What is this thing?
Revolutions Per Minute: The Art Record was unique in its ability to transcend the physical confines of the art gallery, but in the age of internet, this is now taken for granted. Anyone can conduct a search on the internet and find images of almost any piece of artwork, no matter its physical location. Though this may lessen the poignancy of the Feldman exhibit's mobility, the piece remains relevant in many other ways, such as the themes it explores and the historical context it provides.
This particular copy of "Revolutions Per Minute: The Art Record" was purchased by Vanderbilt Fine Arts Gallery in 1982, just five days after the exhibit opened in New York. It is number 107 in a edition of 500 copies of a special edition of the record, which included the 21 audio tracks on two vinyl discs and the 21 lithographs, each signed by the artist which created it.
This page has paths:
- Revolutions Per Minute: The Art Record Rebekah Smith
Contents of this tag:
- Gallery of Lithographs
- Themes
- Further Reading
- 1982: Historical Context of "Revolutions Per Minute"
- Types of Audio Format
- Would Not Say No to Some Help; Les Levine
- How to Make Love a Sound; Douglas Davis
- Polynesian/Polyhedron; Jud Fine
- Pieces of Sound; Vincenzo Agnetti
- Antinova Remembers; Eleanor Antin
- First Lines; Margaret Harrison
- Vibrations/Metaphors; Edwin Schlossberg
- The Louis XIV Deterrent; Conrad Atkinson
- Stand Up; Hannah Wilke
- Excerpt from the Second Lagoon: A Memoriam to John Isaacs; Helen Mayer Harrison & Newton Harrison
- Atomic Alphabet; Chris Burden
- Internal Sound; Terry Fox
- Really, Is that a Fact?; Ida Applebroog
- Excerpt from Cooper Union Dialogue; Joseph Beuys
- Comments on SITE; SITE
- Russian Language Lesson; Komar and Melamid
- Critical Path; R. Buckminster Fuller
- Smashing Beauty; Thomas Shannon
- You Only Call the Old Doctor Once; Piotr Kowalski & William Burroughs
- Typewriter in D; David Smyth
- Think Twice; Todd Siler