Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute Library Exhibition Files

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Items in the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute Library Exhibition Files Collection

Aycock's book is the most ambitious production of the Lapp Princess publications. A highly complex melding of found and descriptive text, archaeological photography, and images of Aycock's sculptural creation, this was the first of her false cities…

This work requires the active participation of the reader. An eighteen-by-twenty-four-inch piece of paper is folded at the requisite six-inch-square format, with the text of Shapiro's poem and Pozzi's illustration buried in the inside. A note inside…

Burgin used the format of a child's primer to produce a commentary on the role of the family in an industrial environment. Facing each brief statement is a page with a photograph, the letter of the first word in the statement in both upper and lower…

Rosenquist's book gives the impression of a stream of consciousness look at the creative process. He created drafts for twelve hypothetical projects, complete with explanatory text, which he supposedly came up with while "waiting for an idea" for the…

The delicate sketches in this book recall Plimack Mangold's landscape painting and her trompe l'oeil tape frames. The work includes handwritten notes about her art. Much of the book is explained in her comment, "In my mind these works are as much…

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