How to Clean a House: A Family Album // Carolina González-Valencia
$20.00
Book of 20 postcards
How to Clean a House: A Family Album
by Carolina González-Valencia
A 20-page book of postcards that combines instructions on how to clean someone’s house as a domestic worker with milestones from the migration experience of the artist's family.
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If Black Saints Could Fly 23 // Marlon Forrester with an essay by Jeffrey De Blois
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A 10-page book that unfolds into a 24” x 34” poster.
If Black Saints Could Fly 23
by Marlon ForresterIf Black Saints Could Fly 23 explores ideas of transformation and ritual as it continues Marlon Forrester’s ongoing artistic interventions around the mediation of the Black male figure in the Americas. A new suite of paintings is presented alongside materials that include a primer on the festivals of Guyana, the artworks of Chartres Cathedral, and the geometry of the basketball court.
Design: Michael Rosenberg
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A Long Wait: Double Vision // Francois Hughes, Yulia Pinkusevich, Andrea Steves
$15.00A Long Wait: Double Vision // Francois Hughes, Yulia Pinkusevich, Andrea Steves
$15.00
105 pages, soft cover
A Long Wait: Double Vision
by Francois Hughes, Yulia Pinkusevich, Andrea StevesA Long Wait: Double Vision is an artist book published in conjunction with the 2018 installation developed at Fort Gorges in Portland, Maine by artists Andrea Steves, Francois Hughes, and Yulia Pinkusevich. Edited by Rose Linke, the volume draws on research from the artists' collaborative project, Double Vision, which explores the Cold War history of the Nike Missile Program and its counterparts in the USSR. The project began while the artists were in residence at the Headlands Center for the Arts in the Marin Headlands, California, which is home to the Nike Missile Battery, part of a nationwide nuclear missile defense system active from 1951 to 1972. A Long Wait: Double Vision features photographs, interviews with former Nike veterans and veterans of the USSR’s nuclear programs, and historical documents from multiple archives, allowing for collective reflection on this history and our current reality of heightened nuclear fears.