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The Jean Freeman Gallery Does Not Exist The Mit Press 1st Edition Christopher Howard

  • SKU: BELL-48988834
The Jean Freeman Gallery Does Not Exist The Mit Press 1st Edition Christopher Howard
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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The Jean Freeman Gallery Does Not Exist The Mit Press 1st Edition Christopher Howard instant download after payment.

Publisher: The MIT Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 15.47 MB
Pages: 413
Author: Christopher Howard
ISBN: 9780262038461, 0262038463
Language: English
Year: 2018
Edition: 1

Product desciption

The Jean Freeman Gallery Does Not Exist The Mit Press 1st Edition Christopher Howard by Christopher Howard 9780262038461, 0262038463 instant download after payment.

From the summer of 1970 to March 1971, advertisements appeared in four leading art magazines―ArtforumArt in AmericaArts Magazine, and ARTnews―for a group show and six solo exhibitions at the Jean Freeman Gallery at 26 West Fifty-Seventh Street, in the heart of Manhattan's gallery district. As gallery goers soon discovered, this address did not exist―the street numbers went from 16 to 20 to 24 to 28―and neither did the art supposedly exhibited there. The ads were promoting fictional shows by fictional artists in a fictional gallery. The scheme, eventually exposed by a New York Times reporter, was concocted by the artist Terry Fugate-Wilcox as both work of art and critique of the art world. In this book, Christopher Howard brings this forgotten Conceptual art project back into view.   Howard demonstrates that Fugate-Wilcox's project was an exceptionally clever embodiment of many important aspects of Conceptualism, incisively synthesizing the major aesthetic issues of its time―documentation and dematerialization, serialism and process, text and image, publishing and publicity. He puts the Jean Freeman Gallery in the context of other magazine-based work by Mel Bochner, Judy Chicago, Yoko Ono, and Ed Ruscha, and compares the fictional artists' projects with actual Earthworks by Walter De Maria, Peter Hutchinson, Dennis Oppenheim, and more. Despite the deadpan perfection of the Jean Freeman Gallery project, the art establishment marginalized its creator, and the project itself was virtually erased from art history. Howard corrects these omissions, drawing on deep archival research, personal interviews, and investigation of fine-printed clues to shed new light on a New York art world mystery.

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