreover, Sanders work has been shown in group shows such as in Documenta12 (9 Scripts From a Nation at War, with Andrea Geyer, Sharon Hayes, Ashley Hunt &#38; David Thorne), Kunstraum Universität Lüneburg, Rooseum in Malmö, Charlottenborg in Copenhagen, Neue Berliner Kunstverein, CCA Watts Institute in San Francisco, ICCA Bucharest, Artists Space in New York, Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Moderna Museet in Stockholm, Musée de L’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, Kunsthalle Wien, Aarhus Art Museum, MIGROS Museum, and others. She has worked in various collaborative constellations. Sanders writing on art, visual cultures, architecture and feminism has been published internationally in various books, magazines and journals. Together with Simon Sheikh she is a series editor of OE–Critical Readers in Visual Cultures, published with b_books, Berlin.

Contributors
Zach Formwalt, Elin Wikström, Neil Cummings, Pauline Boudry &#38; Renate Lorenz,Alex Villar, Katja Eydel, Brian Holmes, Andrea Creutz &#38; Thomas Boren, Ashley Hunt, Jason Simon, Simon Sheikh, John Strauss, Sandra Schäfer, Ralph and Stefan Heidenreich.

Launch/Discussion Event
‘Kick Starting the Core’, 6.30pm on 7 December 2010 at The Banker’s Club, Stephen Street Upper, D8.
‘Kick Starting the Core’ featured presentations by: Garrett Phelan – Visual Artist, Dr. Constantin Gurdgiev – Adjunct Lecturer in Finance with Trinity College, Dublin and Noel Kelly – Chief Executive Officer/Director Visual Artists Ireland.

In the light of crash of the global financial system, the launch of this edition of Printed Project (which took a  timely look at the notion of 'circulation goods, bodies, knowledge, ideas, images and money) occasioned a wide ranging discussion event looking at the interaction of art and economics in Ireland.
 


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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-943" style="border: 0pt none; margin: 5px;" title="Printed Project 12" src="http://visualartists.ie/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/PP12small.jpg" alt="" width="134" height="174" /> In the light of the recent crash in the global financial system, this issue of Printed Project takes a timely look at the notion of ‘circulation’ – not only circulation of goods, bodies, knowledge, ideas, images and money, i.e. the movement of certain forms – but also, and maybe more so, an idea of circulation as a form in itself.</p>
<p>Curator / editor Katya Sander has taken her cue from a number of recent sociologists and anthropologists, who have sought to understand and describe the market &#8220;as one form of circulation central to western imaginary of modernity&#8221;. As Sander notes &#8220;along with the market as one such matrix for western modernity, the notion of the public sphere and the idea of the nation state can also be understood as seminal forms of circulation for western modernity and the ways in which it is understood and imagined.”</p>
<p><strong>Curator / Editor</strong><br />
Katya Sander (born 1970 Copenhagen) lives and works in Berlin and Copenhagen. Sanders most recent solo exhibitions include Production of Future. A Science Fiction About Counting at Künstlerhaus Stuttgart, TIFO (event) at Generator in Trondheim, and The Most Complicated Machines are Made of Words at Museum Moderner Kunst (MuMoK) in Vienna. Moreover, Sanders work has been shown in group shows such as in Documenta12 (9 Scripts From a Nation at War, with Andrea Geyer, Sharon Hayes, Ashley Hunt &amp; David Thorne), Kunstraum Universität Lüneburg, Rooseum in Malmö, Charlottenborg in Copenhagen, Neue Berliner Kunstverein, CCA Watts Institute in San Francisco, ICCA Bucharest, Artists Space in New York, Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Moderna Museet in Stockholm, Musée de L’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, Kunsthalle Wien, Aarhus Art Museum, MIGROS Museum, and others. She has worked in various collaborative constellations. Sanders writing on art, visual cultures, architecture and feminism has been published internationally in various books, magazines and journals. Together with Simon Sheikh she is a series editor of OE–Critical Readers in Visual Cultures, published with b_books, Berlin.</p>
<p><strong>Contributors</strong><br />
Zach Formwalt, Elin Wikström, Neil Cummings, Pauline Boudry &amp; Renate Lorenz,Alex Villar, Katja Eydel, Brian Holmes, Andrea Creutz &amp; Thomas Boren, Ashley Hunt, Jason Simon, Simon Sheikh, John Strauss, Sandra Schäfer, Ralph and Stefan Heidenreich.</p>
<p><strong>Launch/Discussion Event</strong><em><br />
‘Kick Starting the Core’,</em> 6.30pm on 7 December 2010 at The Banker’s Club, Stephen Street Upper, D8.<em><br />
‘Kick Starting the Core’ </em>featured presentations by: Garrett Phelan – Visual Artist, Dr. Constantin Gurdgiev – Adjunct Lecturer in Finance with Trinity College, Dublin and Noel Kelly – Chief Executive Officer/Director Visual Artists Ireland.</p>
<p>In the light of crash of the global financial system, the launch of this edition of Printed Project (which took a  timely look at the notion of &#8216;circulation goods, bodies, knowledge, ideas, images and money) occasioned a wide ranging discussion event looking at the interaction of art and economics in Ireland.<br />
<strong> </strong></p>
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		<title>Printed Project 10: The Art of Living with Strangers, Curator / Editor: Lolita Jablonskiene</title>
		<link>http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed_project/pp10/</link>
		<comments>http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed_project/pp10/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Feb 2009 13:23:57 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA['The Art of Living with Strangers', curated / edited by Lolita Jablonskiene, is based around the experience of the immigrant within their adopted environment and is indebted to the sociologist Zygmunt Bauman's assertions that inhabitants of the contemporary city are - 'permanent strangers', and that co-habitation, according to Bauman, is 'an art which, like all arts, requires study and exercise'. Moreover, Lolita Jablonskiene describes her edition of Printed Project ' as a workshop - constructed in the spirit of Alexander Rodchenko's Workers' Club - offering socio-political enlightenment, a platform for debate, and a space for the renewal of our energy at the end of a long working day'.

Curator / Editor
Lolita Jablonskiene (PhD) is an art critic and curator based in Vilnius. In 2002 she was appointed chief curator of the National Gallery. Jablonskiene is currently writing a book on the development of contemporary art practices in Lithuania during the 1990s.

Contributors
Lolita Jablonskiene, Zygmunt Bauman, Flash Bar, Brendan Earley, Steven Flusty, Sam Ely &#38; Sam Ely &#38; Lynn Harris, Lukasz Piotr Galecki, Tessa Giblin, Daniel Jewesbury, Jesse Jones, Danius Kesminas, Eléonore de Montesquiou, Nikos Papastergiadis, Paulina Egle Pukyte, Simon Rees, Société Réaliste, Apolonija Sustersic, Sarah Tuck, What is to be done? / Chto delat?, Pavel Braila.

Launch event
This issue of Printed Project was launched at Temple Bar Gallery &#38; Studios in Dublin on Friday 7 November 2009 at 6pm with a reception to celebrate the publication of the 10th Printed Project and also the European Council of Artists' Annual Conference on Artist's Mobility: Aspiration or Reality, hosted by Visual Artists Ireland and supported by the Irish Museum of Modern Art on 7 and 8 November 2008.


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……………………………………………………………………………………………….

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You can subscribe to Printed Project and receive two issues a year. In addition, there are preferential subscription rates for members of VAI.  Full details here: http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed-project/subscribe-to-printed-project [1]

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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-941" style="border: 0pt none; margin: 5px;" title="Printed Project 10" src="http://visualartists.ie/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/ap_currentissue_cover10.jpg" alt="" width="134" height="175" />&#8216;The Art of Living with Strangers&#8217;, curated / edited by Lolita Jablonskiene, is based around the experience of the immigrant within their adopted environment and is indebted to the sociologist Zygmunt Bauman&#8217;s assertions that inhabitants of the contemporary city are &#8211; &#8216;permanent strangers&#8217;, and that co-habitation, according to Bauman, is &#8216;an art which, like all arts, requires study and exercise&#8217;. Moreover, Lolita Jablonskiene describes her edition of Printed Project &#8216; <em>as a workshop &#8211; constructed in the spirit of Alexander Rodchenko&#8217;s Workers&#8217; Club &#8211; offering socio-political enlightenment, a platform for debate, and a space for the renewal of our energy at the end of a long working day</em>&#8216;.</p>
<p><strong>Curator / Editor</strong><br />
Lolita Jablonskiene<strong> </strong>(PhD) is an art critic and curator based in Vilnius. In 2002 she was appointed chief curator of the National Gallery. Jablonskiene is currently writing a book on the development of contemporary art practices in Lithuania during the 1990s.</p>
<p><strong>Contributors</strong><br />
Lolita Jablonskiene, Zygmunt Bauman, Flash Bar, Brendan Earley, Steven Flusty, Sam Ely &amp; Sam Ely &amp; Lynn Harris, Lukasz Piotr Galecki, Tessa Giblin, Daniel Jewesbury, Jesse Jones, Danius Kesminas, Eléonore de Montesquiou, Nikos Papastergiadis, Paulina Egle Pukyte, Simon Rees, Société Réaliste, Apolonija Sustersic, Sarah Tuck, What is to be done? / Chto delat?, Pavel Braila.</p>
<p><strong>Launch event<br />
</strong>This issue of Printed Project was launched at Temple Bar Gallery &amp; Studios in Dublin on Friday 7 November 2009 at 6pm with a reception to celebrate the publication of the 10th Printed Project and also the European Council of Artists&#8217; Annual Conference on Artist&#8217;s Mobility: Aspiration or Reality, hosted by Visual Artists Ireland and supported by the Irish Museum of Modern Art on 7 and 8 November 2008.</p>
<p><strong><br />
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		<title>Printed Project 09: &#8216;The Call of the Wild is now a Cry for Help&#8217;, Curator / Editors: Declan Clarke and Paul McDevitt</title>
		<link>http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed_project/pp09/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Feb 2009 12:57:40 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Clarke &#38; McDevitt have treated Printed Project issue 9, The Call of the Wild is now a Cry for Help, as an artist-led exhibition space – keeping the written content to a minimum in order to make the publication prominently visual. Moreover they write 'As artists ourselves, we want our issue of Printed Project to be considered as an artwork in its own right'.

The contributions include solo visual projects, hand written text works and collaborative pages – with some artists choosing to literally work on top of the work of other artists - while others opted for a call-and-response approach, whereby new works were made in response to works sent.

A thread running through 'The Call of the Wild is now a Cry for Help' is a concern with the ways in which artists consider different ways and means of engaging with histories be they in terms of ones personal life; or work; or of a wider cultural and / or political scope.

Contributors
Jonathan Meese, Sophie von Hellermann, Goshka Macuga, Luke Dowd, Liz Craft /
Klaus Weber, Markus Selg / David Godbold, Matthias Dornfeld / Sara MacKillop, Mamma Andersson, Jockum Nordström, Jewyo Rhii, Tyler Vlahovich.

Curator / Editors
Declan Clarke is an artist based in London and Dublin. Recent solo exhibitions include 'Rebellion and Plots Ripen Like Fruit', Kiosko Gallery, Santa Cruz, Bolivia in 2007. 'Mine Are of Trouble', Art Now Lightbox, Tate Britain, London, "Trauma and Romance" Off-Site Project, Douglas Hyde Gallery, Dublin in 2006.

Paul McDevitt is an artist based in Berlin. Recent solo exhibitions include 'Guide Me' Berwick Gymnasium, Berwick-upon-Tweed, UK, 'Solitary Figure in Landscape' Stephen Friedman Gallery, London in 2007. He participated in 'Star Dust ou la Dernière Frontière' MAC/VAL Musée D'Art Contemporain Du Val-De-Marn Paris and Hayward touring show 'Cult Fiction' in 2007.

Clarke and McDevitt have been collaborating on curated projects since 2000. Past projects include 'Expect Nothing' Gallery for One, Dublin 2007, 'Matt Calderwood, Björn Dahlem, Sophie von Hellermann, Ian Kiaer, Cornelius Quabeck' Dublin City Gallery the Hugh Lane 2005. 'Play it as it Lays' The London Institute Gallery, London 2002.

A full archive of previous Clarke and McDevitt projects is available at
www.clarkeandmcdevitt.com [1]

Launch Events
DUBLIN: Thursday 17th April 2008
Followed by 'Kunstschlampen' (art table quiz) from 8:30pm
Upstairs at Toner’s, 139 Baggot Street Lower, Dublin 2

LONDON:Saturday 19th April, 2008
Stephen Friedman Gallery, 25 – 28 Old Burlington Street, London W1

BERLIN: Friday 25th April 2008
Bar in der Karl-Marx-Allee 36

……………………………………………………………………………………………….

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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-940" style="border: 0pt none; margin: 5px;" title="Printed Project 09a" src="http://visualartists.ie/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/apbackissues_cover09a.gif" alt="" width="132" height="172" />Clarke &amp; McDevitt have treated Printed Project issue 9,<em> The Call of the Wild is now a Cry for Help</em>, as an artist-led exhibition space – keeping the written content to a minimum in order to make the publication prominently visual. Moreover they write &#8216;As artists ourselves, we want our issue of Printed Project to be considered as an artwork in its own right&#8217;.</p>
<p>The contributions include solo visual projects, hand written text works and collaborative pages – with some artists choosing to literally work on top of the work of other artists &#8211; while others opted for a call-and-response approach, whereby new works were made in response to works sent.</p>
<p>A thread running through &#8216;<em>The Call of the Wild is now a Cry for Help</em>&#8216; is a concern with the ways in which artists consider different ways and means of engaging with histories be they in terms of ones personal life; or work; or of a wider cultural and / or political scope.</p>
<p><img class="size-full wp-image-939 alignright" style="border: 0pt none; margin: 5px;" title="Printed Project 09b" src="http://visualartists.ie/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/apbackissues_cover09b.gif" alt="" width="132" height="175" /><strong>Contributors</strong><br />
Jonathan Meese, Sophie von Hellermann, Goshka Macuga, Luke Dowd, Liz Craft /<br />
Klaus Weber, Markus Selg / David Godbold, Matthias Dornfeld / Sara MacKillop, Mamma Andersson, Jockum Nordström, Jewyo Rhii, Tyler Vlahovich.</p>
<p><strong>Curator / Editor</strong>s<br />
Declan Clarke is an artist based in London and Dublin. Recent solo exhibitions include &#8216;Rebellion and Plots Ripen Like Fruit&#8217;, Kiosko Gallery, Santa Cruz, Bolivia in 2007. &#8216;Mine Are of Trouble&#8217;, Art Now Lightbox, Tate Britain, London, &#8220;Trauma and Romance&#8221; Off-Site Project, Douglas Hyde Gallery, Dublin in 2006.</p>
<p>Paul McDevitt is an artist based in Berlin. Recent solo exhibitions include &#8216;Guide Me&#8217; Berwick Gymnasium, Berwick-upon-Tweed, UK, &#8216;Solitary Figure in Landscape&#8217; Stephen Friedman Gallery, London in 2007. He participated in &#8216;Star Dust ou la Dernière Frontière&#8217; MAC/VAL Musée D&#8217;Art Contemporain Du Val-De-Marn Paris and Hayward touring show &#8216;Cult Fiction&#8217; in 2007.</p>
<p>Clarke and McDevitt have been collaborating on curated projects since 2000. Past projects include &#8216;Expect Nothing&#8217; Gallery for One, Dublin 2007, &#8216;Matt Calderwood, Björn Dahlem, Sophie von Hellermann, Ian Kiaer, Cornelius Quabeck&#8217; Dublin City Gallery the Hugh Lane 2005. &#8216;Play it as it Lays&#8217; The London Institute Gallery, London 2002.</p>
<p>A full archive of previous Clarke and McDevitt projects is available at<br />
<a href="http://www.clarkeandmcdevitt.com/" target="_blank">www.clarkeandmcdevitt.com</a></p>
<p><strong>Launch Events<br />
</strong>DUBLIN: Thursday 17th April 2008<br />
Followed by &#8216;Kunstschlampen&#8217; (art table quiz) from 8:30pm<br />
Upstairs at Toner’s, 139 Baggot Street Lower, Dublin 2</p>
<p>LONDON:Saturday 19th April, 2008<br />
Stephen Friedman Gallery, 25 – 28 Old Burlington Street, London W1</p>
<p>BERLIN: Friday 25th April 2008<br />
Bar in der Karl-Marx-Allee 36</p>
<p>……………………………………………………………………………………………….</p>
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		<title>Printed Project 08: Artistic Freedom–Anxiety and Aspiration, Editor/Curator: Munira Mirza</title>
		<link>http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed_project/pp08/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Feb 2009 12:54:50 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[The dilemmas and tensions of artistic autonomy have been a constant throughout the past two centuries. With the age of Modernity, the shackles of tradition and the ancien regime may have loosened but new pressures have come to exert themselves – the demands of an ever-growing public audience, the taste of the established academy, the buying power of the mercantile classes, and the political machinations of the state. Against all these forces, the artist has always tried to push back by drawing on a sense of obligation to something beyond – to his practice, to Beauty, to Truth, or even to nihilistic, post-modern nonsense.

Today, the artist luxuriates in a freedom unimagined by his predecessors. Yet, there are new responsibilities. Artists are accused of not being socially useful. Arts organisations are told they must cater to more disadvantaged groups. The commercial market is also overwhelming, fixing the channels through which artists practice and speak to the public.

Should we be concerned about the state of autonomy today or was it ever thus?

This issue of Printed Project brings together a range of contributors to think about artistic autonomy. They bring their past and present experiences to bear on the question of why we – not just artists, but society as a whole – need such freedom.

Launch Event
To mark the launch of Printed Project’s eighth edition, edited by cultural commentator Munira Mirza, Gasworks hosted a discussion event expanding upon the issue’s focus on ‘artistic freedom – anxiety and aspiration. Does Autonomy Really Matter Anymore? Panel Discussion And Printed Project Launch Event Wednesday 5 December, 6- 8.00pm at Gasworks 155 Vauxhall Street,London, SE11 5RH.  www.gasworks.org.uk  [1]

Contributors
JJ Charlesworth, Pauline Hadaway, Paul O’Neill, Andrew Calcutt, Sonya Dyer, Padraic Moore, Cecilia Wee, Dolan Cummings, Emma Ridgway, Becky Shaw, Andrew Brighton, Josie Appleton.

Curator / Editor
Munira Mirza is a writer and researcher on issues relating to cultural policy, race and identity. She presented the BBC Radio 4 series, The Business of Race (2005) and Fighting Chance (2007) and edited a collection of essays called Culture Vultures: Is UK arts policy damaging the arts? (2006). She is currently researching her PhD at the University of Kent on the politics of local cultural policies.

……………………………………………………………………………………………….

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……………………………………………………………………………………………….

View Online Edition on Docstoc.com
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[1] http://www.gasworks.org.uk/
[2] http://visualartists.ie../publications/printed_project/publications/printed_project/publications/printed-project/subscribe-to-printed-project
[3] http://www.docstoc.com/docs/document-preview.aspx?doc_id=13459768]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" style="border: 0pt none; margin: 5px;" title="Printed Project 08" src="http://visualartists.ie/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/ap_backissues_cover08.gif" alt="" width="131" height="175" />The dilemmas and tensions of artistic autonomy have been a constant throughout the past two centuries. With the age of Modernity, the shackles of tradition and the ancien regime may have loosened but new pressures have come to exert themselves – the demands of an ever-growing public audience, the taste of the established academy, the buying power of the mercantile classes, and the political machinations of the state. Against all these forces, the artist has always tried to push back by drawing on a sense of obligation to something beyond – to his practice, to Beauty, to Truth, or even to nihilistic, post-modern nonsense.</p>
<p>Today, the artist luxuriates in a freedom unimagined by his predecessors. Yet, there are new responsibilities. Artists are accused of not being socially useful. Arts organisations are told they must cater to more disadvantaged groups. The commercial market is also overwhelming, fixing the channels through which artists practice and speak to the public.</p>
<p>Should we be concerned about the state of autonomy today or was it ever thus?</p>
<p>This issue of Printed Project brings together a range of contributors to think about artistic autonomy. They bring their past and present experiences to bear on the question of why we – not just artists, but society as a whole – need such freedom.</p>
<p><strong>Launch Event</strong><br />
To mark the launch of Printed Project’s eighth edition, edited by cultural commentator Munira Mirza, Gasworks hosted a discussion event expanding upon the issue’s focus on ‘artistic freedom – anxiety and aspiration. <em>Does Autonomy Really Matter Anymore? </em><em>Panel Discussion And Printed Project Launch Event Wednesday 5 December, 6- 8.00pm</em><strong> </strong>at Gasworks 155 Vauxhall Street,London, SE11 5RH.  <a href="http://www.gasworks.org.uk/" target="_blank">www.gasworks.org.uk </a></p>
<p><strong>Contributors<br />
</strong>JJ Charlesworth, Pauline Hadaway, Paul O’Neill, Andrew Calcutt, Sonya Dyer, Padraic Moore, Cecilia Wee, Dolan Cummings, Emma Ridgway, Becky Shaw, Andrew Brighton, Josie Appleton.</p>
<p><strong>Curator / Editor</strong><br />
Munira Mirza is a writer and researcher on issues relating to cultural policy, race and identity. She presented the BBC Radio 4 series, The Business of Race (2005) and Fighting Chance (2007) and edited a collection of essays called Culture Vultures: Is UK arts policy damaging the arts? (2006). She is currently researching her PhD at the University of Kent on the politics of local cultural policies.</p>
<p>……………………………………………………………………………………………….</p>
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		<title>Printed Project 07: &#8216;Unconditional Love&#8217;, Curator/Editor Kim Levin</title>
		<link>http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed_project/pp07-2/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Feb 2009 12:48:40 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Kim Levin’s edition of Printed Project, entitled ‘Unconditional Love’ features works by artists internationally known for their extreme projects and interventions – sometimes possessing elements of possible danger or destruction, illegality or un-lovability. The 12 projects presented in the publication run the gamut from fantasy to reality, with some interesting connections arising between them.


Printed Project Issue 7 was presented at the Irish Visual Art Periodicals launch (Circa, Printed Project, Source) at the Venice Biennale on Saturday 9 June 2007. 
 
Contributors: Writers - Kim Levin, Ekaterina Degot; Artists – Maurizio Cattelan, Marina Abramovic, Tania Bruguera, Christoph Buchel Luca Buvoli, Andrea Fraser Kendell Geers, Oleg Kulik, Maurice O’Connell, Santiago Sierra, Nedko Solakov, Tavares Strachen.


Curator / Editor
Kim Levin is an independent art critic and curator. Until 2006, she was a regular contributor to The Village Voice. From 1996 to 2002, she was International President of the International Association of Art Critics (AICA) based in Paris. She is the author of Beyond Modernism: essays on Art from the ‘70s and ‘80s (Harper Collins 1988; Tokyo Shoseki 1991); and editor of Beyond Walls and Wars: Art, Politics and Multiculturalism (Midmarch Press 1992). She conceived and co-edited Art Planet: A Global View of Criticism (The AICA Press, Volume 1 1999) and is co-author of Transplant: Living Vegetation in Contemporary Art (Hatje Cantz, Germany, 2000).


PURCHASE THIS ISSUE OF PRINTED PROJECT:
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You can subscribe to Printed Project and receive two issues a year. In addition, there are preferential subscription rates for members of VAI.  Full details here: http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed-project/subscribe-to-printed-project [1]

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[1] http://visualartists.ie../publications/printed_project/publications/printed_project/publications/printed-project/subscribe-to-printed-project]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><img class="alignleft" style="border: 0pt none; margin: 3px 4px;" title="Printed Project 07" src="http://visualartists.ie/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/ap_backissues_cover07.gif" alt="" width="138" height="169" />Kim Levin’s </strong>edition of Printed Project, entitled ‘<em>Unconditional Love’</em> features works by artists internationally known for their extreme projects and interventions – sometimes possessing elements of possible danger or destruction, illegality or un-lovability. The 12 projects presented in the publication run the gamut from fantasy to reality, with some interesting connections arising between them.<strong><br />
</strong></p>
<p><strong>Printed Project Issue 7 was presented at the Irish Visual Art Periodicals launch (Circa, Printed Project, Source) at the Venice Biennale on Saturday 9 June 2007. </strong><br />
<strong> </strong><br />
<strong>Contributors: </strong>Writers &#8211; Kim Levin, Ekaterina Degot; Artists – Maurizio Cattelan, Marina Abramovic, Tania Bruguera, Christoph Buchel Luca Buvoli, Andrea Fraser Kendell Geers, Oleg Kulik, Maurice O’Connell, Santiago Sierra, Nedko Solakov, Tavares Strachen.<span style="font-family: Arial;"><br />
</span></p>
<p><strong>Curator / Editor</strong><br />
Kim Levin is an independent art critic and curator. Until 2006, she was a regular contributor to The Village Voice. From 1996 to 2002, she was International President of the International Association of Art Critics (AICA) based in Paris. She is the author of Beyond Modernism: essays on Art from the ‘70s and ‘80s (Harper Collins 1988; Tokyo Shoseki 1991); and editor of Beyond Walls and Wars: Art, Politics and Multiculturalism (Midmarch Press 1992). She conceived and co-edited Art Planet: A Global View of Criticism (The AICA Press, Volume 1 1999) and is co-author of Transplant: Living Vegetation in Contemporary Art (Hatje Cantz, Germany, 2000).</p>
<p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong><br />
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		<title>Printed Project 06: &#8216;I Can’t Work Like This&#8217;, Curator/Editors: Anton Vidokle &amp; Tirdad Zolghadr</title>
		<link>http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed_project/pp06i-can%e2%80%99t-work-like-this-curator-editors-anton-vidokle-tirdad-zolghadr/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Feb 2009 12:43:07 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Entitled ‘I Cant Work Like This’ and co-edited by Anton Vidokle &#38; Tirdad Zolghadr, Printed Project Issue 6 includes varied contributions that take as their starting point the notion of failure – in particular how to reassess failure in a context of ‘cutting defeatism’ among artists, writers and curators.

This issue of Printed Project was launched in Dublin, Madrid and Berlin:
Dublin: 15 February 2007 at Project, Essex Street.
Madrid: 18 February at ARCO 5th International Contemporary Art Experts Forum
Berlin: 24 February at the unitednationsplaza.

“The decision to invite Anton Vidokle to edit of Issue 6 of Printed Project arose out of events that took place in June 2006, when the city of Nicosia cancelled Manifesta 6 and terminated the curators' contracts, a move that is virtually unheard of on this level. In July, during a heat wave in Dublin, in the casual banter that precedes this type of meeting, Printed Project's editorial panel shared our disbelief, relaying to one another various sources of speculation. The idea arose to use the next issue of Printed Project to document this controversy, in hopes that this would allow some public entry into the decision. However, this approach would contradict our editorial mission: to support guest editors through an open platform in the form of a printed publication with no prescribed theme. We decided that an appropriate response to Manifesta's cancellation would be to invite one of the curators to do anything they wanted. In effect, to offer a platform where one had been stripped away.

Anton invited Tirdad Zolghadr to co-edit the issue. It is important to mention that many of the contributions here are based on the opening conference called ‘Histories of Productive Failures: From French Revolution to Manifesta 6’, which took place at the unitednationsplaza, Berlin in October of 2006.”

(From Our failure to Disagree by Sarah Pierce, in ‘I Can’t Work Like This’ Printed Project : Issue 6)

Contents:
Natascha Sadr Haghighian: Front and Back Cover Design
Sarah Pierce, Our Failure to Disagree
Tirdad Zolghadr &#38; Anton Vidokle, A Disagreement
Anselm Franke, The Grudge
Maria Lind, When Water is Gushing In
Adrienne Goehler, United Nations Plaza: The Toast
Martha Rosler, Transition and Digressions - an on-going series of photographs
Liam Gillick, The Winter School – A Fiction Towards Documenta X
Liam Gillick, Selected Transcription from Talk at UN Plaza, Berlin, 2006
Diedrich Diederichsen, The New Ugliness of the Oppressed as Ornament
Ingrid Serven, Oh God, She Said,Talking to a Tree
Fia Backström, Herd Instincts 360°
Joseph Cohen, Berliner Vortrag
Hans Ulrich Obrist, The Agency of Unrealised Projects
Tirdad Zolghadr, Epilogue. But You Promised
Tom Holert, Surviving Surveillance? Failure as Technology
UNP Staff, I Can’t Work Like This: A Written Assessment

Biographies
Anton Vidokle was born in Moscow and is currently based in Berlin. His work has been exhibited in shows such as the Venice Biennale, Dakar Biennale and at Tate Modern, London; Moderna Galerija, Ljubljana; Musee d'art Modern de la Ville de Paris; Museo Carrillo Gil, Mexico City; UCLA Hammer, LA; ICA, Boston; Haus Der Kunst, Munich; P.S.1, New York; amongst others. With Julieta Aranda, he put together e-flux video rental. As founding director of e-flux, he has produced projects such as Next Documenta Should Be Curated By An Artist, Do it, Utopia Station poster project, and organised An Image Bank for Everyday Revolutionary Life and Martha Rosler Library. Anton Vidokle was a co-curator of Manifesta 6.

Tirdad Zolghadr works as a freelance curator, writes for Frieze magazine and has also contributed to Parkett, Bidoun, Cabinet, afterall, Neue Zürcher Zeitung, Straits Times Singapore and other publications. After his MA in Comparative Literature he began work in the field of journalism and documentary film, being a co-founder of the Tehran-based online publication Bad Jens in 1999, and co-director of Tehran 1380 (with Solmaz Shahbazi), a documentary on Tehran mass housing in 2002. His recent "Tropical Modernism" explores the history of Iranian socialism and was premiered at the Oberhausen Short Film Festival 2006. Since 2004, Zolghadr has curated events at Cubitt London, IASPIS Stockholm, Kunsthalle Geneva, various Tehran artspaces and other venues. He was co-curator of the International Sharjah Biennial 2005, and is currently preparing a long-term exhibition and research project addressing social class in the art world that shall take place at Gasworks London, Platform Istanbul and Tensta Konsthall. Zolghadr is also a founding member of the SHAHRZAD art &#38; design collective and will shortly publish his novel Softcore with Telegram Books, London.



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     Ireland and Northern Ireland €9.50 Euro    UK, Europe, USA, and Rest of World €12.50 Euro ……………………………………………………………………………………………….

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   €5.00 Euro  
 ……………………………………………………………………………………………….

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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-936" style="border: 0pt none; margin: 5px;" title="ap_backissues06" src="http://visualartists.ie/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/ap_backissues06.gif" alt="" width="135" height="167" />Entitled <em>‘I Cant Work Like This’</em> and co-edited by Anton Vidokle &amp; Tirdad Zolghadr, Printed Project Issue 6 includes varied contributions that take as their starting point the notion of failure – in particular how to reassess failure in a context of ‘cutting defeatism’ among artists, writers and curators.</p>
<p>This issue of Printed Project was launched in Dublin, Madrid and Berlin:<br />
Dublin: 15 February 2007 at Project, Essex Street.<br />
Madrid: 18 February at ARCO 5th International Contemporary Art Experts Forum<br />
Berlin: 24 February at the unitednationsplaza.</p>
<p>“The decision to invite Anton Vidokle to edit of Issue 6 of Printed Project arose out of events that took place in June 2006, when the city of Nicosia cancelled Manifesta 6 and terminated the curators&#8217; contracts, a move that is virtually unheard of on this level. In July, during a heat wave in Dublin, in the casual banter that precedes this type of meeting, Printed Project&#8217;s editorial panel shared our disbelief, relaying to one another various sources of speculation. The idea arose to use the next issue of Printed Project to document this controversy, in hopes that this would allow some public entry into the decision. However, this approach would contradict our editorial mission: to support guest editors through an open platform in the form of a printed publication with no prescribed theme. We decided that an appropriate response to Manifesta&#8217;s cancellation would be to invite one of the curators to do anything they wanted. In effect, to offer a platform where one had been stripped away.</p>
<p>Anton invited Tirdad Zolghadr to co-edit the issue. It is important to mention that many of the contributions here are based on the opening conference called ‘Histories of Productive Failures: From French Revolution to Manifesta 6’, which took place at the unitednationsplaza, Berlin in October of 2006.”</p>
<p>(From <em>Our failure to Disagree</em> by Sarah Pierce, in ‘I Can’t Work Like This’ Printed Project : Issue 6)</p>
<p><strong>Contents:</strong><br />
Natascha Sadr Haghighian: Front and Back Cover Design<br />
Sarah Pierce, Our Failure to Disagree<br />
Tirdad Zolghadr &amp; Anton Vidokle, A Disagreement<br />
Anselm Franke, The Grudge<br />
Maria Lind, When Water is Gushing In<br />
Adrienne Goehler, United Nations Plaza: The Toast<br />
Martha Rosler, Transition and Digressions &#8211; an on-going series of photographs<br />
Liam Gillick, The Winter School – A Fiction Towards Documenta X<br />
Liam Gillick, Selected Transcription from Talk at UN Plaza, Berlin, 2006<br />
Diedrich Diederichsen, The New Ugliness of the Oppressed as Ornament<br />
Ingrid Serven, Oh God, She Said,Talking to a Tree<br />
Fia Backström, Herd Instincts 360°<br />
Joseph Cohen, Berliner Vortrag<br />
Hans Ulrich Obrist, The Agency of Unrealised Projects<br />
Tirdad Zolghadr, Epilogue. But You Promised<br />
Tom Holert, Surviving Surveillance? Failure as Technology<br />
UNP Staff, I Can’t Work Like This: A Written Assessment</p>
<p><strong>Biographies<br />
Anton Vidokle </strong>was born in Moscow and is currently based in Berlin. His work has been exhibited in shows such as the Venice Biennale, Dakar Biennale and at Tate Modern, London; Moderna Galerija, Ljubljana; Musee d&#8217;art Modern de la Ville de Paris; Museo Carrillo Gil, Mexico City; UCLA Hammer, LA; ICA, Boston; Haus Der Kunst, Munich; P.S.1, New York; amongst others. With Julieta Aranda, he put together e-flux video rental. As founding director of e-flux, he has produced projects such as Next Documenta Should Be Curated By An Artist, Do it, Utopia Station poster project, and organised An Image Bank for Everyday Revolutionary Life and Martha Rosler Library. Anton Vidokle was a co-curator of Manifesta 6.</p>
<p><strong>Tirdad Zolghadr </strong>works as a freelance curator, writes for Frieze magazine and has also contributed to Parkett, Bidoun, Cabinet, afterall, Neue Zürcher Zeitung, Straits Times Singapore and other publications. After his MA in Comparative Literature he began work in the field of journalism and documentary film, being a co-founder of the Tehran-based online publication Bad Jens in 1999, and co-director of Tehran 1380 (with Solmaz Shahbazi), a documentary on Tehran mass housing in 2002. His recent &#8220;Tropical Modernism&#8221; explores the history of Iranian socialism and was premiered at the Oberhausen Short Film Festival 2006. Since 2004, Zolghadr has curated events at Cubitt London, IASPIS Stockholm, Kunsthalle Geneva, various Tehran artspaces and other venues. He was co-curator of the International Sharjah Biennial 2005, and is currently preparing a long-term exhibition and research project addressing social class in the art world that shall take place at Gasworks London, Platform Istanbul and Tensta Konsthall. Zolghadr is also a founding member of the SHAHRZAD art &amp; design collective and will shortly publish his novel Softcore with Telegram Books, London.</p>
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		<title>Printed Project 05: &#8216;another monumental metaphor&#8217; Curator / Editor: Alan Phelan</title>
		<link>http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed_project/pp05-another-monumental-metaphor-curator-editor-alan-phelan/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2009 22:35:02 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Printed Project]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Special Venice Issue
Alan Phelan, an artist, curator and art writer from Dublin, is the editor for the fifth edition of Printed Project which formed part of the exhibition at the Irish Pavilion at this year's Venice Biennale. Printed Project was specially invited to participate in Ireland's representation at the Venice Biennale by curator Sarah Glennie. Stemming from this context, the themes from various world biennials serve as the starting point for over 20 contributions from writers, curators and artists from Ireland and around Europe. The journal examines various participatory, collaborative and discursive practices. Historical examples are surveyed alongside recent and upcoming projects, through essays, conversations and artist pages.


Contributors
Texts: Niamh O’Malley; Georgina Jackson; Steven Duval and René Zechlin; Anna Colin; Tim Davies, John Langan, Ann Mulrooney and Deirdre O’Mahony; Gavin Delahunty and Nevan Lahart; Gavin Murphy; Tim Stott; Ciarán Bennett; Jason E Bowman, Sarah Glennie, Caoimhín Mac Giolla Léith, Karen MacKinnon and Hugh Mulholland.

Artworks: Alice Maher; Mark O’Kelly; Susan MacWilliam; Shane Cullen; Vanessa O’Reilly; Niamh McCann; Katie Holten.

Curator/Editor
Alan Phelan is an artist who lives and works in Dublin. His practice combines gallery exhibition, public art projects, critical writing and curating. He studied at DCU, Dublin and RIT, New York. He has exhibited widely in Ireland and also in the UK, USA, Germany, Denmark and Slovenia. Recent exhibitions include the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Golden Thread Gallery, Belfast; Galway Arts Centre; and the Kilkenny Arts Festival, 2004. Recent commissions include a web project for DCMNR Broadband www.broadbandart.ie. Curated projects include 'Felons', RHA, 2005; 'No Respect’ 2004 and 'Stand Fast Dick and Jane', 2001. He has also written for Circa, Contexts, The SSI Newsletter, The Visual Artists' News Sheet and Printed Project.


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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-935" style="border: 0pt none; margin: 5px;" title="Printed Project 05" src="http://visualartists.ie/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/AP_edition05.gif" alt="Printed Project 05" width="139" height="164" /><strong>Special Venice Issue</strong><br />
Alan Phelan, an artist, curator and art writer from Dublin, is the editor for the fifth edition of Printed Project which formed part of the exhibition at the Irish Pavilion at this year&#8217;s Venice Biennale. Printed Project was specially invited to participate in Ireland&#8217;s representation at the Venice Biennale by curator Sarah Glennie. Stemming from this context, the themes from various world biennials serve as the starting point for over 20 contributions from writers, curators and artists from Ireland and around Europe. The journal examines various participatory, collaborative and discursive practices. Historical examples are surveyed alongside recent and upcoming projects, through essays, conversations and artist pages.</p>
<p><strong><br />
Contributors</strong><br />
Texts: Niamh O’Malley; Georgina Jackson; Steven Duval and René Zechlin; Anna Colin; Tim Davies, John Langan, Ann Mulrooney and Deirdre O’Mahony; Gavin Delahunty and Nevan Lahart; Gavin Murphy; Tim Stott; Ciarán Bennett; Jason E Bowman, Sarah Glennie, Caoimhín Mac Giolla Léith, Karen MacKinnon and Hugh Mulholland.</p>
<p>Artworks: Alice Maher; Mark O’Kelly; Susan MacWilliam; Shane Cullen; Vanessa O’Reilly; Niamh McCann; Katie Holten.</p>
<p><strong>Curator/Editor</strong><br />
Alan Phelan is an artist who lives and works in Dublin. His practice combines gallery exhibition, public art projects, critical writing and curating. He studied at DCU, Dublin and RIT, New York. He has exhibited widely in Ireland and also in the UK, USA, Germany, Denmark and Slovenia. Recent exhibitions include the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Golden Thread Gallery, Belfast; Galway Arts Centre; and the Kilkenny Arts Festival, 2004. Recent commissions include a web project for DCMNR Broadband www.broadbandart.ie. Curated projects include &#8216;Felons&#8217;, RHA, 2005; &#8216;No Respect’ 2004 and &#8216;Stand Fast Dick and Jane&#8217;, 2001. He has also written for Circa, Contexts, The SSI Newsletter, The Visual Artists&#8217; News Sheet and Printed Project.</p>
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		<title>Printed Project 04: ‘The New PhD in Studio Art’, Curator / Editor: James Elkins</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2009 22:31:57 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[ If you are a young artist and you are wondering about how to land a secure teaching job, there is an interesting - I should really say frightening, new possibility. It appears that before too long, employers will be looking for artists with PhDs rather than master's or college degrees. For the best jobs, it will no longer be enough to have an MA or an MFA (the standard 'terminal' degree in the United States). This edition of Printed Project provides materials to think about the new degree. It contains essays on the philosophic forms of the degree, on current debates about it in Ireland and the UK, and on the history of the degree. It also has a half-dozen short excerpts from PhD theses, to show the kind of work artists have done when they mix scholarship and art.

Contributors
Part One: Essays
1: The Three Configurations Practice-Based PhDs, by James Elkins
2: A Method of Search For Reality, by Timothy Emlyn Jones
3: On Beyond Research and New Knowledge, by James Elkins

Part Two: Examples
4: Jo-Anne Duggan (University of Technology, Sydney)
5: Sue Lovegrove (School of Art, Australian National University, Canberra)
6: Frank Thirion (School of Art, Australian National University, Canberra)
7: Ruth Waller (School of Art, Australian National University, Canberra)
8: Christl Berg (School of Art, University of Tasmania, Hobart)
9: Maria Mencia (Chelsea College of Art and Design / University of the Arts, London)
10: Uriel Orlow (London Institute / Central St Martin's)
11: Phoebe von Held (University College London / Slade School of Art)

Curator / Editor
James Elkins teaches at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He is currently E.C. Chadbourne Chair in the Department of Art History, Theory, and Criticism. He also teaches in the Department of Visual and Critical Studies, and is Head of History of Art at the University College Cork, Ireland.

His writing focuses on the history and theory of images in art, science, and nature. Some of his books are exclusively on fine art (What Painting Is, Why Are Our Pictures Puzzles?). Others include scientific and non-art images and archaeology (The Domain of Images, On Pictures and the Words That Fail Them), and some include natural history as well (How to Use Your Eyes).

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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong> </strong><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-934" style="border: 0pt none; margin: 5px;" title="Printed Project 04" src="http://visualartists.ie/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/AP_BackIssues_Cover_04.gif" alt="Printed Project 04" width="139" height="164" />If you are a young artist and you are wondering about how to land a secure teaching job, there is an interesting &#8211; I should really say frightening, new possibility. It appears that before too long, employers will be looking for artists with PhDs rather than master&#8217;s or college degrees. For the best jobs, it will no longer be enough to have an MA or an MFA (the standard &#8216;terminal&#8217; degree in the United States). This edition of Printed Project provides materials to think about the new degree. It contains essays on the philosophic forms of the degree, on current debates about it in Ireland and the UK, and on the history of the degree. It also has a half-dozen short excerpts from PhD theses, to show the kind of work artists have done when they mix scholarship and art.</p>
<p><strong>Contributors</strong><br />
Part One: Essays<br />
1: The Three Configurations Practice-Based PhDs, by James Elkins<br />
2: A Method of Search For Reality, by Timothy Emlyn Jones<br />
3: On Beyond Research and New Knowledge, by James Elkins</p>
<p>Part Two: Examples<br />
4: Jo-Anne Duggan (University of Technology, Sydney)<br />
5: Sue Lovegrove (School of Art, Australian National University, Canberra)<br />
6: Frank Thirion (School of Art, Australian National University, Canberra)<br />
7: Ruth Waller (School of Art, Australian National University, Canberra)<br />
8: Christl Berg (School of Art, University of Tasmania, Hobart)<br />
9: Maria Mencia (Chelsea College of Art and Design / University of the Arts, London)<br />
10: Uriel Orlow (London Institute / Central St Martin&#8217;s)<br />
11: Phoebe von Held (University College London / Slade School of Art)</p>
<p><strong>Curator / Editor</strong><br />
James Elkins teaches at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He is currently E.C. Chadbourne Chair in the Department of Art History, Theory, and Criticism. He also teaches in the Department of Visual and Critical Studies, and is Head of History of Art at the University College Cork, Ireland.</p>
<p>His writing focuses on the history and theory of images in art, science, and nature. Some of his books are exclusively on fine art (What Painting Is, Why Are Our Pictures Puzzles?). Others include scientific and non-art images and archaeology (The Domain of Images, On Pictures and the Words That Fail Them), and some include natural history as well (How to Use Your Eyes).</p>
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		<title>Printed Project 03: ‘The Self Express’, Editor / Curator: Les Levine</title>
		<link>http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed_project/pp03/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2009 22:26:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Printed Project]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[ For The Self Express Les Levine has employed a recurrent technique in his practice of bringing together a diverse range of individuals to focus upon a particular subject - in this case the subject of 'the self'. In 2003 Levine made a DVD work also titled The Self Express in which he invited a range of participants to address this same issue. For Printed Project Levine has extended this work, inviting those who were the subjects of this work to instead interview him. What emerges from the 15 interviews conducted for Printed Project is a multifaceted portrait of the artist that is equally telling about the interviewers notions about selfhood and the business of living in contemporary culture. As Levine puts it, "One could think of the Self Express interviews as mental portraits of the interviewers... this project should be experienced as a mental journey".

Contributors
John Boone, Soke Dinkla, Jenny Dixon, Catherine Galasso, Ted Greenwald, Noritoshi Hirakawa, Yu Yeon Kim, Vivian Kurz Thomas McEvilley, Declan McGonagle, Lars Movin, John Perreault, Steven Rand, Walter Robinson, Katrin Roos

Curator / Editor
The curator / editor for Printed Project issue 3 is Les Levine. Levine calls himself a 'media sculptor' having first used the term in 1969. He is one of the first artists in the world to make video art. He has had over 300 one-man shows and numerous mass-media campaigns in major capitals throughout the world. He is responsible for the terminology 'software art', 'disposable art' and 'camera art'. Amongst his major exhibitions are 'Public Mind: Les Levine Media Sculpture and Mass Ad Campaigns', Everson Museum, NY, 1990, and 'Art Can See', Galerie der Stadt, Stuttgart, 1997. He has been in several Documentas and Biennales. He has authored many articles and books. Amongst them is 'Media: the Bio-Tech Rehearsal for Leaving the Body', Alberta College of Art, 1979. He was born in Dublin in 1935 and lives in New York.


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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong> </strong><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-933" style="border: 0pt none; margin: 5px;" title="Printed Project 03" src="http://visualartists.ie/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/AP_BackIssues_Cover_03.gif" alt="Printed Project 03" width="139" height="164" />For The Self Express Les Levine has employed a recurrent technique in his practice of bringing together a diverse range of individuals to focus upon a particular subject &#8211; in this case the subject of &#8216;the self&#8217;. In 2003 Levine made a DVD work also titled The Self Express in which he invited a range of participants to address this same issue. For Printed Project Levine has extended this work, inviting those who were the subjects of this work to instead interview him. What emerges from the 15 interviews conducted for Printed Project is a multifaceted portrait of the artist that is equally telling about the interviewers notions about selfhood and the business of living in contemporary culture. As Levine puts it, &#8220;One could think of the Self Express interviews as mental portraits of the interviewers&#8230; this project should be experienced as a mental journey&#8221;.</p>
<p><strong>Contributors</strong><br />
John Boone, Soke Dinkla, Jenny Dixon, Catherine Galasso, Ted Greenwald, Noritoshi Hirakawa, Yu Yeon Kim, Vivian Kurz Thomas McEvilley, Declan McGonagle, Lars Movin, John Perreault, Steven Rand, Walter Robinson, Katrin Roos</p>
<p><strong>Curator / Editor</strong><br />
The curator / editor for Printed Project issue 3 is Les Levine. Levine calls himself a &#8216;media sculptor&#8217; having first used the term in 1969. He is one of the first artists in the world to make video art. He has had over 300 one-man shows and numerous mass-media campaigns in major capitals throughout the world. He is responsible for the terminology &#8216;software art&#8217;, &#8216;disposable art&#8217; and &#8216;camera art&#8217;. Amongst his major exhibitions are &#8216;Public Mind: Les Levine Media Sculpture and Mass Ad Campaigns&#8217;, Everson Museum, NY, 1990, and &#8216;Art Can See&#8217;, Galerie der Stadt, Stuttgart, 1997. He has been in several Documentas and Biennales. He has authored many articles and books. Amongst them is &#8216;Media: the Bio-Tech Rehearsal for Leaving the Body&#8217;, Alberta College of Art, 1979. He was born in Dublin in 1935 and lives in New York.</p>
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		<title>Printed Project 02: ‘Letters from Five Continents’, Curator / Editor: Saskia Bos</title>
		<link>http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed_project/pp02/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2009 22:13:07 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[For Printed Project issue 2 Saskia Bos invited the former students of De Appel's curatorial programme, now working across the globe from Auckland to Ljubljana, to write a letter about art, living conditions and other issues relevant to their locales. For Bos "The beauty of the idea is to have so many different letters from all over the globe from people who have moved from their country of origin, who travel all the time and/or who speak to many artists, musicians, writers".

Contributors
Tobias Berger (Auckland), Annie Fletcher (Amsterdam), Basak Senova (Istanbul), Machiko Harada (Akiyoshi dai), Francesco Bernardelli (Torino), Natasa Petresin (Ljubljana), Clive Kellner (Cape Town), Nina Folkersma (Amsterdam), Paula Toppila (Espoo), Raimundas Malasauskas (Vilnius), Ilina Koralova (Leipzig), Nuno Sacramento (Dundee), Edit Molnar (Budapest), Nikola Dietrich (Berlin), Luca Cerizza (Berlin), Montse Badia (Madrid), Dominique Fontaine (Montreal), Sophie O'Brien (Sydney), Sjoukje van der Meulen (New York), Yukie Kamiya (New York), Florence Derieux (Paris), Lorenzo Benedetti (Rome), Anja Dorn (Cologne), Rob Tufnell (London), Phillip van den Bossche (Eindhoven),

Curator / Editor
Saskia Bos has been the director since 1984 of the De Appel Foundation in Amsterdam. Bos was the curator for the 2000 Berlin Biennale and has worked on the advisory committee of the Yokohama Triennale, the 43rd Venice Biennale in 1988 and Documenta VII in 1981.



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    €5.00……………………………………………………………………………………………….

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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-932" style="border: 0pt none; margin: 5px;" title="Printed Project 02" src="http://visualartists.ie/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/AP_BackIssues_Cover_02.gif" alt="Printed Project 02" width="139" height="164" />For Printed Project issue 2 Saskia Bos invited the former students of De Appel&#8217;s curatorial programme, now working across the globe from Auckland to Ljubljana, to write a letter about art, living conditions and other issues relevant to their locales. For Bos &#8220;The beauty of the idea is to have so many different letters from all over the globe from people who have moved from their country of origin, who travel all the time and/or who speak to many artists, musicians, writers&#8221;.</p>
<p><strong>Contributors</strong><br />
Tobias Berger (Auckland), Annie Fletcher (Amsterdam), Basak Senova (Istanbul), Machiko Harada (Akiyoshi dai), Francesco Bernardelli (Torino), Natasa Petresin (Ljubljana), Clive Kellner (Cape Town), Nina Folkersma (Amsterdam), Paula Toppila (Espoo), Raimundas Malasauskas (Vilnius), Ilina Koralova (Leipzig), Nuno Sacramento (Dundee), Edit Molnar (Budapest), Nikola Dietrich (Berlin), Luca Cerizza (Berlin), Montse Badia (Madrid), Dominique Fontaine (Montreal), Sophie O&#8217;Brien (Sydney), Sjoukje van der Meulen (New York), Yukie Kamiya (New York), Florence Derieux (Paris), Lorenzo Benedetti (Rome), Anja Dorn (Cologne), Rob Tufnell (London), Phillip van den Bossche (Eindhoven),</p>
<p><strong>Curator / Editor</strong><br />
Saskia Bos has been the director since 1984 of the De Appel Foundation in Amsterdam. Bos was the curator for the 2000 Berlin Biennale and has worked on the advisory committee of the Yokohama Triennale, the 43rd Venice Biennale in 1988 and Documenta VII in 1981.<a href="http://www.docstoc.com/docs/document-preview.aspx?doc_id=13460242" target="_blank"><br />
</a></p>
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		<title>Printed Project 01: &#8216;there once was a west&#8217;, Curator / Editor: Sarah Pierce</title>
		<link>http://visualartists.ie/publications/printed_project/pp01/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2009 22:09:50 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Printed Project's first issue, curated and edited by Sarah Pierce considered the processes translation, movement, migration and cultural shift. Fittingly, the issues title 'There once was a West' was a reference to the 'correct' translation of the name of Sergio Leone's famous Western C'era una Volta il West', which was known in the English speaking world 'Once Upon a Time in the West'.

Contributors
Issa Samb: Mediums of Transformations Bettina Funcke: Robert Whitman's Telecommunication Projects Rachel Price: Translation, Terror, Terrorism Aleksandra Mir: No Picassos Not A Local Bird Pip Day: 0-19, 20 days / 1-100, 99 years Wendy Judge: Two Post Cards Two Drawings Gerard Byrne: Views from a Sequence of Images Simon Sheikh: Counter-public works: Re-mapping public space Caoimhín Mac Giolla Léith: June Travelogue Grant Watson: Bombay/Mumbai Peter Fend: Superflex at the Johannesburg Biennial , Asier Pérez: Tortilla De Patatas Para 4 Personas Alan Phelan: Blind Lip Sync

Curator / Editor
Sarah Pierce is an artist and the organiser of the Metropolitan Complex, an
independent project based in Dublin. www.themetropolitancomplex.com  [1]



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[1] http://www.themetropolitancomplex.com/
[2] http://visualartists.ie../publications/printed_project/publications/printed_project/publications/printed-project/subscribe-to-printed-project]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-946" style="border: 0pt none; margin: 5px;" title="Printed Project 01" src="http://visualartists.ie/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/AP_BackIssues_Cover_01.gif" alt="Printed Project 01" width="139" height="164" />Printed Project&#8217;s first issue, curated and edited by Sarah Pierce considered the processes translation, movement, migration and cultural shift. Fittingly, the issues title &#8216;There once was a West&#8217; was a reference to the &#8216;correct&#8217; translation of the name of Sergio Leone&#8217;s famous Western C&#8217;era una Volta il West&#8217;, which was known in the English speaking world &#8216;Once Upon a Time in the West&#8217;.</p>
<p><strong>Contributors</strong><br />
Issa Samb: Mediums of Transformations Bettina Funcke: Robert Whitman&#8217;s Telecommunication Projects Rachel Price: Translation, Terror, Terrorism Aleksandra Mir: No Picassos Not A Local Bird Pip Day: 0-19, 20 days / 1-100, 99 years Wendy Judge: Two Post Cards Two Drawings Gerard Byrne: Views from a Sequence of Images Simon Sheikh: Counter-public works: Re-mapping public space Caoimhín Mac Giolla Léith: June Travelogue Grant Watson: Bombay/Mumbai Peter Fend: Superflex at the Johannesburg Biennial , Asier Pérez: Tortilla De Patatas Para 4 Personas Alan Phelan: Blind Lip Sync</p>
<p><strong>Curator / Editor</strong><br />
Sarah Pierce is an artist and the organiser of the Metropolitan Complex, an<br />
independent project based in Dublin. <a href="http://www.themetropolitancomplex.com/" target="_blank">www.themetropolitancomplex.com </a></p>
<p><strong><br />
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