Sampling of some of the cooler mass markets hitting the shelves this evening 🙂
Terminal Beach and The Box Man are $30 each
The rest are not priced yet
In-store only
An Anthology of New York Poets, edited by Ron Padgett and David Shapiro, Vintage, 1970. With cover by Joe Brainard. Iconic and scarce!
Second pic: from the helpfully provided Index of First Lines in the back
$100, in-store only
The New Avant-Garde: Issues for the Art of the Seventies, Praeger, 1972. With sections on Dan Flavin, Sol Lewitt, Carl Andre, Robert Morris, Robert Smithson, Richard Serra, Keith Sonnier, Bruce Nauman, Joseph Beuys, Mario Merz, Walter De Maria, and Michael Heizer, and filled with beautiful photographs by Gianfranco Gorgoni.
Only $20 as this copy is in sub-par condition. In-store only
Agent Provocateur by David Young, Coach House Press, edition of 1000, 1976. A noirish detective story featuring collages by the author and dedicated to Marcel Duchamp?! Wow.
SOLD
Genesis Breyer P-Orridge, First Third Editions, 2013, number 727 of 1323. $200, in-store only.
Music pioneer, artist and body evolutionist, Genesis Breyer P-Orridge has never let art, life or evolution stand in the way of imagination. As a Fluxus and Dada-inspired perÂformance artist with COUM Transmissions, the post-hippie Breyer P-Orridge determined to revolutionise everyday life. By the late ’70s, Breyer P-Orridge was fronting Throbbing Gristle, a defiantly anti-rock experiment that launched the entirely new genre of Industrial Music. TG also pioneered a self-determining model for independent music-making that still flourishes today.
Breyer P-Orridge’s next project, the music and arts collecÂtive Psychic TV, explored a deep interest in fetishism, magick and ritual, with an emphasis on body art. A prime mover in the 80’s Modern Primitives subculture, from which the latter-day mass trend for tattooing and piercing emerged, Breyer P-Orridge has since taken body politics several stages further with pandrogeny, a ‘third gender’ project launched in the late 90’s with wife and life-partner Lady Jaye. After Jaye ‘dropped her body’ in 2007, Genesis remains even more devoted to pandrogeny, which s/he insists is more about consciousness than the body.
This monograph is a testament to a life spent exploring the outer limits of creative expression – often landing the artist in deep controversy. Working with artist Leigha Mason, Genesis mined h/er personal archives for many of the 350+ photographs included, and added insightful personal commentary throughout. A detailed forward in the form of a Q&A with rock journalist Mark Paytress explores the cultural importance of the work of this self-styled ‘cultural engineer.'
Ryu (not to be confused with Haruki) Murakami's debut novel, Almost Transparent Blue, 1976, which won him the Akutagawa Prize. This is the first English paperback edition from 1981. Someone really needs to reprint this, but until they do, it's very scarce and thus $50, in-store only.
Almost Transparent Blue is a brutal tale of lost youth in a Japanese port town close to an American military base. Murakami's image-intensive narrative paints a portrait of a group of friends locked in a destructive cycle of sex, drugs and rock'n'roll. The novel is all but plotless, yet the raw and often violent prose takes us on a rollercoaster ride through reality and halluci-nation, highs and lows, in which the characters and their experiences come vividly to life. Trapped in pas-sivity, they gain neither passion nor pleasure from their adventures. Yet out of the alienation, boredom and underlying rage and grief emerges a strangely quiet and almost equally shocking beauty.
As Ryu Murakami's first novel, written when he was twenty-three, Almost Transparent Blue won the coveted Akutagawa literary prize in 1976 and became an instant bestseller. Representing a sharp and conscious turning away from the introspective trend of postwar Japanese literature, it polarized critics and public alike and soon attracted international attention as an alternative view of modern Japan.
SOLD
Just Another Asshole no. 7: Thought Objects. Edited by Barbara Ess and Glenn Branca. The final installment in the series, including photos by Nan Goldin, Barbara Kruger, David Wojnarowicz, Jeff Wall, Jack Goldstein, Dan Graham, Rodney Graham, Peter Hujar etc. etc. Basically if you were hip and in NYC in 1987 you're in this book lol. I didn't even get to the essays: contributors include Cookie Mueller, Lynn Tillman and Gary Indiana. Phew!
All yours for a mere $60. As always, in-store only