Printer Friendly
The Free Library
6,672,335 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Spiritual America: David Deitcher on pre-teen spirit.


For twenty years TWENTY YEARS. The lapse of twenty years raises a presumption of certain facts, and after such a time, the party against whom the presumption has been raised, will be required to prove a negative to establish his rights.
     2.
 I kept a rather plain postcard tucked away in a folder of art-related ephemera e·phem·er·a  
n.
A plural of ephemeron.


ephemera
Noun, pl

items designed to last only for a short time, such as programmes or posters

Noun 1.
 from the early '80s. From edge to edge on its other wise black face, white capital letters spell out a single word: "POP." On the flip side Flip side

In the context of general equities, opposite side to a proposition or position (buy, if sell is the proposition and vice versa).
, the card provides the basics about a now all-but-forgotten exhibition: works by Sarah Charlesworth Sarah Charlesworth (born 29 March 1947) is a well-known American conceptual artist and photographer. She was born in East Orange, New Jersey. She received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Barnard College in 1969 and now lives in New York City. , Louise Lawler Louise Lawler (born 1947, Bronxville, New York) is a U.S. artist and photographer. From the late 1970s onwards, Lawler's work has focused on the presentation and marketing of artwork. , Cindy Sherman, Jeff Koons Jeff Koons (born January 21, 1955), is an American artist. He is noted for his use of kitsch imagery using painting, sculpture and other forms, often in large scale. Life and art
Early life and work
, Allan McCollum Allan McCollum is a contemporary American artist who was born in Los Angeles, California in 1944, and now lives and works in New York City. He has spent over thirty years exploring how objects achieve public and personal meaning in a world constituted in mass production, focusing , and Richard Prince
For an article on the British actor who murdered William Terriss, see Richard Archer Prince.


Richard Prince, (born 1949 in the U.S.-controlled Panama Canal Zone, now part of Republic of Panama) is an American painter and photographer.
; opening on the evening of February 1, 1984, at a place called Spiritual America, 5 Rivington Street Rivington Street is a street in the New York City borough of Manhattan, which runs across the Lower East Side neighborhood, between Bowery and Pitt Street, with a break between Chrystie and Forsyth for Sara D. Roosevelt Park. Vehicular traffic runs west on this one-way street. , on Manhattan's Lower East Side.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Prince masterminded both "POP" and the funky storefront space he had opened three months earlier with the help of a girlfriend, Kimberly Fine, who obligingly o·blig·ing  
adj.
Ready to do favors for others; accommodating.



o·bliging·ly adv.
 fronted for the artist, running their by-appointment-only enterprise. Hardly a blue-chip affair, "POP"--like the three other shows that marked the short lifespan of Spiritual America (which closed within considerably less than a year)--left few traces: no reviews, no installation shots, no checklist, nothing more than an announcement card beset by misspelled names. I attended the opening of "POP" because I was friendly with Prince and most of the exhibiting artists. Twenty years later, all I remember is a vague sense of the space itself, a Sarah Charlesworth photocollage that resembled a close-up of a tartan, and feeling disappointed. (At the time, I was working on a dissertation that looked, in part, at historic Pop, and "POP" just wasn't Pop enough for me.)

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

But with the benefit of two decades' hindsight, an exhibition of that name, at that time, seems like a landmark in a secret--or anyway elusive--history of Pop after Pop. The episode now reads as a shrewd reiteration of a famous Pop gambit: Twenty-two years before Spiritual America, Claes Oldenburg Noun 1. Claes Oldenburg - United States sculptor (born in Sweden); a leader of the pop art movement who was noted for giant sculptures of common objects (born in 1929)
Claes Thure Oldenburg, Oldenburg
 opened his "Store" on the Lower East Side as a venue for Happenings and an emporium for the display and sale of his own exuberantly grungy grun·gy  
adj. grun·gi·er, grun·gi·est Slang
In a dirty, rundown, or inferior condition: grungy old jeans.



[Origin unknown.
 painted plaster works. Oldenburg and fellow Pop artists turned to popular imagery (and, not uncommonly, invoked the spaces of retailing) to disrupt Abstract Expressionism's high--cultural solemnity SOLEMNITY. The formality established by law to render a contract, agreement, or other act valid.
     2. A marriage, for example, would not be valid if made in jest, and without solemnity. Vide Marriage, and Dig. 4, 1, 7; Id. 45, 1, 30.
 with gregarious signs of everyday life. Building on Pop's lessons, Prince approached media representations as a parallel universe that we all partially inhabit--our collective imaginary, as it were.

Other artists of Prince's generation deliberately resisted the ideological blandishments of commercial imagery. Two years before "POP," for instance, another artist-organized show helped define the same milieu in a different manner. Barbara Kruger's "Pictures and Promises: A Display of Advertising, Slogans and Interventions" at the Kitchen (Jan. 8-Feb. 5, 1981) comprised a dense installation of ads juxtaposed jux·ta·pose  
tr.v. jux·ta·posed, jux·ta·pos·ing, jux·ta·pos·es
To place side by side, especially for comparison or contrast.
 with "interventions" by, among others, Prince, Sherrie Levine Sherrie Levine (born April 17, 1947 in Hazleton, Pennsylvania, United States) is a photographer and conceptual artist. Much of her work is in the form of very direct image appropriation. , Laurie Simmons, James Welling, Jenny Holzer Jenny Holzer (born 1950 in Gallipolis, Ohio) is an American conceptual artist. She attended Ohio University (in Athens, Ohio), Rhode Island School of Design, and the Independent Study Program at the Whitney Museum of American Art. , Jimmy De Sana, Hans Haacke Hans Haacke (born 1936 in Cologne, Germany) is a conceptual artist.

Haacke studied at the Staatliche Werkakademie in Kassel, Germany, from 1956 to 1960. From 1961 to 1962 on a Fulbright grant at the Tyler School of Art at Temple University in Philadelphia.
, and Hannah Wilke Hannah Wilke (born Arlene Hannah Butter, March 7, 1940 - January 28, 1993)[1] was an American painter, sculptor, and photographer. Biography
Hannah Wilke was born in 1940 in New York City into a Jewish family.
. Just as Stuart Hall would refer in the early '80s to the "rediscovery of ideology," Kruger was looking critically at the spectacular, naturalized nat·u·ral·ize  
v. nat·u·ral·ized, nat·u·ral·iz·ing, nat·u·ral·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To grant full citizenship to (one of foreign birth).

2. To adopt (something foreign) into general use.
 world of images as a reflection of mainstream attitudes regarding class, race, gender, and sexuality and at how such representations also help to construct and maintain those attitudes.

While Prince's early work was perfectly suited to Kruger's show, he has to this day maintained a stubbornly ambiguous relationship with the imagery he has surveyed. From the late '70s, when he first embarked on re-photography, and throughout the '80s, Prince proved a perceptive, quirky guide through the encyclopedic en·cy·clo·pe·dic  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of an encyclopedia.

2. Embracing many subjects; comprehensive: "an ignorance almost as encyclopedic as his erudition" 
 forest of signs. He had a special gift for isolating the revealing detail, the fragment rich in visual rhetoric--the trope trope  
n.
1. A figure of speech using words in nonliteral ways, such as a metaphor.

2. A word or phrase interpolated as an embellishment in the sung parts of certain medieval liturgies.
 that summons the normal and the perverse, the banal and the precious, the sublime and the bizarre. On the cusp of the digital era, he focused on representations whose capacity to convince depended on an analogical an·a·log·i·cal  
adj.
Of, expressing, composed of, or based on an analogy: the analogical use of a metaphor.



an
 photographic realism. So flagrantly artificial was this image world, yet so forceful its social presence, that Prince famously declared it "more real than the real thing."

Spiritual America opened in November 1983, one year after Nature Morte and one year before International With Monument--artist-run spaces that established profitable footholds of anti-expressionism in the heart of the East Village's hitherto expressionistic ex·pres·sion·ism  
n.
A movement in the arts during the early part of the 20th century that emphasized subjective expression of the artist's inner experiences.



ex·pres
 punk Bohemia. Almost a decade after the opening of Spiritual America, in May 1992, the critic Paul Taylor--one of that era's more knowing voices and editor of the timely anthology Post-Pop Art (1989)--described the space on Rivington in the pages of the New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times as Prince's "fake gallery." The description is apt, I believe, in that the gallery was a low-key setting for the display of new work by Prince and a handful of friends, distinctly not a place where financial gain was a high priority. Fake also, perhaps, because Spiritual America represented a simulacrum of an art gallery--the mere idea of a gallery--at the dawn of the art world's enthrallment en·thrall  
tr.v. en·thralled, en·thrall·ing, en·thralls
1. To hold spellbound; captivate: The magic show enthralled the audience.

2. To enslave.
 with the later writings of Jean Baudrillard.

The space on Rivington opened with the display of a single work, also called Spiritual America. The opening was a non-event that nonetheless transformed Prince's venue into a cultish cause celebre among the few people who knew it existed. Prince's work hung alone--shrinelike--in a cheap gold frame beneath a diminutive picture light at the end of an otherwise unlit, or dimly lit, narrow room with exposed-brick walls. Taylor dubbed Prince's eponymous piece "one of the biggest stunts of his career." The infamous picture was a photograph of a photograph of a heavily lubricated lu·bri·cate  
v. lu·bri·cat·ed, lu·bri·cat·ing, lu·bri·cates

v.tr.
1. To apply a lubricant to.

2. To make slippery or smooth.

v.intr.
To act as a lubricant.
, extravagantly made-up, prepubescent prepubescent /pre·pu·bes·cent/ (pre?pu-bes´ent) prepubertal.

pre·pu·bes·cent
adj.
Of or characteristic of prepuberty.

n.
A prepubescent child.
 Brooke Shields, posed to look like she has just arisen from a, steamy bath. An "extremely complicated photo," Prince has said, "of a naked girl who looks like a boy made up to look like a woman."

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Complicated indeed. Commercial photographer Garry Gross took the picture in 1975, with the permission of the ten-year-old child's mother, Teri. After Shields became a star in Louis Malle's Pretty Baby (1978) and achieved further fame and fortune hawking Calvin Klein jeans in June 1982 she convinced the Supreme Court of New York to issue an injunction against Gross to prevent him from further sales or distribution of the image. In March 1983, eight months before Prince displayed Spiritual America, the Appellate Court A court having jurisdiction to review decisions of a trial-level or other lower court.

An unsuccessful party in a lawsuit must file an appeal with an appellate court in order to have the decision reviewed.
 overturned the injunction in a 4-3 decision, stating that children cannot break a contract signed by a parent or guardian, thus clearing the way for Gross to resume marketing the images to devotees of arty, soft-core child pornography Child pornography is the visual representation of minors under the age of 18 engaged in sexual activity or the visual representation of minors engaging in lewd or erotic behavior designed to arouse the viewer's sexual interest. .

Like historic Pop, Prince's neo-Pop demonstrates the persistence, despite the odds, of what Roland Barthes called "that old thing art." Prince borrowed the title Spiritual America from a well-known photograph of the same name taken by Alfred Stieglitz in 1923--a close-up of the belly and haunches of a harnessed workhorse. The reuse of the title serves to measure the historical distance between Stieglitz's modernist equation of American spirituality with a fleshy fleshy (flesh´e)
1. pertaining to or resembling flesh.

2. characterized by abundant flesh.
 symbol for the Protestant work ethic The Protestant work ethic, or sometimes called the Puritan work ethic, is a Calvinist value emphasizing the necessity of constant labor in a person's calling as a sign of personal salvation.  and Prince's postmodernist selection of a spectacular kiddie porn tableau. Prince comments, "I saw Stieglitz's photograph, Spiritual America, at the Met just before opening the gallery. It's really the whole reason for the show, for the gallery. I mean a picture of a gelded geld 1  
tr.v. geld·ed or gelt , geld·ing, gelds
1. To castrate (a horse, for example).

2. To deprive of strength or vigor; weaken.
 horse with a title like that--it just seemed to mean so much."

Clearly, however, the sight of Stieglitz's picture was not the "whole reason" for any or all parts of the Spiritual America episode. Friends (myself included) remember Prince's excitement about the Gross picture, which preoccupied him for some time prior to its display. Some of us were offended by what Prince did with the picture, none more so than Kate Linker, author of "On Richard Prince's Photographs" (first published in Arts Magazine, November 1982) and one of the artist's most perceptive early supporters. Linker recounted the episode quite vividly this past summer:

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
  During the very late '70s and early '80s, at a time when Richard and I
  were good friends, he would often go to one or more bars in the West
  Forties where young, bit-part actresses hung out. He was fascinated by
  the power that a specific, minute space in the daily edition of the
  Post or Daily News held for them, and particularly by the way in which
  all of their professional aspirations and sense of success seemed to
  converge on the possibility of being represented in that small visual
  venue. Shortly thereafter, when he became overly obsessed with the
  storefront named Spiritual America, I thought that the name referred
  to the degree to which aspirations--or a form of the American or
  contemporary spirit--could be reflected in the power of surfaces or,
  specifically, in the suasion of images. What Richard often called "the
  look" was a form of that same imagistic power; few faces or images had
  it. To a degree, I think he felt that he was encapsulating something
  paradoxically profound in his focus on the imagistic surfaces that
  would be chosen and displayed at this other, small visual venue.


Linker also remembers Prince's buildup to the opening of Spiritual America as a "somewhat tedious obsession" with one image that did not interest her, except as outrageous visual testimony to the exploitation of a child by her mother. But Prince "seemed mesmerized by it," writes Linker. "He was fascinated by the way in which 'they' had slicked up this ten-year-old, greased her up, and represented her in a pornographic way." Linker never did visit the store-front on Rivington Street, having broken off her friendship with Prince just before the opening. From her perspective, he had "uncritically pushed both sexuality and feminism away to focus on the equivocal lures of the look." Prince and Linker haven't spoken since.

In his preoccupation with the Gross picture and the possible consequences of its appropriation, Prince was, deliberately or not, doing his best to generate a neo-Pop buzz among his friends and associates concerning his scheme. While expounding ex·pound  
v. ex·pound·ed, ex·pound·ing, ex·pounds

v.tr.
1. To give a detailed statement of; set forth: expounded the intricacies of the new tax law.

2.
 on "the look" of the photograph, he would also hold forth on the likelihood that his ploy would lead to legal action by those who would want to suppress the scandalous image. Notwithstanding the grassroots hype, Spiritual America did not sell. Prince recently explained that two years after the work's display, he gave Spiritual America to a friend, artist Meyer Vaisman. But in February 2004 a San Francisco gossip columnist reported that on the occasion of a lecture at the California College of the Arts     [  in San Francisco in which Prince discussed Spiritual America, he responded to a question about what happened to the work with the deadpan assertion that he'd sold it to his plumber for $100. To be sure, Prince is well known for such devil-may-care self-mythologizing. Contradictory claims therefore abound, as if in literal demonstration of the dispersed, schizoid schizoid /schiz·oid/ (skit´soid)
1. denoting the traits that characterize the schizoid personality.

2.
 subjectivity that was then so often associated with postmodernist art in general, and with Prince's in particular.

Prince's version of the Gross picture posed quite a challenge to contemporary art collectors. They would have had to overcome not only their resistance to buying photographs (still not an established market in 1983)--let alone photographs of photograph--but also the taboo against child pornography. Only lately have collectors taken up Prince's implicitly lubricious lu·bri·cious   also lu·bri·cous
adj.
1. Having a slippery or smooth quality.

2. Shifty or tricky.

3.
a. Lewd; wanton.

b. Sexually stimulating; salacious.
 challenge, and with spectacular results. On November 13, 2003, one version of Spiritual America, from an edition of ten dated 1983, sold at auction in New York for $372,500. ("Now that's Spiritual America," Prince exclaimed, according to the San Francisco columnist.) Less than a year later, the "original" Spiritual America sold in Basel for just under $1 million.

The display of Spiritual America attrated only one brief mention in the press--and that by an insider, Walter Windshield, aka Walter Robinson, whose paintings representing illustrations of Hollywood movie-star types from the days of yore made up one of the four exhibitions at Spiritual America. In reviewing the piece for the East Village Eye, Windshield described the image's sexual charge, including more than one reference to the "stage-mother as pimp." But he did not describe Prince's intensely theatrical installation (a bit of Times Square on the Lower East Side) nor reflect on the meaning of the artist's gesture--beyond noting by way of conclusion that Prince "remains the mute artist; hardly the artist as maker, he only looks, like the rest of us."

Another story regarding the promotion and display of the Shields picture comes straight from the Pop playbook. It has been widely reported (though never proven) that when word of Prince's project reached Gross (or Shields, or Shields's mother), he (she/they) threatened to sue Prince for copyright infringement. Robinson recently recalled--or recalled hearing--that Gross visited the Rivington storefront with Shields's mother, and that the two considered but decided against suing the maker of this presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 unsaleable unsaleable
Adjective

unable to be sold

Adj. 1. unsaleable - impossible to sell
unsalable

unsaleable, unsalable (US) adjinvendible 
 object, displayed as it was in an appointment-only storefront in a lousy part of town. Such threats of legal action--or, more often, rumors of such threats--have peppered the history of Pop since 1962, when the art educator Earl Loran threatened Roy Lichtenstein for exhibiting three large paintings based on diagrams from the pages of Loran's book, Cezanne's Composition. Last summer, Prince insisted that not only did Gross not threaten him with legal action, "he didn't know anything about it when I showed his picture at Spiritual America." Last February, Prince told his audience in San Francisco that Teri Shields had threatened him with legal action. The jury, as it were, is still out.

In attempting to reconstruct "POP," I turned to the murky realm of memory--my own and others'. Early last summer I contacted each of the show's participants; their recollections were sometimes gratifying grat·i·fy  
tr.v. grat·i·fied, grat·i·fy·ing, grat·i·fies
1. To please or satisfy: His achievement gratified his father. See Synonyms at please.

2.
, usually pleasurable, and ultimately, of course, inconclusive. McCollum remembers the opening of the gallery as an "annoying event." He was particularly bothered by one thing, and it had nothing to do with the art: "The young women who coordinated the exhibition for Richard (who chose to remain semi-anonymous) were extremely snotty and not too bright: They decided it would be cool to paint the gallery floor with silver metallic paint, and stupidly chose to do this an hour before the reception; everyone slipped and mushed around in the wet paint and quickly left, with silver paint all over their shoes. Remember?" Indeed, now I do remember my feet sticking to the tacky floor, and the silver paint wrecking a nice pair of boots. Notwithstanding the show's ill-fated opening, McCollum recalls "POP" with some affection. "Richard's show was very tight, and the artists, each very strong, presented together modestly, with a single work each, to form an analytical whole that was effective and memorable." McCollum further commends Prince for his "clever use of the all-caps 'POP' (rather than just 'Pop') to allow for the common acronymic interpretation 'Point Of Purchase,' an inflection that offered a reference to the gallery as a site of economic exchange."

Prince doesn't corroborate To support or enhance the believability of a fact or assertion by the presentation of additional information that confirms the truthfulness of the item.

The testimony of a witness is corroborated if subsequent evidence, such as a coroner's report or the testimony of other
 the institutional-critique read on "POP." Asked about the show's title, he replies, "Pop wasn't a good word back then"--perhaps a reference to the fact that Pop had been considered a "non-issue" throughout the heyday of Minimal and Conceptual art and was only just beginning to enjoy a resurgence as Prince and his colleagues conceived their artistic projects. Prince claims to have organized "POP" for one overriding reason: "The artists I put into it weren't popular. I was thinking that they should have been more popular than the artists who were." It's true the most "popular" artists of the day were the neo-expressionists. Difficult as it may be to conceive of a time when Prince, Sherman, Lawler, McCollum, Charlesworth, and Koons weren't "popular," during the early '80s their work attracted nowhere near the economic and curatorial commitments that art by, say, David Salle or Julian Schnabel did. "I thought what we did was easy," says Prince. "But it wasn't. Look at Louise Lawler and Jeff Koons. I guess it took another fifteen years to get it."

But what did "POP" actually include? Virtually everyone involved with the show remembers the presence of Jeff Koons's Duratrans light box, The New Jeff Koons, 1981, in which a beaming, fresh-faced eight-year-old Koons poses with his brand new set of crayons. Lawler remembers standing "in the glow of the Koons light box, my feet sticking to the floor which had been too recently painted silver, and that my work hung across from Sarah's plaids." Charlesworth's 1983 "Plaid" series, of which she exhibited one or two examples, is comprised of black-and-white photographs of familiar tartan patterns with colored gels adhered to the surface to suggest, through choice of color, such titles as Wallace, Balmoral, Dress MacPhereson, and Dress Macleod.

McCollum initially remembered that Lawler showed "one of her oddball fillip works, a photo of a Japanese toy, a little triceratops-type beast." McCollum is referring to works like Portrait (Green), 1983, one of a number of modestly scaled photographs of colorful Japanese toys--hilariously fearsome little plastic creatures that Lawler photographed against vivid, monochromatic monochromatic /mono·chro·mat·ic/ (-kro-mat´ik)
1. existing in or having only one color.

2. pertaining to or affected by monochromatic vision.

3. staining with only one dye at a time.
 backgrounds to poke fun at to make a butt of; to ridicule.

See also: Poke
 neo-expressionist portraiture. But after speaking with Lawler, McCollum remembered seeing her "portraits" a year later as part of "Interesting," an installation at Nature Morte, thus making him doubt his initial memory that they were in "POP," since he thought she would not likely have shown the same work in different contexts. Still, neither he nor she rejects the possibility that she first exhibited one in "POP."

McCollum has no doubt that he showed one of his "Perpetual Photos"--grainy black-and-white close-ups of framed pictures "found" on interior walls in movies and on TV. The "Perpetual Photos" evoke the lessons of Antonioni's Blow-Up (1966), demonstrating the paradoxical loss of visual information that photographic enlargement ultimately produces.

Neither Sherman nor Prince recalls what they showed in "POP." Lawler thinks Prince showed a 1983 photograph of a detail of a photograph showing acorn jewelry nestled among the branches of a leafy plant--a notably innocuous work by the artist who had only just pulled off "one of the biggest stunts of his career." Though "POP" was itself hardly innocuous, it was a rather restrained exhibition to be sporting such a loud little name. It was, as McCollum says, tight and modest, its artists all strong. But to say, as he does, that it was memorable would be to fly in the face of to defy; to brave; to withstand.
to insult; to assail; to set at defiance; to oppose with violence; to act in direct opposition to; to resist.

See also: Face Fly
 the historical fact that it made virtually no impression.

The only other show at Spiritual America that anyone recalls in any detail is of Peter Nadin's "still life" paintings. Though no one can say precisely when this event took place (the sequence of the shows remains unknown), Lawler remembers bringing Nadin a gift of bananas on the occasion of the show's opening. Others, it is said, brought apples. "I think I showed fifteen or twenty paintings and read a couple of poems," writes Nadin. "I remember the occasion very fondly especially because many people arrived bearing gifts of fruit. Strangely, the fruit fell into two categories--bananas and apples. As the paintings derived from a castration complex castration complex
n.
1. In psychoanalytic theory, a child's fear of injury to the genitals by the parent of the same sex as punishment for unconscious guilt over oedipal feelings.

2.
, the sight of many people holding debagged metaphoric cock and balls was entirely appropriate."

No one remembers exactly when Prince and Fine closed down Spiritual America--or why. Robinson tells me that he thinks Fine got disillusioned dis·il·lu·sion  
tr.v. dis·il·lu·sioned, dis·il·lu·sion·ing, dis·il·lu·sions
To free or deprive of illusion.

n.
1. The act of disenchanting.

2. The condition or fact of being disenchanted.
 (with Prince? with her self-employment as a fake gallerist losing real money?) and moved to Florida. The gallery was a brief, minor, yet telling episode in the history of pop after Pop, in which one artist revealed certain things about himself and his milieu at a time when the economic stakes were liberatingly low. And, wouldn't you know that that somewhere in the process of writing this article, I discovered that I finally lost the announcement card for "POP."

David Deitcher teaches art and critical theory at Cooper Union and at the ICP/Bard Program for Advanced Photo-graphic Studies, New York.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Popisms
Author:Deitcher, David
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Oct 1, 2004
Words:3261
Previous Article:Banks Violette.(My Pop)(Brief Article)(Interview)
Next Article:Jason Rhoades.(My Pop)(Brief Article)(Interview)
Topics:



Related Articles
Wehmeyer's article on the Indian image in New Orleans altars the Caribbean connection.
Friends indeed. (arts & entertainment).(Dear Friends: American Photographs of Men Together, 1840-1918 )(Review)(Brief Article)
Abrahams, George, Ph.D. & Ahlbrand, Sheila. Boy v. girl? How gender shapes who we are, what we want, and how we get along.(Brief Article)(Young Adult...
Correlation of the Holy Spirit Questionnaire with the Spiritual Well-Being Scale and the Spiritual Assessment Inventory.
SCHOOL FASHION THE NEW 'TUDE IS MORE SUBDUED TEENS, TWEENS FAVORING STYLES MOMS CAN BUY INTO.(News)
Orchard Books/Scholastic.(The Picturebook Shelf)
PEDDLERS OF TEENAGE SLEAZE HAVE YOUR BACK.(U)
The Catholic Faith Handbook for Youth.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
The Secret in the Attic.(Brief Article)(Children's Review)(Book Review)
EYES ON A CROWN CASTAIC GIRL TO COMPETE IN PAGEANT FOR PRETEENS.(News)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles