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ETCAMA: The Solution to Nothing
9–23 July 2010
now now now now you missed it
there’s a new now now now now now.
http://www.extemporetemporarycontemporaryartmuseumamsterdam.com/
http://www.etcama.com/
Mark Manders, Traducing Ruddle
Newspaper, 16 pp., web offset 1/1, 350 x 480 mm
Insert, 48 pp., offset 1/1, 215 x 280 mm
Edition of 3000
ISBN 978-0-9738133-7-1
Published by Fillip Editions, Roma Publications
Sheets from Manders’ Traducing Ruddle form the central element of the artist’s Window with Fake Newspapers project, a site-specific public work on view through March 28th.
Distributed in North America by Textfield, Inc.
Textfield, Inc. is an independent publisher and distributor of artists books, catalogs, editions, monographs, multiples, and periodicals. We specialize in the distribution of quality publications from publishers in North America and Europe, to libraries, bookshops, galleries, and museums.
The focus of our publishing catalog involves the development of close working relationships with artists, galleries, museums, universities, and institutions to design and publish books and other printed matter.
Publishers: 032c, Capricious, Christoph Keller Editions, C Magazine, Coins, David Kordansky Gallery, Fillip, FormContent, Harsh Patel, Hassla Books, I-20 Gallery, Kunst Halle Sankt Gallen, Laura Bartlett Gallery, Manuel Raeder, Mono.Kultur, Museum Paper, Nieves, OK-RM, onestar press, Paperback, Peres Projects, Seems, Slavs and Tatars, Textfield, True True True, Vier5, Wallspace, Wear.
Textfield · 09/02/09
Inside Motto Berlin, Skalitzerstrasse 68, Im Hinterhof.
“We are proud to announce the European launch of Fillip 9 in partnership with Konst-ig, Stockholm, and Motto Berlin. As part of these transcontinental events, Fillip staff and board members will discuss recent writing and artist projects that situate the publication within the larger landscape of international art criticism. This will also be an opportunity to expand discussions begun during our recent Judgment and Contemporary Art Criticism series presented this past February in collaboration with Artspeak, Vancouver.”
All are invited to attend and participate in these discussions:
Konst-ig, 7 May 18:00
Asögatan 124, Söder District, Stockholm
with Kristina Lee Podesva, Amy Zion,
and Johan Lundh
Berlin Launch
Motto Berlin, 13 May 18:30
Skalitzerstrasse 68 im Hinterhof, Berlin
with Kristina Lee Podesva, Amy Zion,
Markus Miessen, and Antonia Hirsch
About the current issue
In Fillip 9, Diedrich Diedrichsen provides an in depth discussion of Paul Valéry and pop music, and critic Shepherd Steiner considers the Martha Rosler Library project through the lens of the Boolean search. The issue also features conversations between Lea Feinstein and Christian L. Frock on second wave feminism and last year’s proliferation of feminist art shows, and between Boris Groys and Andro Wekua on art practice and production today and in the former East Europe. In addition, Fillip 9 includes an interview with Steve Lambert of the New York Times Special Edition project among exhibition reviews and other texts.
We are very pleased to present a special audio project for the issue, a yellow vinyl 45 by artists Cranfield and Slade, which is included in each copy of the magazine. The edition is produced in collaboration with the Or Gallery, Vancouver, and in support of the artists’ forthcoming album 12 Sun Songs by the Or Gallery, Christoph Keller Editions, and JRP/Ringier.
Konst-ig is the largest independent art bookseller in Scandinavia specializing in books on art, photography, architecture, design, graphic design, fashion, video, performance, theory, and related journals, magazines, artists’ books, and mulitples.
Motto Berlin presents a wide selection of magazines and independent publications ranging from books to zines. The catalogue consists of titles from many different fields such as art, photography, design, architecture, fashion, and many others.
Fillip
305 Cambie Street
Vancouver, British Columbia
V6E 2N4 Canada
604.781.4417
www.fillip.ca
Fillip is distributed in the United States by Textfield or contact your local bookshop.
As part of Judgment and Contemporary Art Criticism, Fillip and Artspeak are pleased to present extended talks, discussions, and screenings during the month of March.
Every Saturday, Artspeak will host local and international writers and curators who are investigating what is at stake in the shifting value of judgment within contemporary art writing. These sessions will build on discussions raised by the participants of our recent two-day forum on the present state of art criticism.
Events start promptly at 1pm. All events are free and will be held at the reading room at Artspeak, 233 Carrall Street, Vancouver. Phone: 604.688.0051. Please come early to ensure a seat.
Architect, writer, and curator Markus Miessen (Berlin), and artists Amy Zion and Kristina Lee Podesva (Vancouver) will discuss architecture as political practice and the nightmare of participation. Miessen’s talk is supported through the Emily Carr University Student Symposium.
14 March, 1pm
Following up on a keynote address by critic/curator Tirdad Zolghadr, we are pleased to screen the film A Crime Against Art (Hila Peleg, 2007). Based on a trial staged at ARCO, Madrid, the film casts Zolghadr and Anton Vidokle as the defendants in a mock trial on a number of polemical issues in the world of contemporary art. This screening is presented with generosity from e-flux, New York.
21 March, 1pm
Curators Jo-Anne Birnie-Danzker (Vancouver/Munich) and Jordan Strom (Vancouver) will discuss Birnie-Danzker’s curatorial experiences in Vancouver in the seventies and eighties, and, more recently, in Europe and Asia.
28 March, 1pm
For our final event, join us for an open discussion with critic Sven Lutticken (Utrecht). Appearing via Skype, Lutticken will discuss ways of navigating critical judgment within the spaces of contemporary art writing. Space is expected to be limited, so please arrive early.
Fillip
305 Cambie Street
Vancouver, British Columbia
V6E 2N4 Canada
604.781.4417
Fillip is distributed in North America by Textfield or contact your local bookshop.
Fillip is a publication of art, culture and ideas released three times a year by the Projectile Publishing Society from Vancouver, British Columbia.
Mariana Castillo Deball’s contribution to Fillip is part of Master Humphrey’s Clock (2008), a project that examines the intersections between storytelling and circulation through a series of art exhibitions, publications, and events. The project is curated by Yulia Aksenova, Jesse Birch, Sarah Farrar, Inti Guerrero, and Virginija Januskeviciute, the participants in de Appel arts centre’s 2007/08 curatorial program, Amsterdam.
Fillip is available from Textfield Distribution or contact your local bookshop.
Textfield · 12/30/08
















