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Mail Art Periodicals - MoMA

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up as the masters of tomorrow. It's a question of patience. You need to cultivate<br />

it if you want to hang around the network. Of course, equals tend to find each<br />

other. It's a search and an adventure. I urge you to continue on the path in spite<br />

of the obstacles. It's worth it." More documentation of the "Naked Women<br />

Project." Motivations for networking by Peter Küstermann (Germany).<br />

"Influences," by <strong>Art</strong>uro G. Fallico (USA). Publication reviews. Addition<br />

contributions by Michel Pollard (USA), Julee Peezlee (USA), Michael Kaczynski<br />

(Poland), Shigeru Tamaru (Japan), buZ blurr (USA). et al.<br />

Vol. 3, No. 3 ([1993]). Photocopy. 5 1/2"x4 1/4". 32 pages. Editorial.<br />

"Networking," by the editor. "(What is) International Networker Culture<br />

(Anyway)?," by John Held, Jr. (USA). "Television <strong>Mail</strong>art Project Documentation."<br />

Publication reviews. Additional contributions by Jean-Claude Gagnon (Canada),<br />

Mike Diana (USA), Mike Dyar (USA), Nonlocal Variable (USA), <strong>Art</strong> Ala Carte<br />

(USA), et al.<br />

Kinokaze: Report from the Underground. Mischievous<br />

Productions, Editor. London, England. 1993.<br />

No. 2 (1993). Photocopy, 8 1/4"x5 3/4". 44 pages. Interview with David<br />

Greenberger (USA), Editor of "Duplex Planet." "Neo vs. Neo," Paddy pain<br />

interviews Stewart Home (England) and Monty Cantsin (AKA Istvan Kantor)<br />

(Canada). "Like many avant-garde groups, the Neoists have been plagued by infighting<br />

and splits. The most notorious was the 1985 split initiated by Stewart<br />

Home, novelist, polemicist and provocateur. Home's version of Neoism was<br />

published in 1991 by AK Press as "The Neoist Manifestoes."<br />

kontexts. Michael Gibbs, Editor. Amsterdam, Holland. 1976/1977.<br />

No. 9/10 (Winter 1976/1977). Newsprint and Mixed Media. 10 3/4"x8<br />

1/4". (88 pages). Contributions by Dick Higgins (USA), Fred Truck (USA),<br />

Scott Helmes (USA), Peter Meyer (Sweden), Ulises Carrión (Holland), Robin<br />

Crozier (England), Endre Tot (Hungary), et al. News. Publication reviews.<br />

Contributing Editor, Ulises Carrión.<br />

Kreuz-Aktionen. Wilfred Nold, Editor. Frankfurt, Germany. 2001.<br />

(2001). Offset. 8 1/4"x5 3/4". 48 pages. "I have provided a written<br />

accompaniment to the 'Cosmic Cross' in the form of the 'Kreuz-Aktionen' series<br />

of journals, with a total of five issues and two special issues. The project and the<br />

publications are the result of a personal research programme which I initiated for<br />

myself, for which I am solely responsible, and which I finance on a private basis.<br />

The practical realization of this idealistic idea was only made sufficiently possible<br />

through the medium of <strong>Mail</strong> <strong>Art</strong>..." "The Graffiti v <strong>Mail</strong> <strong>Art</strong> Project," by Joe Decie<br />

(England).

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