Portfolio - Galerie Jocelyn Wolff
Transcription
Portfolio - Galerie Jocelyn Wolff
WILLIAM ANASTASI Galerie Jocelyn Wolff WILLIAM ANASTASI Updated: April 2016 Born Philadelphia, PA, in 1933 Lives and works in New York, NY AWARDS 2010 John Cage Award, Foundation for Contemporary Art SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2015 Solo show, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris, France 2013 Sound Works, 1963-2013, Leubsdorf Art Gallery at Hunter College, New York, USA 2012 Jarry:Du/Joy, Blind Drawings, Walking, Subway, Drop, Vetruvian Man, Still, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris 2010 Drawings, Gering & López Gallery, New York, USA Isabelle Du Moulin und Nils Borch Jensen Galerie, Berlin, Germany William Anastasi, John Cage Award (Biennial Award) 2009 William Anastasi, Emilio Mazzoli Gallery, Modena, Italy William Anastasi Retrospective, curator: Inge Merete Kjeldgaard, The Esberg Museum of Modern Art, Esbjerg, Denmark 2008 Opposites Are Identical, Peter Blum Gallery (Chelsea), New York New works, Stalke Galleri / Stalke Up North / Stalke Out Of Space, Kirke Saaby, DK 2007 William Anastasi, Raw [Seven works from 1963 to 1966], The Drawing Center, New York William Anastasi, Paintings and drawings, Michael Benevento, The Orange Group, Los Angeles 2006 William Anastasi, Bjorn Ressle Fine Art, New York William Anastasi, Baumgartner Gallery, New York 2005 Drawings 1970-2005, Stalke Gallery, Copenhagen Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Blind, art agents, Hamburg William Anastasi, Rehbein Gallery, Cologne 2004 William Anastasi, SolwayJones, Los Angeles 2003 Blind, The Annex, NY 2001 William Anastasi: 1961-2000: A Retrospective at the Nikolaj Contemporary Art Center, Copenhagen 2000 William Anastasi, art agents, Hamburg 1999 ...vor mehr alseinem halben Jahrhundert, Landes Museum, Linz, Germany Drawings, Gary Tatintsian Gallery, NY 1998 I Am A Jew, The Philadelphia Museum of Judaica, Philadelphia, PA 1997 The Painting of the Word Jew, Sandra Gering Gallery, NY William Anastasi, Hubert Winter Gallery, Vienna, Austria 1996 William Anastasi, Stalke Kunsthandel, Copenhagen, Denmark 1995 William Anastasi: A Retrospective, Moore College of Art, Philadelphia William Anastasi, The Pier Gallery, Orkney, Scotland Rosenbach Museum and Library, Philadelphia, PA, ten manuscript pages from me innerman monophone: Jarry in Joyce, shown alternating with the first ten manuscript pages of James Joyce’s Ulysses William Anastasi, Anders Tornberg, Lund, Sweden William Anastasi: A Retrospective (1960-95), Moore College of Art and Design, Philadelphia,PA Abandoned Paintings, Sandra Gering Gallery, NY 1994 Kristal Fahl Gallery, Stockholm Me innerman monophone, oeuvre conceptuelle, exhibition of original manuscript and paper given on “Jarry in Joyce” at the Sorbonne, Paris 1993 Du Jarry, exhibition of original manuscript, Sandra Gering Gallery, NY Drawing Sounds: An Installation in Honor of John Cage, the Philadelphia Museum of Art 1992 Works 1963-1992, Anders Tornberg Gallery, Lund, Sweden 1991 Sink, Trespass, Issue, Incision, Sandra Gering Gallery, NY 1990 Incidents and Coincidents A Retrospective, Ball State University, Muncie, Indiana 1989 A Selection of Works form 1960 to 1989, The Scott Hanson Gallery, NY, accompanied by a catalogue Galerie Jocelyn Wolff The Mattress Factory, Pittsburgh 1988 Bess Cutler Gallery, NY Stalke Galleri, Copenhagen 1987 Bess Cutler Gallery, NY 1982 Diary Paintings, Ericson Gallery 1981 Coincidents, the Whitney Museum of American Art, NY Collapse, Sculpture for a Public Space (commissioned by the museum, exhibited at the Lincoln Center Complex), the Whitney Museum of American Art, NY 1979 Re-visions: Perspectives and Proposals in Film and Video, the Whitney Museum of American Art, NY Coincidents, Kunstmuseum, Dusseldorf, Germany 1978 Terminus, the Hudson River Museum, NY Max Hetzler, Stutttgart 1977 P.S. 1 Museum, the Institute of Art and Urban Resources, NY 1973 O.K. Harris Gallery, NY 1970 Continuum, Dwan Gallery, NY Three Conic Sections, Dwan Gallery, NY 1967 Six Sites, Dwan Gallery, NY 1966 Sound Objects, Dwan Gallery, NY 1965 Witherspoon Gallery, University of North Carolina 1964 Washington Square Gallery, NY Galerie Jocelyn Wolff GROUP EXHIBITIONS (SELECTION) 2016 Drawing Dialogues: selections from the Sol LeWitt Collection, The Drawing Center, New York, USA CAMÉRA(AUTO)CONTRÔLE, Centre de la photographie Genève, Switzerland La Boîte de Pandore: une histoire de la photographie par Jan Dibbets, Musée d’Art Moderne de la ville mmmmmmmmmkde Paris, Paris, France Portrait de l’artiste en Alter, FRAC Haute-Normandie, Sotteville-lès-Rouen, France 2015/16 The Bottom Line, SMAK Gent, Belgium Alfred Jarry Archipelago, Centre d’art contemporain de la Ferme du Buisson, Noisiel, France 2015 Tout le monde, Centre d’art contemporain d’Ivry - le Crédac, Ivry-sur-Seine, France What is a line, curator : Jennifer Farrell, The Fralin Museum of Art, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia Passion, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris, France Théâtre des opérations, Théâtre de l’usine, Geneva, Switzerland 2014 Dans ma cellule, une silhouette, curator: Lore Gablier, La Ferme du Buisson, France For Each Gesture Another Character, curator: Kasia Redzisz, Art Stations Gallery, Stary Browar, Poznań, Poland 2013/14 Something More Than a Succession of Notes, Justina Barnicke Gallery, Toronto, Canada 2013 A Trip from Here to There, Drawings Galleries, MOMA, New York, USA Sol LeWitt collectionneur. Un artiste et ses artistes, Centre Pompidou Metz, France Something More Than a Succession of Notes, Beton salon, Paris, France L‘instinct oublié, gallery Jocelyn Wolff exhibits at gallery LAbor, Mexico City, Mexico A Stone Left Unturned, Galerie Yvon Lambert, Paris, France 2012 Art = Text =Art, Zimmerli Art Museum, New Brunswick, New Jersey, NJ 2011 Plot, Plan, Process: Works on Paper from the 1960s to Now, Leslie Tonkonow ARTWORKS + PRO JECTS, New York, NY Drawn / Taped / Burned: Abstraction on Paper, Katonah Museum of Art, Katonah, NY Dance/Draw, The Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston, Boston, MA; Travels to: Grey Art Gallery, New York University, New York, NY; Tang Teaching Museum at Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, NY; Artists Collect: Prints from the Collections of Sol LeWitt, Kiki Smith, Philip Taaffe, Richard Tuttle, Inter national Print Center New York, New York, NY The Linde Family Wing for Contemporary Art Inaugural Exhibition, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Boston, MA Anti-Photography, curator: Duncan Wooldridge, Focal Point Gallery, Southend Central Library, Victoria Avenue, Southend-on-Sea, Essex SS2 6EX, United Kingdom What Is Contemporary Art?, curator: Sanne Kofoed, Artists from the collection, The Museum of Contem Galerie Jocelyn Wolff porary Art, Roskilde, Denmark 2010 Intolerance, Curators: Christopher Whittey and Gerald Ross; Decker and Meyerhoff galleries, Maryland Institute College of Art, Baltimore Early Conceptualists, curator: Erik Verhagen and Jocelyn Wolff, Jocelyn Wolff Gallery, Paris. Connexions, curator: Inge Merete Kil The Esbjerg Museum of Modern Art, Esbjerg, Denmark Performance Drawings, curator: Helen Molesworth, The Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston Drawn / Taped / Burned: Abstraction on Paper (From the Werner H. Kramarsky Collection), Katonah Mu seum of Art, Katonah, New York Reunion 2010: The Night of Future Past: William Anastasi & Dove Bradshaw play chess reminiscent of the 1968 Reunion: Marcel Duchamp and John Cage Chess Match; Kombucha & Raw Canapé Chess, eating and drinking captured pieces, designed by Fluxus artist Takako Saito, Ryerson Theatre, Toronto At 21: Gifts and Promised Gifts in Honor of The Contemporary Museum’s 20th Anniversary, The Contem porary Museum of Honolulu, Hawaii On Paper, curator: Sam Jedig, Stalke Gallery, Kirke-Sonnerup Gallery, Kirke-Sonnerup, Denmark Quick Constructions (Trumpets, 2009), Quick Constructions (City Debris, 2009), Quick Constructions (With Curves, 2009) Biennial Winter Salon, Curator: Bjorn Ressler & Associate Curator: Jee Yuen Chen; Elga Wimmer Gallery, New York Performance Art Benefit, Lehman Maupin Gallery, New York 2009 The Third Mind, American Artists Contemplate Asia, 1860-1989, curator: Alexndra Munroe, The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York East/West, Anastasi, Bradshaw, Flavin, Kuwayama, Bjorn Ressle Gallery, New York Space As Medium, William Anastasi, Lynda Benglis, Tom Burr, Eugenio Wspinoza, Ryan Gander,Katharina Grosse, Wade Guyton, Toba Khedoori, Nicolas Lobe, Charles Ray, Fred Sandback, Simon Starling, Rachel Whiteread, Miami Art Museum ONE Copenhagen, Six Americans / Six Danes, curator: Dove Bradshaw; Stalke Up North, Copenhagen (Zero Space, Zero Time, Infinite Heat, 1988) ONE Copenhagen on-line catalogue ONE More, Cologne, Dedicated to Sol LeWitt, curator: Dove Bradshaw; the Mildred Lane Kem per Art Museum, St Louis, MO Gifts and Promised Gifts in Honor of The Contemporary Museum’s 20th Anniversary, The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu, Hawaii 2008 The Title of This Show, curator: Mario Garcia Torres, William Anastasi, Eduardo Costa, Dan Graham, Stephen Kaltenbach, Jan Mot Gallery, Brussels Subversive Spaces: Surrealism and Contemporary Art, The Whiteworth Art Gallery, The Victoria University of Manchester, Manchester, UK No Regrets Sam Jedig, artists: Anastasi, Williams, Weiner, Dahlgaard, Ebbesen, Lone and Albert Mertz; Stalke Up North, Copenhagen New York New Drawings 1946-2007, Selections from the Werner H. Kramarsky Collection, curators: Ana Martinez de Aquilar, Director, José Maria Pareno Velasco, Deputy Director, Museo de Art Contemporaneo Esteban Vicente, Segovia, Spain; Museo de Art Contemporaneo Esteban Vicente, Segovia, Spain Five Americans, curator: Sam Jedig, Lawrence Anastasi,William Anastasi, William Antony, Dove Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Bradshaw, Michael Coughlan; Borup Artcenter, Copenhagen, Denmark Choosing, curator: Robert Barry; Andrée Sfeir-Semler Gallery, Hamburg. Winter Salon-Works on Paper, cuator: BjÖrn Ressle; BjÖrn Ressle Gallery, New York Brooklyn Rail Benefit, Pace Gallery, New York Aldrich Museum Benefit, Aldrich Museum, Ridgefield, CT ONE More: Dedicated to Sol LeWitt, curator: Bradshaw; Esbjerg Museum of Modern Art, Esbjerg, Den mark 2007 One, In memoriam: Sol LeWitt; curator: Dove Bradshaw; Anastasi, Andre, Barry, Bradshaw, Hafif, Highstein, Kretschmer, LeWitt, Nonas, Wagner, Bjorn Ressle Gallery, New York Blind January 19-27, 2007, The Annex, New York Anastasi, Bradshaw, Cage, Cunningham, curator: Dove Bradshaw, University Art Gallery, Univer sity of California at San Diego, La Jolla, CA Anastasi, Bradshaw, Cage, Cunningham, curator: Dove Bradshaw University of Virginia Art Museum, Charlottesville, VA. LeWitt x 2, curator: Dean Swanson; Kirke Sonnerup, Denmark. LeWitt x 2, curator: Dean Swanson, curator: Dean Swanson; artists: same as above; The Miami Art Museum Benefit for the Museum of Contemporary Art, LAMOCA, Los Angeles Invention, Merce Cunningham & Collaborators, curators: Barbara Cohen-Stratyner, Judy R and Alfred A. Rosenberg, Curator of Exhibitions at The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, Michell Potter, Curator of the Jerome Robbins Dance Division of the NY Library for the Performing Arts; and David Baufhan, Archivist of the Merce Cunningham Dance Company; The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, Lincoln Center, New York Winter Salon, Bjorn Ressle Fine Art, New York White Box Annex, artists: William Anastasi, Dove Bradshaw, among others, White Box Annex, New York 2006 Twice Drawn, curator: Sol LeWitt, artists: Tang Teaching Museum, Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, New York October 7 - December 30, 2006 LeWitt x 2, curator: Dean Swanson; artists: same as above; inaugurating the new building of the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art, Madison, Wisconsin Aldrich Undercover, Aldrich Museum Exhibition and Benefit, Ridgefield, CT 2005 Edge Level Ground: William Anastasi, Dove Bradshaw, Ulrigh Erben, Jack Sal, Christian Sery, Stephanie Hering Gallery, Berlin Anastasi Bradshaw Cage Cunningham, curators: Marianne Bech and Dove Bradshaw; The University Art Museum, The University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia (25 works: paintings, sculptures, work on paper, DVDs, dance collaborations with John Cage and Merce Cunningham William Anastasi / Dove Bradshaw, Les Yeux du Monde, Charlottesville, VA Poles Apart, Poles Together, curator: Juan Puntes; 51st Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy Reality, curator: Sam Jedig; Kirke Sonnerup, Denmark 2004 Work Ethic, The Baltimore Museum of Art, curated by Helen Molesworth, traveled to Des Moines Art Center in Iowa (May 15, 2004-August 1, 2004) and the Wexner Center for the Arts in Colum bus, Ohio (September 17, 2004-January 2, 2005) (catalogue) Selections from the Sol LeWitt Collection, New Britain Museum of Art, New Britain, CT View Point: Works from the Museum Collection, curator: Marianne Bech; The Samstidskunst Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Museum of Contemporary Art, Roskilde, Denmark Opening Celebration of the Rubin Museum of Art, The Museum of Tibetan Art, The Flag Project at the invitation of the museum and Kiki Smith, New York Infinite Possibilities: Serial Imagery in Twentieth Century Drawings, Curator: Anja Chavez, Da vis Museum and Cultural Center, Wellesley College, Wellesley, MA Stereognost & Propriocept, curated by Koan Jeff Baysa and Donald Kunze, The Lab Gallery, New York. 2003 The Invisible Thread: Buddhist Spirit in Contemporary Art, Snug Harbor NYC Group show, Davidson Art Gallery, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT Unexpected Dimensions: Works from the LeWitt Collection, curator: Sol LeWitt, New Britain Museum of American Art, New Britain Unexpected Dimensions: Works from the LeWitt Collection, Davison Art Center, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT LeWitt’s LeWitts, curator: Sol LeWitt; New Britain Museum of American Art, New Britain, CWhite Box Benefit Auction, Cohan Gallery, New York 2002 Memorial Concert For John Cage, 1912- 1992, Composers/musicians: Emanuel Dimas De Melo Pimenta, Peter Zummo, Fast Forward; Performances: William Anastasi, Ledger, Dove Bradshaw, Fire, Garry Tatinsian Gallery, New York Charles Carpenter Collection, curator: Richard Kline, The Aldrich Museum, Ridgefield, CT Blobs, wiggles and dots, webs and crustillations, curator: Lucio Pozzi, The Work Space, New York Mattress Factory 25th Anniversary Auction, Mattress Factory, Pittsburgh Whitebox Benefit, curator: Juan Puntes, Whitebox Gallery, New York Collaborations, Dieu Donne, New York Benefit for the Drawing Center, 25th Anniversary Benefit Selections Exhibition, From For merly Exhibited Artists, The Drawing Center, New York Mattress Factory 25th Anniversary Auction, curator: Michael Olijnyk; Mattress Factory, Pittsburgh Twenty Years of Danish Art, Stalke Gallery, Copenhagen 2001 Visions From American Art: Photographs from the Whitney Museum of American Art, 1940- 2001, The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York Anastasi, Bradshaw, Cage, curator: Marianna Bech and Dove Bradshaw, Museum of Contemporary Art, Roskilde, Denmark Blind Man’s Bluff [four timed, sound Blind Drawings made by four invited executors, Concep tual Art Today, Pittsburg Center for the Arts, 2001 Century of Innocence, The History of the White Monochrome, curator: Bo Nilsson, Rooseum Contemporary Art Center, Malmo, Sweden 2000 Into the Light: The Projected Image in American Art 1964-1977, The Whitney Museum of Ame rican Art, New York; curated by Chrissie Iles The Century of Innocence: The History of the White Monochrome, Rooseum Museum of Art, Malmo, and Liljevalchs Konstall, Stockholm, curator: Bo Nilsson Photographic Re-View, Gary Tatintsian Gallery, New York Topology, White Box Gallery, New York This is What It Is, Bard College, Annandale-on Hudson, NY Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Destruction/Creation, curator: Rosa Essman and Adam Boxer, Ubu Gallery, New York, exhibited Indeterminacy XXVIII (vermont marble cube and pyrite) End Papers, Drawings 1890-1900 1990-2000, curator: Judy Collischan, The Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase, NY The American Century, 1950-2000, The Whitney Museum of American Art, NY New Works, curator: Sam Jedig; Stalke Gallery, Copenhagen 1999 Afterimage, curator: Connie Butler, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles Merce Cunningham Fifty Years, La Fundacio Antoni Tapies, Barcelona. Traveled to: Fundaçao De Seralves, Porto, Portugal; Castello Di Rivoli, Italy; Museum Moderna Kunst, Stiftung Palais Lichtenstein, Vienna, Andy Warhol, Jasper Johns, William Anastasi, Robert Rauschenberg, Morris Graves, Dove Bradshaw, among others. Manna Benefit for the Jacques Marchais Museum of Tibet, curated by Elizabeth Rogers, White Box Gallery, New York Benefit, Sculpture Center, New York 1998 Drawing is another kind of language: Recent American drawings from a New York private collection, Kunstmuseum Ahlen, Ahlen, Germany Re:Duchamp/Contemporary Artists Respond to Marcel Duchamp’s Influence, Abraham Lubelski Gallery, New York Dove Bradshaw, William Anastasi, Margrethe Sorensen, Torbin Ebbeson, curator: Sam Jedig, Stalke Gallery, Copenhagen Pieces, curator: Silvia Netzer, 128 Gallery, New York 1997 Drawing is another kind of language: Recent American drawings from a New York private collection, Harvard University, Sackler Gallery, Cambridge, MA From Time to Time, curators: Sarah Slavick and Kevin Rainey, Iris and Gerald B. Cantor Art Gallery, College of the Holy Cross, Worcester, Massachusetts Word to Word, Linda Kirkland Gallery, NY 10th year anniversary group show, Stalke Gallery, Copenhagen, Denmark Charles Carpenter Collection, curator: Mark Francis; The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York 1996 Group show, Hubert Winter Gallery, Vienna, Austria Group show, Linda Kirkland Gallery, NY Drawing on Chance (Selections from the Collection), Museum of Modern Art, NY Time Wise, curator: Karen Kuoni, The Swiss Institute, NY Charles Carpenter Collection, curator: Mark Francis; Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh and The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York in 1997. 1995 Sound Sculpture: Music for the Eyes, Ludwig Museum, Koblenz, Germany Joyce and the Visual Arts, The Rosenbach Museum & Library, Philadelphia, PA Dark Room, Stark Gallery, NY The Photography Show 1995, curator: Barry Singer; Singer Photography, Petaluma, CA , AI PAD, New York (Medium, 1992) Galerie Jocelyn Wolff 1994 Drawings, with Dove Bradshaw, Indeterminacy, Werner H. Kramarsky, New York Autobodyography, with Dove Bradshaw, Contingency, Sandra Gering Gallery, NY 1993 Rolywholyover Circus (an exhibition based on the life and work of John Cage), curators: John Cage and Julie Lazar, 50 Artists selected by John Cage beginning with Marcel Duchamp and Thoreau, The Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art; Traveled to: The Menil Collection, Houston; Solomon R Guggen heim Museum, Soho, New York; The Philadelphia Museum of Art; Mito Art Tower, Mito, Japan,William Anastasi Drawing Sounds: An Installation in Honor of John Cage, curated by Ann D’Harnoncourt; The Phi ladelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia. The Return of the Cadavre Exquis, curator: Anne Philbin, The Drawing Center, New York; Traveled to: Cor coran Gallery of Art, Washington, DC; Santa Monica Museum of Art, Santa Monica; Forum for Contempo rary Art, St. Louis; The American Center, Paris, The American Center, Paris, exhibited drawing with William Anastasi and Merce Cunningham Concurrencies II, curator: Lucio Pozzi, William Patterson College, New Jersey William Anastasi Drawing Sounds: An Installation in Honor of John Cage, curator: Ann D’Harnoncourt; The Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia (Without Title [Sound Drawing], 1993, half hour drawing with micro-cassette recording of its making) The Return of the Cadavre Exquis, curator: Anne Philbin; The Drawing Center, New York; trave led to: Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, DC; Santa Monica Museum of Art, Santa Monica; Forum for Contemporary Art, St. Louis; The American Center, Paris Merce Cunningham Dance Company Benefit, Cunningham Dance Foundation, New York 1992 Concurrencies, curator: Lucio Pozzi, Grace Borgenicht Gallery, NY 1991 How to Use Small Areas in a Dozen Different Ways to Bring a Room to Life, curator: Bogdan Perzryuski, Arte Museum, Austin, Texas 1990 Casino Fantasma, curator: Allana Heiss, Winter Casino, Venice, Italy Anastasi, Bradshaw, Cage, Marioni, Rauchenberg, Tobey (Work from John Cage’s collection) curator: Dove Bradshaw, Sandra Gering Gallery, New York 1989 Benefit for the Contemporary Performance Arts, selected and hung by Jasper Johns, Leo Castelli Gallery, NY Chaos, curator: Laura Trippi, The New Museum, New York 1988 Benefit for Merce Cunningham Dance Company, curator: David Vaughan; Group show, Stalke Galleri, Copenhagen Group show, Brigitte March Gallery Stuttgart Espace des Concept Art, Chalon sur Saone, Copenhagen, Stuttgart, Art Cologne, Cologne Re-opening of the Jewish Museum, The Jewish Museum, New York Group show, Stux Gallery, Boston 1987 Group show, Bess Cutler Gallery, New York Reading Art, The New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York Merce Cunningham and His Collaborators: William Anastasi, Dove Bradshaw, John Cage, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Bob Rauschenberg, Andy Warhol, Bruce Nauman, Mark Lancaster, Morris Graves, Lehman College Art Gallery, City University of New York, exhibited design for Points in Space, 1987, World première, City Center, New York and for the Opera de Paris Garnier, Paris, Commissioned by Artistic Director, Rudolf Nureyev.. June, 1993. Music: John Cage; Design: William Anastasi; Bradshaw: Costumes for stage. On Line, An Exhibition of Drawings, curator: Billy Biondi; City Without Walls, Newark, New Jersey, Benefit for AIDS, curator: Susan Lorence and Bob Monk, Lorence Monk Gallery, New York 1985 Group show, Science Museum, Koran-Sha Company, Tokyo 1983 Film as Installation II, curator: Leandro Katz; The Clocktower, NY 1983 Benefit for Merce Cunningham Dance Company, hung by Jasper Johns, Castelli Gallery, New York 1982 Annual Awards, The American Academy of Arts and Letters, New York Exhibition in Honor of John Cage, curator: Judith Pisar, The American Center, Paris Artists: William Anastasi, Dove Bradshaw, John Cage. Biennial ‘81, The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York Group Show, Erickson Gallery, NY 1981 8 Painters, curator: Dove Bradshaw, The Ericson Gallery, NY Group Show, curator: Takis Efstanthiou, Ericson Gallery, New York. 1980 Film as Installation, The Clocktower, New York Fur Augen und Ohren, Akademie Der Kunste, Berlin, W. Germany Ecoute par les Yeux, Musee D’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris 1979 Sound, curator: Alanna Heiss, P.S. 1 Museum, Long Island City, New York Terminus, The Hudson River Museum, New York Benefit for Contemporary Performance Arts, Leo Castelli Gallery, New York Fluxus’ New Interpreters, curator: Peter Frank, Interart Gallery, New York Group show, Paula Cooper Gallery, NY Group show, Anna Canepa, Video Distribution, NY Couples, curator: Alanna Heiss; PS1 Contemporary Art Center, LIC, New York 1978 Art For Jimmy Carter, The Georgia Museum of Art, Athens, GA 1977 Projects for the Seventies, An Exhibition assembled by the Institute for Art and Urban Resources which traveled to Lisbon, Warsaw, Ankara, Tel Aviv, Bucharest, Madrid, Reykjavik, Ottawa 1976 – 77 Open to New Ideas: Art for Jimmy Carter, An exhibition assembled for the Georgia Museum’s permanent collection which toured the major U.S. Museums 1972 Group show, Paula Cooper Gallery, NY 1970 Group show, Musee Cantonal des Beaux-Arts, Lausanne, Switzerland Group show, Musee D’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Group show, E.A.T. Benefit, Leo Castelli Gallery, NY Group Show, Dwan Gallery, New York Artists: Jasper Johns, Yves Klein, Robert Rauschenberg, Jean Tinguley, Niki De San Phalle. 1967 Language, Dwan Gallery, New York 1964 Group show, Betty Parsons Gallery, NY ARTISTIC ADVISOR TO THE MERCE CUNNINGHAM DANCE COMPANY Appointed along with Dove Bradshaw Phrases, 1984, World première, Theatre Municipal d’Angers, Angers France. Music: David Vaughn; Design: William Anastasi; Bradshaw Native Green, 1985, World première, City Center. Music: John King; Design: William Anastasi; Bradshaw: Lighting for stage Grange Eve, World premiere, City Center Theater, New York, Music: Takehisa Kosugi; Décor , Costumes and Lighting: William Anastasi Points In Space, 1986, World Premiere, BBC Television, Music: John Cage; Décor: William Anastasi; Costumes: Dove Bradshaw Points In Space, 1990, commissioned by Rudolf Nureyev, Opera de Paris Garnier, Paris, Music: John Cage; Décor: William Anastasi; Costumes: Dove Bradshaw Fielding Sixes, 1986, World Premiere City Center Thearer, New York, Music: John Cage; Décor, Costumes and Lighting: William Anastasi Shards, 1987, World Premiere, City Center Theater, New York, Music” David Tudor; Décor and Lighting: William Anastasi Eleven, 1988, World Premiere Joyce Theater, New york, Music: Robert Ashley; Décor, Costumes and Lighting, William Anastasi Events, 1989, World Premiere, Grand Central Station, New York, Music: David Tudor; Costumes: William Anastasi and Dove Bradshaw Polarity, 1990, World Premiere, Citly Center Theater, New York, Music: David Tudor; Décor from drawings by Merce Cunningham, Costumes and Lighting, William Anastasi Galerie Jocelyn Wolff PERFORMANCES 2002 Celebrate John Cage, Gary Tatintsian Gallery, NY 1997 William Anastasi: Printed Out, the Mattress Factory Museum, Pittsburgh, PA 1995 me innerman monophone, Aktion Fete du Printemps, NY William Anastasi, Anders Tornberg Gallery, Lund, Sweden 1987 This, The Danheiser Foundation 1982 Plants and Waiters, produced at Princeton University by the Princeton Players, Princeton, NJ 1980 Plants and Waiters, a play by William Anastasi, The Amphitheatre, The School of Visual Arts, NY, Mar. 6, 13, 20 1979 A Peeling, I Forgive Sleep, Coincidents, 3 performances by William Anastasi, The Visual Arts Museum, NY, Nov. 6, 13, 20 1978 You Are (Three Evenings from William Anastasi), narrated by Les Levine, Feb. 10; Carl Keilblock, Feb. 11; John Cage, Feb 12 The Clocktower, NY You Are (Three Evenings from William Anastasi), narrated by William Anastasi, The Visual Arts Museum, NY You Are narrated by William Anastasi, Madama Francesca Allenovi (Italian), Arte Fiera Bologna, Italy, Palachi dei Congressi, Bologna, Italy Galerie Jocelyn Wolff LECTURES 2007 William Anastasi: Works, Pont-Aven School of Contemporary Art, Pont-Aven, France 2006 William Anastasi’s Pataphysical Society, Jarry, Joyce, Duchamp and Cage, Art and Science Department, University of Pennsylvania Anastasi Bradshaw Cage Cunningham; Friendship and Collaboration, Gallery Talk at the opening of Anastasi Bradshaw Cage Cunningham, The University Art Gallery, The University of California at San Diego, La Jolla, CA 2004 The Museum of Modern Art, New York Anastasi Bradshaw Cage Cunningham; A Conversation, Gallery Talk at the opening of Anastasi Bradshaw Cage Cunningham, The Bayly Art Museum, The University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA Public Conversation With William Anastasi and Jean-Michel Rabate, Feb. 28th at the Rosenbach Mu seum & Library, Philadelphia 2003 Test Art after The Silence, Davison Arts Center, Middletown, CT 2001 The Legacy of John Cage, Speakers, William Anastasi, Dove Bradshaw, Carol Hamilton, Associate Profes sor of English, Carnegie Mellon University, Michael Olijnyk, moderator, The Mattress Factory Museum, Pittsburgh 2000 The Whitney Museum of American Art, NY 1998 The Greenhill School, Dallas, TX 1997 The Painting of the Word Jew, panel discussion with Richard Milazzo and Douglas F. Maxwell 1995 Duchamp on the Jarry Road, Inverleith House, Royal Botanical Gardens, Edinburgh Jarry in Joyce, lecture and exhibition of two-hundred pages from me innerman monophone: Jarry in Joyce, Brown University, Providence, RI, James Joyce Conference Jarry in Joyce, The Society for Textual Studies, NY Galerie Jocelyn Wolff 1994 me innerman monophone: Jarry in Joyce, The Sorbonne, Paris Legenda; The New Literariness in Art, School of Visual Arts, NY; panel with Kenneth Goldsmith, Ashley King, Clooier Schorr, and Barry Schwabsky 1993 Du Jarry (Jarry in Duchamp) & me innerman monophone (Jarry in Joyce), Sandra Gering Gallery; panel with Thomas McEvilley and Marlena G. Corcoran 1992 Cage, Duchamp Fats and Crazy, The Art Institute of Chicago 1991 Yale University 1988 Marcel Duchamp Panel, Art in America, Charles F. Stuckey moderator 1981 The Whitney Museum of American Art, NY 1979 Old Dominion University, Norfolk, VA The Hudson River Museum, NY 1978 P.S. 1 The Institute for Art and Urban Resources, NY, “Couples” panel 1977 The University of Georgia, Athens, GA 1970 The School of Visual Arts, New York 1965 University of North Carolina, Greensboro, NC Atlanta School of Art and Design, Atlanta, GA RADIO 1993 WBAI, August 19, 2-3:30am, in commemoration of John Cage with Peter Schmidig 1992 WBAI, August 16, 11pm, panel of close associates of John Cage, Peter Schmidig TELEVISION 1993 Endings and Beginnings, September 26, 12:30am, ABC, discussing the painting of the word “Jew,” the Jewish Museum, New York Galerie Jocelyn Wolff SPECIAL EDITIONS 1975 The Anastasi Puzzle, Special Edition for the Museum of Modern Art, New York (edition of 3000) 1976 The Anastasi Puzzle, (second edition of 1000) 1979 Puzzle Puzzle, Special Edition for The Museum of Modern Art, NY. (edition of 5000) MONOGRAPHS William Anastasi, Essay by Richard Milazzo, Galleria Contemporanea, Emilio, Mazzoli, Modena, Italy, 2009 William Anastasi, Drawing Papers, 70 A Word, words, The Drawing Center, 2007 William Anastasi’s Pataphysical Society: Jarry, Joyce, Duchamp and Cage, Edited by Aaron Levy and Jean-Michel Rabate, Philadelphia Slought Books, Contemporary Artist’s Series No. 3, 2005 William Anastasi, Jakob Lillemose, Copenhagen, Cologne, Hamburg, Stalke, Rehbein, Art Agents, 2004 William Anastasi: The Painting of the Word Jew, Stalke Out of Space, Copenhagen, and Sandra Gering Gallery, NY, 1997. Hanhardt, John and Eileen Neff, William Anastasi: A Retrospective, 1960-1995, Moore College of Art and Design, Philadelphia, PA, 1995. William Anastasi: Works from 1961 to 1995, The Pier Gallery, Stromness, Scotland, 1995. William Anastasi: Sink, 1963; Trespass, 1966; Issue, 1966; Incision, 1966, Sandra Gering Gallery, New York, 1991. William Anastasi: Selections of the Work from 1960-1989, Scott Hanson Gallery, NY, 1989. BOOKS & EXHIBITION CATALOGUES 560 Broadway, A New York Drawing Collection at Work, 1991-2006, Fifth Floor Foundation, New York & Yale University Press, New Haven, CT, 2008 pp. 17, 23, 46-47, 141 McEvilley, Thomas, Wall Ceiling Floor at the Birmingham Museum of Art, William Anastasi, Donald Judd, Fred Sandback, Birmingham, AL, 2007 The Triumph of Anti-Art, by Thomas McEvilley, McPherson and Company, New York, 2005, pp. 104-135. Drawing From The Modern, 1945-1975, Museum of Modern Art, 2005, p.178 Lerm Hayes, Christa-Maria, Joyce In Art, Visual Art Inspired by James Joyce, Lilliput Press, Dublin, 2005 Nothing Less Than Literal/ Architecture After Minimalism, MIT Press, 2004, p. 94. Master Works of the Jewish Museum, Untitled (jew) by Norman Kleeblat, Jewish Museum, 2004, pp. 188, 189. Work Ethic, The Baltimore Museum of Art, 2003/05, Helen Molesworth, Julia Bryan-Wilson , pp. 109 – 111 Especies D’Espais Des Especes d’espaces, Centre d’Art Contemporani, Toronto, Canada, 2003/04 pp. 52, 53 The Invisible Thread, Newhouse Center For Contemporary Art, 2003/4, by William Anastasi, p.18, 19 Infinite Possibilities: Serial Imagery in Twentieth Century Drawings, Davis Museum and Cultural Center Press, Wellesley, MA, 2003, pp. 52, 53. Anastasi Bradshaw Cage, Jacob Lillemose, Museum of Contemporary Art, Roskilde, Denmark, 2001, pp. 42-56. Conceptual Art Today, Pittsburg Center for the Arts, 2001 Ratcliff, Carter, Out of the Box: The Reinvention of Art 1965-1975, Allworth Press, 2000 pp. 58, 64, 103. End Papers, Drawings 1890-1900 and 1990-2000, curated by Judy Collischan, Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase College, State University of New York, Purchase, NY, 2000, p.24 After Image: Drawing Through Process, curated by Cornelia H. Butler, The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, 1999 pp. 11, 12, 46,139. Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Hayden-Guest, Anthony, True Colors, The Atlantic Monthly Press, New York, 1998, p. 96. Merce Cunningham: Fifty Years, Aperture Foundation, NY, 1997, p. 226, 227, 229, 231, 232, 235, 238, 252. Morgan, Robert C., Between Modernism and Conceptual Art, McFarland & Company, Inc. Publications, Jefferson, N.C. and London, 1997, p. 156-159. Rugoff, Ralph, Scene of the Crime, UCLA and Hammer Museum of Art and Cultural Center, and MIT Press, Cambridge, MA , London, England, 1997 Drawing is Another Kind of Language, Harvard University Art Museum, 1997, p. 24, 25. Klangs Skulpturen Augen Musik, Koblenz, Ludwig Museum, 1995, p.36-39 Anastasi, William with Michael Seidel, “Jarry in Joyce: A Conversation,” Joyce Studies Annual, Edited by Thomas F. Staley, University of Texas Press, Austin, 1995. Bayer Collection of Contemporary Art, Bayer Corporation, White Oak Publishing LTD, Sewickly, PA, 1995, pp. 4,5. Morgan, Robert C., “Environment, Site, Displacement,” After the Deluge: Essays on Art in the Nineties, New York: Red Bass, 1993, p.72. Looking Critically: 21 Years of ArtForum Magazine, Brian O’Doherty, “Inside The White Cube”, Notes on the gallery space Part One: pp. 188-193., ArtFroum, New York, 1984 School of Visual Arts Fine Arts Faculty, SVA Press LTD, New York, 1982, pp. 6-7 Battcock, Gregory, Breaking the Sound Barrier, Dutton, NY, 1981. Open To New Ideas, Georgia Museum of Art, 1976-1977, p.4, 5. Battcock, Gregory, Why Art: Casual Notes on the Aesthetics of the Immediate Past, Dutton, NY, 1977 Lippard, Lucy, Six Years: The Dematerialization of the Art Object from 1966- 1972, 1972, p.25 Battcock, Gregory, Idea Art - A Critical Anthology, Dutton, NY, 1973. Third Salon International de Galeries Pilots Artists et docouvreurs de notre temps, Lausanne/Paris, 1970, p.134. Battcock, Gregory, Minimal Art - A Critical Anthology, Dutton, NY, 1968, pp. 21, 31, 407. Betty Parsons’ Private Collection, Finch College Museum of Art, New York, 1968 ARTICLES Jarry in Duchamp, New Art Examiner, October 1997, pp.10-15. Duchamp on the Jarry Road, ArtForum, September 1991, pp. 86-90. BIBLIOGRAPHY (SELECTION) 2014 Alan Licht, «Easy Listening», Art Forum, February 2014 «Dans ma cellule, une silhouette», Le journal, La Ferme du Buisson, February 2014 Kim Levin, «William Anastasi», ARTNews, January 2014 2013 «William Anastasi: Sound Works, 1963-2013», Art & Education, November 2013 Schwendener Martha, «William Anastasi : «Sound Works, 1963-2013», New York Times, October 24, 2013 Roven, Revue critique sur le dessin contemporain, n°9, printemps-été 201, pp. 52-55 Schmidlin Laurence, «L’événement du dessin», Roven, Revue critique sur le dessin contemporain, N°10 / automne-hiver 2013-2014, Numéro spécial «Dessin et Performance», pp. 10-29 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff 2012 Piettre Céline, «L’artiste Américain William Anastasi : un invité de marque chez Jocelyn Wolff», Artinfo, December 2012 Lequeux Emmanuelle, «Mes oeuvres sont l’ici et le maintenant» William Anastasi, Le Quotidient de l’Art, N.258, November 13th, 2012 Diaz Eva, Notations : The Cage effect today, Hunter College/Times Square Gallery, Artforum, Summer 2012 2008 Johnson, Ken, ”Hunting A Tribe of Minimalists on the Streets of the Upper East Side”, The New York Times, January 5, 2008, Art Review Richardson, Vicky, “Blueprint, January 2008”, William Anastasi Subway Drawing, by, pp. 48-51 2007 Macaulay, Alastair, Design Meets Dance and Rules Are Broken, New York Times, Sunday, June 17th, 2007, p. 8 Frankel, David, ArtForum, October 2007, Reviews: William Anastasi, The Drawing Center, p.370 Anastasi, William, RAW, Self Interview, Art on Paper, New York, 2007, pp. 70-72 Newhall, Edith, The Philadelphia Inquirer, “Drawings that doth the ‘I’ in ink, Art Museums; Galleries, July 20, 2007 Bui, Phong, The Brooklyn Rail, July/August 2007, In Conversation, William Anastasi with Phong Bui, p. 34 2006 Boucher, Brian, “William Anastasi and Lucio Pozzi at Whitebox”, Art In America, New York, 2006, p.182 Glueck, Grace, New York Times, William Anastasi, Works From the 1960’s to the Present, Bjorn Ressle Fine Art, 2006 Powhida, William, The Brooklyn Rail, June 2006, William Anastasi, Works from the 1960’s to the present, Bjorn Ressle Fine Art, p. 30 Boucher, Brian, Art in America, December 2006, Rereading Anastasi, Bjorn Ressle Gallery, New York, PP. 138- 141 McEvilley, Thomas, “Contemporary”, 2006, London, UK, William Anastasi, by, pp. 20-23 2005 Yazdani, Mehrdad, Salt of the Earth, Anastasi Bradshaw Cage Cunningham at the University Art Gallery, University of California at San Diego, 2005 Puvogel, Renate, “William Anastasi Blind”, Kunstforum International September- October, 2005, pp. 387- 389 2004 The Irish Times, July 23, 2004, Joyce In Art, Royal Hibernian Academy Gallagher Gallery, 2004 Mar, Alex, Paper Trail Intelligencer «The drawings collector who’s got the art world talking», 7/23/04 2003 Kimmelman, Michael, The New York Times, May 11, 2003, The Forgotten Godmother of Dia’s Artists, Art/ Architecture p. 19, 2003 Mikael, Wivel, Passion, Vendsyssel Kunst Museum, Sophienholm, Denmark, 2003, p.73-77 Friends of the Davison Art Center, Unexpected Dimensions: Works From the LeWitt Collection, Newsletter Fall, 2003 2001 Bang Larsen, Lars, ArtForum, William Anastasi, Nikolaj Copenhagen Contemporary Art Center, 2001 Jansson, Peder, Sculpture Magazine, William Anastasi July/August, 2001, Copenhagen Contemporary Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Art Center Pohl, Eva, Berlingske Tidende, Jan. 6, 2001, Review: A Pathfinder In American Art Movin, Lars, Only Ideas Can Be Art, “Information”, Copenhagen, January 9, 2001 Sandbye, Mette, Weekendavisen, Jan. 12-18, 2001, Review: William Anastasi, Stalke Gallery, Copenha gen, The Music of Chance 1999 Walsh, Daniella, Show, Oct. 3, 1999, Reviews: Ideas In Things, Irvine Fine Arts Center, Rethinking The Familiar In Art, p.30 Blizzard, Peggy, Connections, Sept. 16, 1999, Reviews: Ideas In Things, Irvine Fine Arts Center, pp. B1, B6 Schoenkopf, Rebecca, Orange County Weekly, Reviews: “Ideas In Things, Irvine Fine Arts Center, It’s Quite Clearly A Monkey!” , Sept. 30, 1999, Anastasi, William, “Without Title, 1988, Lithograph, New York Arts, December, 1999 1998 McEvilley, Tom, “William Anastasi: A Retrospective in Prints,” Art on Paper, November/December 1998, pp. 39-43 McDonough, Tom, “William Anastasi at Sandra Gering,” Art in America, May 1998, p.127. Temin, Christine, “Drawing their own conclusions,” Boston Globe, January 21, 1998 1997 Mendelsohn, John, “Three-Letter Word,” Jewish Week, November 14, 1997 Cohen, Mark Daniel and Neuman, Elizabeth, “William Anastasi: The Painting of the Word Jew at Sandra Gering,” Review, November 1, 1997. Hofleitner, Johanna, “William Anastasi at Hubert Winter,” Flash Art, October 1997 1996 Kyander, Pontus, “William Anastasi: Anders Tornberg Gallery, Material: Journal of Contemporary Art, No. 29, Summer 1996 Morgan, Anne Barclay, “Interview: William Anastasi,” Art Papers, November/December 1995 Wasserman, Buron, “Anastasi exhibit to be experienced, not explained,” Art Matters, July/August 1995 Sozanski, Edward J., “Aesthetics by chance: Heads it’s art, tails it’s not,” The Philadelphia Inquirer, We dnesday, June 7, 1995 McLead, Duncan, “Change and Decay: Review of William Anastasi and Dove Bradshaw,” Scottish Press, September 1995 Schwabsky, Barry, “William Anastasi, Sandra Gering Gallery,” Artforum, May 1995 Karmel Pepe, “Also of Note,” The New York Times, March 24, 1995 1994 Ritchie, Matthew, “The Word Made Flesh,” Flash Art, May/June 1994. Rubinstein, Raphael, “William Anastasi at Sandra Gering,” Art in America, April 1994 MoMA Annual Report, 1993/4, p. 33, 34 1993 Anastasi, William, “Jarry, Joyce, Duchamp and Cage,” essay commissioned for and published in the Catalogue to the Venice Biennale, 1993 Tallmer, Jerry, “Rebuilt museum resumes its tale of Jews’ journey,” New York Post, June 19, 1993 1992 Anastasi, William, me innerman monophone, Anders Tornberg Gallery, Lund, Sweden, 1992 Words, Kukje Gallery, South Korea, 1992 1991 E.H., “William Anastasi, Sandra Gering Gallery,” ARTnews, December 1991 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Virginia Dwan Art Minimal –Art Conceptuel Earthworks, New York, Les Annees 60-70, Gallery Montaigne, 1991 1990 Kalina, Richard, “William Anastasia: Deadpan Conceptualist,” Art in America, January 1990. 1989 ArtForum, March, 1989, “Drawing a Self Portrait”, p. 20 Garrels, Gary, “The Work of Andy Warhol,” Dia Art Foundation, 1989, pp.3, 143 1988 Stuckey, Charles F., Monet Water Lilies, Hugh Lauter Levin Associates, Inc., NY, 1988 Bomb, Untitled, New Art Publications, New York, 1988, p. 73 William Anastasi: Drawing a Self Portrait, ArtForum, 1986, p.20. 1987 McEvilley, Thomas, “William Anastasi, Bess Cutler Gallery,” Artforum, May 1987 1986 O’Doherty, Brian, Inside the White Cube, Lapis Press, 1976/1986 1985 McEvilley, Thomas, “I Think Therefore I Art,” Artforum, Summer, 1985 1984 Battcock, Gregory & Nickas, Robert, The Art of Performance - A Critical Anthology, Dutton, NY, 1984 Anastasi, William, “Artist’s Pages: The Creative Process,” Vantage Point, Sept/Oct 1984 1983 Schwartz, Eugene M, Art greats to be…, Bottom Line Personal, October 30, 1983 1982 Gerrit, Henry, “William Anastasi at Ericson,” Art in America, September 1982 “Video,” The American Federation of Arts Newsletter, Winter, 1982 “Review of Exhibitions,” Art in America, September 1982 1975 O’Doherty, Brian, “Inside the White Cube: Notes on the Gallery Space,” Artforum, March 1975 1971 Battcock, Gregory, “Wall Paintings and the Wall,” Arts, December 1971. 1968 Battcock, Gregory, “Four Artists Who Didn’t Show in New York This Season,” Arts, Summer, 1968 Brown, Gordon, “Light: Object and Image,” Arts, Summer, 1968 1967 Battcock, Gregory, “In the Galleries,” Arts Magazine, Summer, 1967 1965 Look Magazine, 1965 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff PUBLIC COLLECTIONS (SELECTION) USA Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY The Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY The Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. The Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, PA Philadelphia Museum Jewish Art, Philadelphia, PA Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, CA The Brooklyn Museum of Art, Brooklyn, NY The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu, HI The Georgia Museum of Art, Athens, GA The Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore, MD The Phoenix Museum of Art, AZ The Chrysler Museum, Norfolk, VA The Aldrich Museum of Art, Ridgefield, CT J. B. Speed Museum, Louisville, KY Neuberger Museum, Purchase, NY Bowdoin College Museum of Art, Brunswick, ME The Weatherspoon Museum of Art, Greensboro, NC The Jewish Museum, New York, NY The Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN The Getty Museum, Los Angeles, CA The Des Moines Art Center, Des Moines, IA The Denver Art Museum, Denver, CO Oklahoma City Art Museum, OK Milwaukee Art Museum, Milwaukee, WI Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston, TX Arkansas Arts Center, Little Rock, AR Wadsworth Athenaeum, Hartford, CT Fogg Art Museum, Cambridge, MA The Greenstein Museum, Seattle, WA Rutgers University, Newark, NJ Cooperfund Collection, Oak Brook, IL Galerie Jocelyn Wolff The Chase Manhattan Bank, New York, NY The First National Bank of Seattle, Seattle, WA Davison Art Center, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT Le Witt Collection, Chester, CT Rubin Museum of Art, New York, NY Birmingham Museum of Art, Birmingham, AL University Art Museum, the University of Virginia at Charlottesville, VA Progressive Contemporary Collection, Cleveland, OH Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, CT The Morgan Literary Museum, New York, NY Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center, Colorado Springs, CO Boise Art Museum, Boise, ID Portland Art Museum, Portland, OR Cedar Rapids Museum of Art, Cedar Rapids, IA New Mexico Museum of Art, Santa Fe, NM Delaware Art Museum, Wilmington, DE FOREIGN MUSEUMS British Museum, London, UK Museum Ludwig Koln, Cologne, Germany The Kunstmuseum, Düsseldorf, Germany Falkenberg Collection, Hamburg, Germany Kolumba Museum, Cologne, Germany La Gaia Collection, Brusca, Italy Musee Moderne, Stockholm, Sweden Rooseum Center Contemporary Art, Malmo, Sweden Museum of Contemporary Art, Roskilde, Denmark The Esbjerg Museum of Modern Art, Esbjerg, Denmark Statens Museum for Kunst, Copenhagen, Denmark Galerie Jocelyn Wolff WILLIAM ANASTASI Exhibitions Galerie Jocelyn Wolff | 78, rue Julien-Lacroix | F-75020 Paris | T + 33 (0)1 42 03 05 65 | F + 33 (0)1 42 03 05 46 | www.galeriewolff.com WILLIAM ANASTASI Continuum October 23, 2015 – December 24, 2016 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris, France Press Release: Continuum represents a seminal installation in the history of photography. The site specific installation lays out the coordinates of temporal impermanence and the immaterial, phenomenological basis of experience. Anastasi explores these issues by rendering problematic the photograph as instrument of knowledge and objectification. Hung upon each wall of a space, a series of twelve photographs show the space directly behind the viewer as he or she looks at the photograph. Each wall reflects the one opposite it; since each photograph was mounted before the next one was taken, the early ones show a blank wall opposite them; the later ones show on opposing wall with a photograph of the first wall already hung on it. Anastasi metaphorically engages the reflective properties of mirroring by photographically inverting the space, placing the area behind the viewer in front of him. The viewer entering the gallery space and looking behind himself sees the same thing as in front of him. Thomas McEvelly a close friend and Anastasi’s devoted art critic, described Continuum as an “infinite regress”, somewhat like two mirrors facing each other, a space of silence in which the viewer is rendered invisible or immaterial or transparent. Anastasi notes in a conversation with McEvelly in 2005 that the work involved with space itself in the 60ies is an allusion to the discomforting fact that there existed sufficient nuclear weapons sitting in the U.S. and the (former) USSR to essentially bring human life to an end on this planet – that it might be a bit late for art to continue pointing to this or that corner of reality as was once its habit – that here and now had taken on a meaning beyond its meaning to past generations. Anastasi’s interest in pure presence which also manifests itself in his signature “works”, his blind drawings is expressed here clearly. The umbrella under which the early works by Anastasi such as his sound objects, his wall removals and site related installations, all the way up to Autobodyography and Nine Polaroid Photographs of a Mirror bow to is the tautological. These works can be seen as an attack of representational art while simultaneously expanding a genuflection to the hear and the now. It seems that Continuum sums up the preoccupations of classical art: the relationship of the context to the thing; the dichotomy between presence and representation, dematerialization and tautology. Continuum was first presented to the New York galerist Virginia Dwan in 1970, in the form of a drawing by Anastasi dating from 1968. It was then shown in Anastasi’s third solo show at Dwan Gallery. In 1977 Alanna Heiss presented Continuum in a slightly modified version at PS1, NY. Galerie Jocelyn Wolff is now presenting this seminal site specific installation in its original idea of 1968. Galerie Jocelyn Wolff WILLIAM ANASTASI Continuum October 23, 2015 – December 24, 2016 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris, France Communiqué de presse Continuum est une œuvre-phare dans l’histoire de la photographie. L’installation in situ expose les composantes de l’éphémérité temporelle ainsi que les bases immatérielles et phénoménologiques de l’expérience. Anastasi explore ces thèmes en mettant en question la photographie, en tant qu’instrument de connaissance et d’objectification. Accrochée sur chaque mur de l’espace, une série de douze photos montre l’espace situé directement derrière le spectateur alors qu’il ou elle regarde la photo. Chaque mur reflète le mur opposé ; puisque chaque photo a été installée avant que la suivante ne soit prise, les premières montrent le mur vide qui leur fait face et les dernières montrent une photo du premier mur déjà accrochée sur le mur opposé. Anastasi enclenche métaphoriquement les propriétés réflectives du miroir en inversant photographiquement l’espace, c’est-à-dire en plaçant ce qui est derrière le spectateur devant lui. Le spectateur qui entre dans l’espace de la galerie et qui regarde derrière lui voit la même chose que celle qui est présentée devant lui. Thomas McEvelly, ami proche d’Anastasi et critique d’art passionné de son œuvre, a décrit Continuum comme une « régression infinie », un peu comme deux miroirs disposés face à face, un espace de silence dans lequel le spectateur est rendu invisible, immatériel ou transparent. Dans une conversation avec McEvelly en 2005, Anastasi faisait remarquer que l’œuvre des années 1960, intimement liée à l’espace, était une allusion au fait dérangeant qu’il existait suffisamment d’armes nucléaires aux Etats-Unis et dans l’ancienne URSS pour mettre fin à toute vie humaine sur la planète ; qu’il était peut-être un peu tard pour l’art de continuer à pointer la réalité sous tel ou tel angle comme il en avait pris l’habitude, et que l’ici et le maintenant avaient pris un sens différent de celui qu’il avait pour les générations précédentes. L’intérêt que porte Anastasi à la présence pure, qui se manifeste également dans les « œuvres » qui créent son style distinctif, les dessins à l’aveugle, est ici clairement exprimé. L’égide sous laquelle tout l’œuvre tend à se regrouper est la tautologie : depuis les premières réalisations de l’artiste, tels les objets sonores, les suppressions de mur et les installations liées au site, jusqu’à l’Autobodyography et les Nine Polaroïd Photographs of a Mirror. On peut voir ces œuvres comme une attaque de l’art « représentationnel » qui renforce simultanément la prosternation devant l’ici et le maintenant. Continuum semble résumer les préoccupations de l’art classique : la relation de la chose au contexte ; la dichotomie entre la présence et la représentation, la dématérialisation et la tautologie. Continuum a été présenté pour la première fois en 1970 par la galeriste Virginie Dwan à New York, sous la forme d’un dessin d’Anastasi datant de 1968. Il a ensuite été exposé à la troisième exposition personnelle d’Anastasi chez Dwan. En 1977, Alanna Heiss a présenté Continuum dans une version légèrement modifiée à PS1 à New York. La galerie Jocelyn Wolff présente aujourd’hui cette œuvre fondatrice in situ dans la conception originelle de 1968.68. Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Continuum; Gelatin silver prints mounted on aluminium, 1968-2015 Exhibition view: Continuum, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris, France Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Continuum; Gelatin silver prints mounted on aluminium, 1968-2015 Exhibition view: Continuum, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris, France Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Continuum; Gelatin silver prints mounted on aluminium, 1968-2015 Exhibition view: Continuum, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris, France Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Continuum; Gelatin silver prints mounted on aluminium, 1968-2015 Exhibition view: Continuum, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris, France Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Continuum; Gelatin silver prints mounted on aluminium, 1968-2015 Exhibition view: Continuum, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris, France Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Continuum; Gelatin silver prints mounted on aluminium, 1968-2015 Exhibition view: Continuum, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris, France Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Continuum; Gelatin silver prints mounted on aluminium, 1968-2015 Exhibition view: Continuum, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris, France Galerie Jocelyn Wolff WILLIAM ANASTASI Alfred Jarry Archipelago La valse des pantins - ACTE II October 18, 2015 - February 14, 2016 La Ferme du Buisson, Centre d’art contemporain, Marne-la-Vallée, France Curated by Keren Detton & Julie Pellegrin Press Release: All most people remember of Jarry is the King Ubu furore, which overshadows a complex body of work marked by radical experimentation and an unmannerly blending of genres. In bringing together a remarkable group of one-of-a-kind international artists, Alfred Jarry Archipelago demonstrates that an entire register of current art and performance is shot through with potent, «Jarryesque» transgression. «Because this boy – who wore size 36 shoes and who, brokenhearted, went to his friend Mallarmé’s funeral wearing a lemon yellow pair stolen from his lady friend Rachilde; who, when he was born at the age of 15, was already the child he would be when he died at 34; who knew at once that «To live = To cease to exist»; who spent his life yo-yoing at up to 300 km/h between the lands of «shitr» and the absolute; who left behind wonders that would knock you flat; who staked his entire existence on literature and played with a revolver, claiming that it was «as beautiful as literature» – completely escapes the clutches of literature.» Annie Le Brun“ In his poetry, plays and drawings Alfred Jarry (1873-1907) shattered the boundaries of the social, moral and aesthetic order of the late 19th century. Like a thunderclap, his King Ubu’s famed «Shitr!» paved the way for for the modernity that was waiting in the wings: from Marcel Duchamp to Harald Szeemann, and including the Futurists, the Surrealists, the Conceptuals and all the many others indebted to this «proto- Dadaist». Between the turn of one century and that of its successor Jarry’s work and ideas seem to have breathed new life into society and art. The abolition of limits – to disciplines, identity, good sense, good taste – that he explored in his life and his work, led him to a totally new approach to drama, the body and language; as well as issues of domination, whether related to desire, knowledge or power. Homing in a selection of Jarryesque motifs, Alfred Jarry Archipelago sets out to pinpoint their reappearance in the visual arts, on the cusp of theatre, dance and literature. In his celebrated ‘pataphysical manifesto Exploits and Opinions of Dr Faustroll, Pataphysician’ Jarry describes an initiatory island-hopping voyage that abolishes factual geography in favour of its artistic equivalent. Each chapter of Book 3 recounts a landfall on an imaginary island dedicated to a writer or artist of the time. If he were sailing through today’s world, what kind of landscape of the last century would Jarry orchestrate? In the same spirit Alfred Jarry Archipelago invites him along as a posthumous curator: for a string of islands embodying the works of various artists and sketching an uncompromisingly subjective view of his heritage. Unfolding over several months, in different places and in different shapes and forms – group and solo exhibitions, screenings, performances, encounters – the project will be rounded off with a major catalogue. Galerie Jocelyn Wolff WILLIAM ANASTASI Alfred Jarry Archipelago La valse des pantins - ACTE II October 18, 2015 - February 14, 2016 La Ferme du Buisson, Centre d’art contemporain, Marne-la-Vallée, France Commissariat de Keren Detton & Julie Pellegrin Communiqué» de presse De Jarry on ne retient que le scandale d’Ubu Roi qui masque une oeuvre complexe placée sous le signe de l’expérimentation radicale et le mélange des (mauvais) genres. En réunissant un ensemble exceptionnel d’artistes internationaux, Alfred Jarry Archipelago démontre que tout un pan de l’art et de la performance actuels est traversé par cette puissance de transgression « jarryesque ». « Parce que ce garçon-là, qui chaussait du 36 et qui volait les souliers en cuir jaune canard de son amie Rachilde pour assister, bouleversé, à l’enterrement de son ami Mallarmé ; qui lors de sa naissance à 15 ans est déjà l’enfant qu’il sera à sa mort à 34 ans ; qui sait tout de suite que « Vivre = cesser d’Exister » et qui passa sa vie en aller et retour entre les contrées de la « merdre » et de l’absolu avec des pointes à plus de 300 km/heure et des splendeurs à vous plaquer au sol ; parce que Alfred Jarry, qui joua son existence entière sur la littérature et qui jouait du revolver sous prétexte que « c’est beau comme littérature », échappe complètement à la littérature. » Annie Le Brun Poète, dramaturge et dessinateur, Alfred Jarry (1873-1907) a pulvérisé les frontières de l’ordre social, moral et esthétique du XIXe siècle finissant. Retentissant comme un coup de tonnerre, le célèbre « Merdre ! » de son Ubu Roi ouvre la voie aux développements de la modernité à venir - de Marcel Duchamp à Harald Szeemann en passant par les futuristes, les surréalistes, les conceptuels, tous sont redevables de celui qui sera qualifié de « proto-dadaïste ». D’un tournant de siècle à l’autre, l’oeuvre et les idées de Jarry semblent irriguer de nouveau la société et l’art contemporains. L’abolition des limites (des disciplines, de l’identité, du bon sens et du bon goût) explorée autant dans sa vie que dans ses écrits l’ont conduit à une approche inédite de la théâtralité et du langage, du récit absurde, de l’abject, de la relation corps/machine, du désir comme producteur de formes, des rapports de domination, qu’ils soient liés au pouvoir ou au savoir. Identifiant un certain nombre de motifs « jarryesques », Alfred Jarry Archipelago se présente comme une quête spéculative de leurs résurgences dans les arts visuels, à la lisière du politique, du théâtre, de la danse et de la littérature. Dans son célèbre roman, Gestes et Opinions du Docteur Faustroll, pataphysicien, Alfred Jarry décrit un voyage initiatique d’île en île dans lequel une géographie artistique se substitue à la géographie réelle. Chaque chapitre du livre III correspond à une halte dans une île fictive dédiée à un écrivain ou un peintre de son temps. S’il naviguait dans le monde actuel, quel paysage composerait l’auteur et critique du siècle dernier ? Convoquant la figure de Jarry comme commissaire posthume, « Alfred Jarry Archipelago » se compose d’un chapelet d’îlots matérialisant l’univers de divers artistes pour esquisser une vision résolument subjective de son héritage. Le projet se déploie sur plusieurs mois dans plusieurs lieux et différents formats - expositions collectives, monographiques, projections, performances, rencontres – et se conclura par une importante publication. Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Du Jarry, 1991-94, facsimile of the manuscript, about 950 pages Exhibition view: Alfred Jarry Archipelago, La Ferme du Buisson, Marne-la-Vallée, France Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Du Jarry, 1991-94, facsimile of the manuscript, about 950 pages Exhibition view: Alfred Jarry Archipelago, La Ferme du Buisson, Marne-la-Vallée, France Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Sound Object, (Deflacted Tired), inner tube, speakers, recording, 1964/2015 Exhibition view: Alfred Jarry Archipelago, La Ferme du Buisson, Marne-la-Vallée, France Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Badabad (nn), oil, crayon, graphite on canvas, 226 x 187 cm, 2013 Badabad (o), oil, crayon, graphite on canvas, 226 x 187 cm, 2014 Exhibition view: Alfred Jarry Archipelago, La Ferme du Buisson, Marne-la-Vallée, France Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Badabad (o), oil, crayon, graphite on canvas, 226 x 187 cm, 2014 Exhibition view: Alfred Jarry Archipelago, La Ferme du Buisson, Marne-la-Vallée, France Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Badabad (nn), oil, crayon, graphite on canvas, 226 x 187 cm, 2013 Exhibition view: Alfred Jarry Archipelago, La Ferme du Buisson, Marne-la-Vallée, France Galerie Jocelyn Wolff WILLIAM ANASTASI Théâtre des opérations / Theatre of operations January 22-24, 2015 Théâtre de l’usine, Genèva, Switzerland By Bénédicte le Pimpec & Émile Ouroumov in collaboration with Céline Bertin Press Release: In science and engineering, a black box is a device, system or object which can be viewed in terms of its input and out-put without any knowledge of its internal workings. Its implementation is «opaque» (black). Almost anything might be referred to as a black box: a transistor, an algorithm, or the human brain.The opposite of a black box is a system where the in-ner components or logic are available for inspection, which is most commonly referred to as a white box.Source: WikipediaA “theatre of operations” is a delimited geographical zone in which an armed conflict involving at least two adversaries is taking place. The related term “operating theatre” also describes the historical practice of surgery performed as a public spectacle.This project incorporates “operations” – artistic gestures of addition, subtraction, multiplication and differentiation – in the present, and not in an immutable conception of time. Over a three-day period, these operations are being deployed in the form of an exhibition punctuated by activa-tions, inside and outside the “black box”, in an ongoing flow, and with parallel temporalities. The objects, films, readings, interventions and exhibitions arrange their own mediation tools within the theatrical model. Coming from the vocabulary of art, by way of a productive tension they negotiate the hierarchy of the elements of the theatrical edifice, over-exposing to better deconstruct the conflict between actor and spectator, and bringing forth common areas of sensibility between live spectacle and visual art.The interactions of the theatre with the other arts and the social space roundabout can be traced back to Antiquity. But prior to recent attempts at deconstruction, the idea whereby the theatre was the loftiest expression of any society encouraged the application of the notion of “total artwork”, a construct envisaging the arts participating in a pyramidal and compartmental-ized way. This development is akin to capitalist accumulation: in the depths of the Middle Ages, perhaps earlier, with the decline of Rome and Judaeo-Christianity, Western society chose to accumulate rather than live. At the outset, the political nature of the stage space was more an emanation of the state apparatus – undoubtedly, there is a politics of space because space is po-litical – rather than a liberating implementation of the idea that it is by means of the body that space is perceived, lived – and produced (Henri Lefebvre).In a chronology that is subjective and incomplete, the imagination of the “Theatre of Operations” retains some dates. 1924, the ballet Relâche by Francis Picabia, Eric Satie and René Clair, at once transversal and undisciplined. 1970, Yvonne Rainer’s WAR, a dance against the Vietnam war in which the movements are led by the vocabulary of military strategy. 1982, Fitzcarraldo, “con-quistador of the useless” from Werner Herzog’s film of the same title, de-territorializes opera machinery in a boat in Amazonia. 2006, the pioneering exhibition The Living Currency by Pierre Bal-Blanc positions the issue of the body back at the centre of the curatorial economy. 2007, Il Tempo del Postino (Hans Ulrich Obrist and Philippe Parreno) attempts a spectacular transposition of artistic codes in the opera. 2012, with her Artificial Hells, Claire Bishop proposes a critical reading of “participatory art and the politics of spectatorship”.Informed by these endeavours, the “Theatre of Operations” pursues Galerie Jocelyn Wolff an investigation of the place of the spectacle. Guy Debord’s Nouveau Théâtre des opérations dans la culture puts forward the notion that the dissolution of old ideas goes hand in hand with the dissolution of old conditions of existence. Rather than seeing the theatre as the place of a spatial, temporal and corporal capitalization, the exhibition’s intent is to compose a theatre that is inhab-ited, active, plastic and empirical, at opposite ends of the psychological notion of “learned helplessness”, a behaviour in which the subject perceives absence of control over the events in his environment, and subsequently adopts a resigned or passive attitude. Communiqué de presse: Dans la science et l’ingénierie, une boîte noire est un système ou objet qui peut être appréhendé uniquement sous l’angle de ses interactions d’entrée ou sortie, sans connaître son fonction-nement interne. Sa mise en oeuvre est « opaque » (noire). Tout peut être représenté sous forme d’une boîte noire : un transistor, un algorithme ou le cerveau humain.Le contraire d’une boîte noire, dit boîte blanche, est un système dont les mécanismes sont visibles et permettent d’en comprendre le fonctionnement. Source : WikipédiaLe « théâtre des opérations » est une zone géo-graphique délimitée où se déroule un conflit armé impliquant au moins deux adversaires. Le terme pointe aussi la pratique historique de la chirurgie performée en tant que spectacle public. Ce projet inscrit les « opérations », gestes artis-tiques de l’addition, soustraction, multiplication ou différenciation, dans le présent et non dans un temps immuable. Pendant trois jours, ces opérations sont déployées sous la forme d’une exposition ponctuée par des activations, à l’inté-rieur ou à l’extérieur de la « black box », en flux continu et avec des temporalités parallèles. Les objets, films, lectures, interventions et exposi-tions agencent leurs propres outils de médiation au sein du modèle théâtral. Issus du vocabulaire de l’art, ils négocient par une tension productive la hiérarchie des éléments de l’édifice théâtral, surexposant pour mieux déconstruire le conflit entre acteur et spectateur, faisant émerger des zones de sensibilité communes entre spectacle vivant et art plastique.Les interactions du théâtre avec les autres arts et l’espace social environnant peuvent être retracées dès l’Antiquité. Toutefois, avant les tentatives récentes de déconstruction, l’idée selon laquelle le théâtre était l’expression la plus haute de toute société a pu favoriser l’implémentation de la notion d’« oeuvre d’art totale », construction envisageant les arts participants de manière pyramidale et cloisonnée. Ce développement se rapproche de l’accumulation capitaliste : dans les profondeurs médiévales, peut-être auparavant avec le déclin de Rome et le judéo-christianisme, la société occidentale a choisi d’accumuler au lieu de vivre. Le caractère politique de l’espace scénique était à l’origine davantage une émanation de l’appareil étatique – assurément, il y a une politique de l’espace parce que l’espace est politique – plutôt qu’une mise en pratique libératrice de l’idée que c’est à partir du corps que se perçoit et que se vit l’espace, et qu’il se produit (Henri Lefebvre).En une chronologie lacunaire et subjective, l’ima-ginaire du « Théâtre des opérations » retient quelques dates. 1924, le ballet Relâche de Francis Picabia, Erik Satie et René Clair, transversal et indisciplinaire. 1970, WAR d’Yvonne Rainer, une chorégraphie contre la Guerre du Vietnam où les mouvements sont conduits par le vocabulaire de la stratégie militaire. 1982, Fitzcarraldo, « conquistador de l’inutile » du film épo-nyme de Werner Herzog, déterritorialise la machinerie de l’opéra sur un bateau en Amazonie. 2006, l’exposition pionnière La Monnaie Vivante de Pierre Bal-Blanc replace la question du corps au centre de l’économie curatoriale. 2007, Il Tempo del Postino (Hans Ulrich Obrist et Philippe Parreno) tente une transposition spectacu-laire des codes artistiques à l’opéra. 2012, Claire Bishop propose avec Artificial Hells une lecture critique de l’« art participatif et des politiques du spectateur ».Informé par ces entreprises, le « Théâtre des opérations » poursuit une investigation du lieu du spectacle. Le Nouveau Théâtre des opérations dans la culture de Guy Debord avance que la dissolution des idées anciennes va de pair avec la dissolution des anciennes conditions d’existence. Plutôt que d’envisager le théâtre comme le lieu d’une capitalisation foncière, temporelle et cor-porelle, l’exposition entend composer un théâtre habité, actif, plastique et empirique, aux antipodes de la notion d’« impuissance apprise », état psy-chologique dans lequel le sujet fait l’expérience de son absence de contrôle sur les événements survenant dans son environnement, favorisant l’adoption d’une attitude résignée ou passive Galerie Jocelyn Wolff You Are (Three Evenings from William Anastasi) 1977/8 In 1977, You Are: John Cage, One of Three Narrators on Three Successive Evenings, 8–9:30 PM, in which a writer, a visual artist, and a composer were asked to describe the viewers coming to Anastasi’s exhibition at the Cloc tower, New York. Anastasi chose Cage as the composer (the writer being Carl Kielblock, and the artist, Les Levine). In response Cage asked whether he could sit facing away from those gathered and describe the sounds instead. His observations were taken down verbatim by a court stenographer, and then a speed typist’s phonetic transcript (containing errors) was mounted on the wall every couple minutes. The collaboration initiated Anastasi and Cage’s friendship. This led to daily chess games over the next fifteen years until Cage’s death. Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Representations: You Are (Three Evenings from William Anastasi), narrated by Les Levine, Carl Keilblock, John Cage, The Clocktower, New York, NY, 1978 You Are (Three Evenings from William Anastasi), narrated by William Anastasi, The Visual Arts Museum, New York, NY, 1978 You Are narrated by William Anastasi and Francesca Allenovi (Italian), Arte Fiera, Bologna, Italy Palachi dei Congressi, Bologna, Italy, 1978 William Anastasi You Are (Three Evenings from William Anastasi), 1977/8 William Anastasi Exhibition view: Théâtre des opérations, Théâtre de l’usine, Geneva, Switzerland, 2015, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi You Are (Three Evenings from William Anastasi), 1977/8 Exhibition view: Théâtre des opérations, Théâtre de l’usine, Geneva, Switzerland, 2015, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi You Are (Three Evenings from William Anastasi), 1977/8 Exhibition view: Théâtre des opérations, Théâtre de l’usine, Geneva, Switzerland, 2015, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi You Are (Three Evenings from William Anastasi), 1977/8 Exhibition view: Théâtre des opérations, Théâtre de l’usine, Geneva, Switzerland, 2015, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi You Are (Three Evenings from William Anastasi), 1977/8 Exhibition view: Théâtre des opérations, Théâtre de l’usine, Geneva, Switzerland, 2015, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi You Are (Three Evenings from William Anastasi) 1977/8 Exhibition view: Théâtre des opérations, Théâtre de l’usine, Geneva, Switzerland, 2015, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi You Are (Three Evenings from William Anastasi) 1977/8 William Anastasi Exhibition view: Théâtre des opérations, Théâtre de l’usine, Geneva, Switzerland, 2015, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi You Are (Three Evenings from William Anastasi), 1977/8 Drawings by William Anastasi Exhibition view: Théâtre des opérations, Théâtre de l’usine, Geneva, Switzerland, 2015, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff WILLIAM ANASTASI Passion William Anastasi - Francisco Tropa - Christoph Weber April 10 – May 23, 2015 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris, France Centered around Passion by William Anastasi, this exhibition offers many lines of thought for themes specific to conceptuel sculpture and drawing: tautology as process at the origin of the work, the perspective, the relationship to materials, accidents and chance. Working without leaving the «aesthetic prejudice of the moment», be it trying to free oneself from one’s own cultural references via an objectivation process is at the heart of William Anastasi’s practice. The origin of a serigraphy, Real Life, 2000, pencil on paper, 42.5 x 51.5 cm, was re-worked by the artist with pencil and felt pen using his two hands and a set of dice to intervene with one or the other color. This effort for objectivation also lies at the heart of the series of works produced for the exhibition «Six Sites» at the Dwan Gallery in 1967 to which Passion belongs: the photographic print of the space with a scaffold/table is a 10% reduction of the place it is situated, a simple and precise protocol that calls for a redefining of the work each time it is presented in a different context. William Anastasi’s work builds itself upon multiple processes, plays with enlargement and reduction, and utilizes text and language. With Antipodes, 2015, white Estremoz marble, Francisco Tropa fixes an axel and two rails into the marble, metaphor for displacement on two continuous parallel lines; here the traditional sculpture material is that involving the ceasing of movement. The two sculptures, Not yet titled, 2015, steel and concrete, 18.5 x 130 x 60 cm and Not Yet Titled, 2015, concrete, 120 x 44 x 22.5 cm proceed from Christoph Weber’s systematic research on this material’s reaction to folding to the point of breaking, and as a ceasing of movement that is characteristic of the life of the material before it stiffens like a homologon of rock. Galerie Jocelyn Wolff WILLIAM ANASTASI Passion William Anastasi - Francisco Tropa - Christoph Weber April 10 – May 23, 2015 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris, France Articulée autour de Passion de William Anastasi, cette exposition offre plusieurs axes de réflexion autour de thèmes propres à la sculpture et au dessin conceptuels : la tautologie comme process à l’origine de l’oeuvre, la perspective, la relation au matériau et l’accident, le hasard. Travailler sans laisser opérer «le préjudice esthétique du moment», soit essayer de s’affranchir de ses propres références culturelles par un procédé d’objectivation, est au coeur de la pratique de William Anastasi. Real Life (2000, crayon à papier sur papier, 42,5 x 51,5 cm), à l’origine une sérigraphie, a été retravaillée par l’artiste au crayon et au feutre, utilisant ses deux mains et le jeu de dés pour intervenir avec l’une ou l’autre couleur. Cet effort d’objectivation se trouve également au coeur de la série d’oeuvres produites pour l’exposition Six Sites à la Dwan Gallery en 1967 à laquelle Passion appartient : l’impression photographique de l’espace où est placé un échafaudage/table de travail est une réduction de 10% de l’endroit où elle est située, protocole précis et simple, qui appelle à une redéfinition de l’oeuvre chaque fois qu’elle est présentée dans un contexte différent. L’oeuvre de William Anastasi se construit ainsi autour de multiples procédés, jeux d’agrandissement et de réduction, utilisation du texte et du langage. Avec Antipode (2015, marbre blanc Estremoz), Francisco Tropa fige dans le marbre un essieu ferroviaire et deux rails, métaphore du déplacement sur deux lignes parallèles continues; ici le matériau traditionnel de la sculpture est celui de l’arrêt du mouvement. Les deux sculptures de Christoph Weber (Not yet titled, 2015, acier et béton, 18,5 x 130 x 60 cm, et Not Yet Titled, 2015, béton, 120 x 44 x 22,5 cm) procèdent de l’exploration systématique de ce matériau dans sa réaction à la pliure, au point de rupture, et comme arrêt d’un mouvement qui est lié à la vie propre du matériau, avant qu’il ne se fige, comme un homologon de la pierre. Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Passion 1967 Photomural, scaffold and pine plank Dimensions variable,(protocol) Photomural : 152,5 x 365,8 cm Scaffold and pine plank : 91,4 x 426,7 x 61 cm Exhibition view: Passion, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, 2015 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Passion 1967 Photomural, scaffold and pine plank Dimensions variable,(protocol) Photomural : 152,5 x 365,8 cm Scaffold and pine plank : 91,4 x 426,7 x 61 cm Exhibition view: Passion, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, 2015 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Without Title 1995 aluminium engraving 27 x 30.5 cm Exhibition view: Passion, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, 2015 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff WILLIAM ANASTASI Dans ma cellule, une silhouette February 1st – April 20, 2014 Centre d’art contemporain de la Ferme du Buisson, Noisiel, France « Il y a dans ma cellule la trace d’un homme mort. […] Cela fait presque cinq ans qu’il est enterré, pourtant son ombre perdure. Il n’était rien ni personne. Tout ce qui reste de lui c’est une poignée d’accusations pour viol et un dessin exécuté au crayon. Ce n’est peut-être qu’une superstition mais je ne peux m’empêcher de penser que l’effacer reviendrait à effacer jusqu’à son existence. Ce qui ne serait peut-être pas une mauvaise chose finalement, mais ce n’est pas moi qui m’en chargerai. » Extrait de Life After Death, une autobiographie de Damien Echols, condamné à mort par l’État d’Arkansas en 1994 et relaxé en 2011 Proposant une exploration du dessin dans son rapport au geste, au corps, l’exposition revient sur l’histoire de Dibutade, la fille du potier de Sycione, qui, la veille du départ de son amant, « entoura d’une ligne l’ombre de son visage projetée sur le mur par la lumière d’une lanterne. » Si ce geste séminal que relate Pline l’Ancien dans son Histoire naturelle est considéré par l’auteur, et à sa suite par nombre d’historiens de l’art, comme l’origine de la peinture et de la sculpture, elle est aussi une invitation à renouveler notre rapport au visible. Par son geste, la jeune fille nous renvoie en effet à la part d’invisible que recèle le visible, en l’occurrence à son désir qui ne peut se résoudre dans l’image. Ce que nous voyons est ainsi toujours habité par l’absence de ce que nous ne pouvons voir, absence qui non seulement structure notre vision mais permet l’avènement d’une potentialité, d’un événement, d’un dévoilement. Réunissant une sélection d’oeuvres de Abdelkader Benchamma, Mathieu Bonardet, Geta Brătescu, Maryclare Foá & Birgitta Hosea (Performance Drawing Collective), Jean Genet, Dennis Oppenheim, Santiago Reyes, Till Roeskens et Carla Zaccagnini, l’exposition envisage ainsi la relation du dessin au corps, où le corps n’est pas seulement ce qui génère le mouvement mais révèle avant tout ce qui se soustrait au regard et que l’on cherche pourtant à rendre visible de notre rapport à l’autre et de notre rapport à soi. Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Blind drawings Exhibition views: Dans ma cellule, une silhouette, Centre d’art contemporain de la Ferme du Buisson, Noisiel, France Galerie Jocelyn Wolff WILLIAM ANASTASI Sound works 1963-2013 October 4 - November 30, 2013 Hunter college, New York, USA Sound Works examines the importance of sound in the work of William Anastasi (b. 1933), one of the key figures in the development of Conceptual, Process, and Minimal Art. Since the early 1960s, sound has played a central role in Anastasi’s relentless investigations into the status, autonomy, and representational function of the art object. Bringing together works from 1963 to the present, Sound Works marks the first comprehensive exhibition to focus exclusively on William Anastasi’s varied use of and engagement with sound. By showcasing sound as a consistent thread in his pioneering efforts to question aesthetic norms, this exhibition provides a unique lens through which to consider Anastasi’s artistic innovations and contributes to the ongoing critical reappraisal of his oeuvre. This ensemble of objects and drawings explores the complex relationship between sound and image, and yields a range of conceptual and phenomenological tensions: between active and passive, presence and absence, creation and destruction. In so doing, Anastasi raises important questions about site and medium specificity, the dematerialization of the aesthetic object, and the dynamic nature of sense experience and perception. Cumulatively, Sound Works offers visitors an unprecedented opportunity to consider both the importance of sound to Anastasi’s broader artistic practice as well as Anastasi’s significance to the emerging art movements of the 1960s and beyond. William Anastasi: Sound Works, 1963–2013 opens at a pivotal moment in the artist’s career—in the year of his eightieth birthday—and coincides with a resurgence of interest in sound-based art. This unique timing opens the door for critical discussion of the development of sound art and Anastasi’s pivotal role in its history. Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Exhibition view: Sound works 1963-2013, Hunter College, New York, 2013 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Exhibition view: Sound works 1963-2013, Hunter College, New York, 2013 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Exhibition view: Sound works 1963-2013, Hunter College, New York, 2013 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Exhibition view: Sound works 1963-2013, Hunter College, New York, 2013 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi. The World’s Greatest Music, 1977. Three children’s record players, three seventy-eight-rpm records, 6 x 38 x 10 in. Collection of Alanna Heiss and Fredrick Sherman Exhibition view: Sound works 1963-2013, Hunter College, New York, 2013 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Exhibition view: Sound works 1963-2013, Hunter College, New York, 2013 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Exhibition view: Sound works 1963-2013, Hunter College, New York, 2013 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi. Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony, 1965 .Magnetic tape, nails, approx. 80 x 71 in. Collection of Tony Ganz Exhibition view: Sound works 1963-2013, Hunter College, New York, 2013 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff WILLIAM ANASTASI Quelque chose de plus qu’une succession de notes May 22 - July 20, 2013 Beton Salon, Paris, France Communiqué de presse: group show curated by Melanie Bouteloup En 2003, l’Unesco établissait une Convention pour la sauvegarde du Patrimoine Culturel Immatériel, offrant une reconnaissance institutionnelle inédite à des pratiques de l’ordre du savoir-faire, de l’oralité, du geste ou du rituel. Selon cette convention, la notion de « patrimoine culturel immatériel » désigne les « pratiques, représentations, expressions, connaissances et savoir-faire - ainsi que les instruments, objets, artefacts et espaces culturels qui leur sont associés » - transmis de génération en génération par une communauté. Il est en permanence recréé en fonction de l’interaction du groupe avec son milieu, son histoire, et lui procure « un sentiment d’identité et de continuité, contribuant ainsi à promouvoir le respect de la diversité culturelle et la créativité humaine ». Cette convention témoigne d’une évolution du concept de « patrimoine » vers une définition élargie, non plus strictement monumentaliste et occidentale. En dehors du bâti et des textes, elle inclut désormais l’oralité et les gestes pour reconnaître la diversité des formes d’expressions culturelles à travers le monde. L’ambition d’en assurer la préservation pose cependant question. Comment envisager la représentation de pratiques immatérielles ? Comment entreprendre leur « sauvegarde » sans pour autant les figer en un inventaire, et les réduire à une transcription ou réactivation nécessairement partielle et subjective ? Faut-il en définitive « conserver » ces pratiques immatérielles ou laisser libre cours à leurs mutations ? À l’occasion des 10 ans de cette convention, l’exposition « Quelque chose de plus qu’une succession de notes » propose d’interroger les enjeux soulevés par la patrimonialisation de données culturelles par définition vivantes et en perpétuelle évolution. Tenter de classer et perpétuer les pratiques culturelles immatérielles, n’est-ce pas aller à l’encontre du mouvement organique qui les sous-tend, propre à la constitution, à l’évolution voire à la disparition des formes d’expression d’une communauté humaine ? Dans la mesure où les pratiques d’un groupe naissent et se métamorphosent toujours en fonction d’un contexte socio-économique précis, leur fixation en une forme atemporelle supposée représentative (au moyen d’enregistrements sonores, photographiques, vidéos, mais encore de témoignages ou d’éléments collectés sur le terrain) ne peut rendre compte de leurs variations et de leur labilité profonde. Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Without Title (One Gallon of industrial high-gloss enamel, poured), 1966, site specific installation, variable size Microphone, 1963-2011 Exhibition view: Quelque chose de plus qu’une succession de notes, bétonsalon, Paris, 2013 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Without Title (One Gallon of industrial high-gloss enamel, poured) 1966 site specific installation, variable size Exhibition view: Quelque chose de plus qu’une succession de notes, bétonsalon, Paris, 2013 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Without Title (One Gallon of industrial high-gloss enamel, poured) detail 1966 site specific installation, variable size Exhibition view: Quelque chose de plus qu’une succession de notes, bétonsalon, Paris, 2013 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Microphone 1963-2011 Exhibition view: Quelque chose de plus qu’une succession de notes, bétonsalon, Paris, 2013 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi, Coleslaw, Let’s do it From this Moment on, 2003, video on DVD, color, sound, 61 min Exhibition view: Quelque chose de plus qu’une succession de notes, bétonsalon, Paris, 2013 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff WILLIAM ANASTASI JARRY: DU / JOY BLIND DRAWINGS WALKING, SUBWAY, DROP, VETRUVIAN MAN, STILL November 10 – December 22, 2012 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris, France Press release: At the occasion of his first solo exhibition at Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, William Anastasi presents a series of «Blind Drawings», some of them produced in situ. One relief, «Displaced Site» (1966) and a sculpture «1904 S.Ninth St. (1964) along with archives, notes and drawings related to his delving into Jarry’s effect on Duchamp and Joyce. One can observe how the division between artworks and archives are permeable. For William Anastasi the starting point is the idea. His ideas typically arrive with a curiosity regarding their realization. His practice merges with the quotidien. After initiating his “Running drawings”, series in the 60’s, he builds a corpus where drawings accompany his motion (“Walking Drawings”, “Subway drawings”, “Taxi Cab Drawings”, etc.), or organizing a system embracing space for chance (“Drop Drawings”), in coherence with his ethics of the aleatory. Communiqué de presse: Pour sa première exposition personnelle à la galerie, William Anastasi articule un ensemble de “Blind drawings”, dont certains réalisés in situ, deux sculptures «Displaced Site» (1966) et «1904 S.Ninth St.» (1964) et un ensemble de notes et archives lié à ses recherches sur l’influence de l’oeuvre d’Alfred Jarry chez Joyce et chez Duchamp, où les frontières entre œuvre et document se dissipent. Pour William Anastasi, il s’agit toujours d’avoir une idée et de voir ensuite ce que cela produit, transcrit dans la réalité d’un passage à l’acte (avec comme leitmotiv : “I have an idea and want to see how it looks like”). La pratique de William Anastasi s’inscrit dans son quotidien; à la suite de la série des « Running drawings », initiée dans les années 60, se construit un corpus où le dessin apparaît accompagnant ses mouvements et déplacement (« Subway drawings », « Taxi cab drawings » etc.), ou en mettant en place un système libérant un espace au hasard (« Drop Drawings ») en cohérence avec son éthique de l’aléatoire. Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Exhibition view: Jarry: Du/Joy, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Without Title (One hour blind drawing) Burst drawing 2012, oil pastel on paper, 150 x 182 cm Displaced Site 1966, cardboard, plaster, 6 x 9 x 11 cm Exhibition view: Jarry: Du/Joy, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Without Title (Half hour blind drawing) 2012, graphite on paper, 150.5 x 181 cm 1904 S.Ninth St. 1964, bricks, 12.3 x 22.2 x 22 cm Exhibition view: Jarry: Du/Joy, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Still drawing x 3 2011 graphite on paper 76.5 x 57 cm Exhibition view: Jarry: Du/Joy, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Still drawing 2011 graphite on paper 76.5 x 57 cm Exhibition view: Jarry: Du/Joy, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Drop drawing 2012 graphite and incision on paper 57 x 76.5 cm Exhibition view: Jarry: Du/Joy, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Exhibition view: Jarry: Du/Joy, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Exhibition view: Jarry: Du/Joy, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Without Title (One hour blind drawing) 2012 pencil on paper 150 x 274.3 cm Exhibition view: Jarry: Du/Joy, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Making of Without Title (One hour blind drawing) 2012 pencil on paper 150 x 274.3 cm Exhibition view: Jarry: Du/Joy, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris Galerie Jocelyn Wolff WILLIAM ANASTASI Works Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Site Specific Installations Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Untitled 1966 photograph behind glass, framed 131 x 162 cm Installation view: Coincidents, Kunstmuseum Dusseldorf, 1979 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Main Gallery, South Wall from Six Sites 1967 Photo silkscreen on canvas 217 x 842 cm Exhibition view with the artist at Dawn Gallery, New York Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Main Gallery, West Wall from Six Sites 1967 Photo silkscreen on canvas 217 x 400 cm Exhibition view at Dawn Gallery, New York Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Untitled 1968-69 Photograph mounted on aluminium 121 x 165 cm Exhibition view: ,Scott Hanson Gallery Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Continuum 1970 Gelatin silver prints mounted on aluminium 152,4 x 122 cm each Exhibition view at Dawn Gallery, New York Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Passion 1967 photomural 152,4 x 365,8 cm scaffold and pine plank 91,4 x 246,7 x 61 cm Exhibition view at Anders Tornberg Gallery, Lund, Sweden Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Passion 1967 Photomural, scaffold and pine plank Dimensions variable,(protocol) Photomural : 152,5 x 365,8 cm Scaffold and pine plank : 91,4 x 426,7 x 61 cm Exhibition view: Passion, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris, France, 2015 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Without title, (One Gallon of industrial high-gloss enamel, poured), 1966 Exhibition view: Quelque chose de plus qu’une succession de notes, Beton Salon, Paris 2013 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Without title, (One Gallon of industrial high-gloss enamel, poured), 1966 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff READING A LINE ON A WALL 1967 Press type 10 x 210 cm Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Sound Objects Galerie Jocelyn Wolff W I L L I A M A N A S T A S I: S O U N D 1 9 6 3 — 2 0 1 3 Exhibition organized by Dove Bradshaw William Anastasi is not a typical art-‐lover—he says he does not have a strong visual memory. Getting off a highway, or leaving a new hotel he tells of difficulty finding his way back. He seems to reserve his gaze for reading people or interior thoughts. This is rare for an artist. Instead he is a music lover. At sixteen, before the Salk vaccine, he was struck with Polio in his right shoulder. Quarantined at home for the better part of a year, he was given home schooling, but the discovery of classical music helped save him. His Father brought home a 3-‐speed record player and responded to an early promotion of free long-‐playing recordings of the world’s great composers. This experience, no doubt, was the crucible that contributed to the making of the artist. Anastasi attends many live concerts, including regular Sunday Evensong at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in his/our neighborhood—we have lived together since 1974. At these choral concerts he walks the block-‐long corridor of the building while executing Walking Drawings, one of which is shown here. Or in the case of the Concert Drawing here, last fall, he was seated next to Virginia Dwan and me during an evening of John Cage’s music at Carnegie Hall. Afterwards he gave the drawing to Ms. Dwan who had mounted four important exhibitions at the Dwan Gallery in New York from 1966-‐1970. In 1965 through the gallery he met Cage. Anastasi has always maintained close friendships with composers, Cage being the most notable. By contrast most of Cage’s deepest friendships were with artists. In this respect their bonds were mirror opposites. Cage was not drawn to the history of music, and was extremely selective about contemporary music. His was a specific focus. Anastasi’s connection to visual art is similar. Again Anastasi’s omnivorous love of music and Cage’s devotion to art are mirrored. This seeming distance from their chosen vocations provoked these two iconoclasts to become revolutionaries. Sound Works 1963-2013 spans Anastasi forays into sound beginning with one of his earliest works—Microphone, 1963 and ending with an in-‐situ sound/drawing from the Resignation Series, 1989/2013 made for this exhibition. In the past Anastasi has had five significant exhibitions solely devoted to sound made in sculpture, drawing or for theater from which these works were taken. The earliest works from 1963-‐ 1965 exhibited in his 1966, Sound Objects, at the Dwan Gallery, New York. He coined the appellation Sound Objects, which has become vernacular. In 1977, You Are: John Cage: one of three narrators on three successive evenings, 8-‐9:30 PM followed at the Clocktower, New York. Anastasi invited Cage to describe the audience. Cage asked whether he could sit facing away and describe the sounds instead. His observations were taken down verbatim by a court stenographer, then a speed typist’s transcript was mounted on the wall every couple of minutes. The collaboration initiated their Galerie Jocelyn Wolff friendship. This led to daily chess games over the next fifteen years until Cage’s death. Again in 1977, Microphone, exhibited in it’s own space at PS1, Contemporary Art Center, Long Island City, New York. In 1993, Drawing Sounds: A Memorial in Honor of John Cage, was presented at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Anastasi invited fifteen friends of John’s to record the sound made while drawing on paper mounted onto a clipboard. The tape recorder, clipped to the board, repeated the sounds for viewers. Shown here are Merce Cunningham’s, Jasper John’s and Anastasi’s drawings. Finally in 1998, Mural Drawings with the Sound of their Making, premièred at the Pittsburgh Center for the Arts, with the artist and three students each executing a stationary Vetruvian Man mural. Transducers attached to each wall recalled the sound of the making of each drawing (one is displayed in the window). The Hunter exhibition presents a selection of works taken from each these exhibitions, along with some of the earliest examples inspired by sound, but not shown as a body. Among them, are the first presentation of 4 of 96 Constellation Drawings, 1963, done while listening to Wanda Landowska’s recording of Bach’s Well Tempered Clavier. Other drawings include two Concert Drawings, 2009 (the Bach concert) and 2012 (the Carnegie Hall evening of Cage) and a Dance/Concert Drawing, 2004 made viewing a Merce Cunningham performance. Sculptures include Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony, 1965, a wall-‐relief using a recording tape of that piece, and World’s Greatest Music, 1977: three manual record players randomly playing on and off the end-‐grooves of three-‐78 rpm records labeled World’s Greatest Music. Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Sound Objects 1966 Installation view Exhibition view: Dawn Gallery, New York Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Sound Object Deflated Tire 1964-2013 Inner tube, speaker, recording Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Sound Object Drill 1964-2013 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Sound Object Fann 1964-2013 Fan, speaker, recording Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Sound Object Radiator 1964-2013 Heater, speakers, recording Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Microphone 1963 Microphone, sound Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Microphone 1963-2011 Exhibition view: Quelque chose de plus qu’une succession de notes, bétonsalon, Paris, 2013 Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Photographs Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Nine Polaroid Photographs of a Mirror 1967 polaroid photographs and mirror 50 x 32 cm The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Diptych (Grass) 1967 polaroid photographs 11 x 18 cm Diptych (Hands) 1967 polaroid photographs 10 x 16,5 cm Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Maintenance III 1968 photogravure 38 x 47 cm Exhibition view: Jarry: Du/Joy, Galerie Jocelyn Wolff, Paris Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Untitled 1967 black and white polaroid photographs and masking tape Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Without Title (Rust) 1977 Polaroids 26 x 30 cm Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Four one to one photographs of a papered wall at the Bradshaw residence, 436 E. 88th St, NYC, Jan 27, 1977 1977 Polaroids 21,5 x 28 cm Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Without Title (Roof) 1977 Polaroids 31 x 28 cm Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Without Title (Beach) 1977 Polaroids 33 x 35,5 cm Galerie Jocelyn Wolff Drawings on canvas Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Breath 1997 Oil, graphite on canvas 256 x 198 x 5 cm Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Without Title (painting of the word Jew) 2013 Oilstick on canvas 228 x 187 cm Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Without Title (THIS JEW) 1998 Coloured ink on canvas 30,5 x 30,5 cm Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Without Title (Abandoned Painting) The Abandoned Painting is part of the William Anastasi’s ongoing practice of unsighted drawings incorporating chance and a set of rules into the artistic process. In 1995 Anastasi began the series Abandoned, titled after de Kooning’s notion of “never finishing a painting but rather abandoning it”. The all-black, large-scale painting reflects the artist’s body in its full dimensions, as far as his arms could reach in a Vitruvian stretch. The ground is painted black, and the formless figures are a result of drawing blindly in oil and graphite on the surface. Anastasi refers to the Abandoned Painting as a silent movie – combining sighted and unsighted gestures whose placement is determined by the throw of dice. He forgoes his recipe for closure (when the oil stick runs out, when the allotted time is up) and decides when, as de Kooning would say, to abandon the painting. This final, sighted intervention contradicts the exacting set of controls that has framed Anastasi’s work for many years. Anastasi believes in chance and in the silent world of meditation. He also loves to play chess and sees this game as a metaphor for life and a struggle for life. A chess player’s virtues are reason, memory and invention – the virtues of a thinking man. Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Abandoned painting 2000 oil and graphite on canvas 224 x 187,5 cm Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Abandoned painting 2000 oil and graphite on canvas 224 x 187,5 cm Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi The Bababad Paintings” The Bababab series is inspired by the longest word in James Joyce’s novel, Finnegans Wake, as the preeminent New York-based artist William Anastasi explains, Joyce’s “frightening beast” of an experimental novel. Like many admirers of the book, it has held an enduring fascination for Anastasi and it has found its way into the soul of Anastasi’s work and literally onto his canvas. He began the series in the mid-eighties and is continuously working on it to this day. At the end of the series, which is one-third completed, fifty paintings (at roughly two letters each painting) will spell the sound of the fall of man, or the thunderclap expelling Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden. The word in question is: “Bababadalgharaghtakamminarronnkonnbronntonnerronntuonnthunntrovarrhounawnskawnlooho ohoordenenthurnuk.” Try and say that aloud three times quickly. But wait. Is it not more enjoyable to look at each and every letter of the word as Anastasi has magically transformed them into arabesques of pulsating line and color that quiver and float through the visual space of his canvases. “The attraction was to literary genius,” says Anastasi. His attraction to Joyce started with The Dubliners and A Portrait of the Artist and ultimately to Finnegans Wake. During his formative years, Anastasi remembers that he got into the habit of reading aloud, and that act of reading something aloud made it much more meaningful, much more powerful for him, Anastasi says, “I was reading Finnegans Wake aloud at the time and I loved this word which represents, among other things, God’s voice.” Anastasi goes on to explain, “There’s an Irish folkloric tradition that when a man plunges to death the sound which accompanies his fall is the voice of God. This word heralds Finnegan’s fall from his scaffold and symbolically propels Lucifer and his followers into hell. It’s a sound object, and I guess connects with my sound objects. It’s a word about a sound, a word of a sound. I started with sound objects and ended up here doing a painting of a sound.” Perhaps to memorialize his 50 year preoccupation with the novel as well as a double homage to his heroes in literature and art, James Joyce and John Cage respectively, Anastasi has turned out a series of paintings as electrifying as a flash of lightning with a simultaneous crash of thunder. The bold, colorful, larger than life size canvases are created in part by chance, what Anastasi calls “unsighted painting” – painting without consciously looking at the canvas. Anastasi’s process involves oil sticks, which make it possible to put color on a surface without choosing the color. In contrast to abstraction, he creates structure in the form of letters. Anastasi employs the old fashioned transparency method where immense blow-ups of each letter of the word are traced onto the canvas. In the novel, the word is first introduced to the reader on page one. It’s the first of ten thunderclaps scattered throughout the novel; each of them has 100 letters. Each painting includes roughly two letters. Sometimes the letters unintentionally form a word, for example “on”, “tu” French for “you” and other times the letters visually transmit a sound, like “o” or “er”. The word as image has long fascinated artists and art lovers. If we think back to the history of 20th century art, cubist paintings of Picasso and Braque, with their inclusions of bits of words, instantly come to mind, as do the witty word paintings of Ed Ruscha and the cool joke paintings of Richard Prince. Paintings with text are attractive to the viewer not only because they are enjoyable to look at, but they also engaging to read. Words add an intellectual component to the act of looking at a painting. Lisa Jacobs Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Bababad (ghtak) 1987 Oil on canvas 246 x 546 cm Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Bababad (nn) 2013 Oil, crayon, graphite on canvas 226 x 187 cm Galerie Jocelyn Wolff William Anastasi Bababad (o) 2014 Oil, crayon, graphite on canvas 226 x 187 cm Galerie Jocelyn Wolff