Triple Canopy is proud to announce Miscellaneous Uncatalogued Material, the second publication in our Volume Number series. Volume Number reimagines the magazine as a framework for activities that occur beyond its pages: Each double-sided newsprint page in Miscellaneous Uncatalogued Material holds an annotated version of discussions facilitated by artists Sarah Crowner, David Horvitz and poet Ariana Reines, which occurred at MoMA’s Print Studio as part of Triple Canopy’s discussion series, also called Miscellaneous Uncatalogued Material. Read a dispatch from the series here.
Source: canopycanopycanopy.com
“all copyrot rejected by author”
Cleveland’s maverick mimeographer, poet, and renegade d.a. levy’s Tibetan Stroboscope, 1968.
Source: arcade.nyarc.org
“Fragile Cinema”: Fold-out exhibition catalogue from Czech Republic-based design studio Anymade.
(via an-itinerant-poet)
Source: anymadestudio.com
“The Electric Information Age Book explores the nine-year window of mass-market publishing in the sixties and seventies when formerly backstage players—designers, graphic artists, editors—stepped into the spotlight to produce a series of exceptional books. Aimed squarely at the young media-savvy consumers of the ‘Electronic Information Age,’ these small, inexpensive paperbacks aimed to bring the ideas of contemporary thinkers like Marshall McLuhan, R. Buckminster Fuller, Herman Kahn, and Carl Sagan to the masses.”
Source: weareconstance
The second number of The Blind Man will appear as soon as YOU have sent sufficient material for it.
Source: canopycanopycanopy.com
Marcel Duchamp and Man Ray’s The Blind Man, a periodical with a negative photostat from 1917.
Artist Sarah Crowner continues our series of public discussions Miscellaneous Uncatalogued Material at MoMA Print Studio on Monday, February 27, 2:30-4 p.m.
Source: canopycanopycanopy.com
Triple Canopy at MoMA Print Studio
This afternoon, artist David Horvitz begins our series at MoMA Print Studio, Miscellaneous Uncatalogued Material. At each talk, a different artist will choose a work from MoMA’s collection and lead participants in a discussion about how digital technologies, new forms of publication, and new modes of authorship have changed arts publishing over the years. Horvitz will examine a photoradiogram from 1926, one of the earliest images ever to be transmitted electronically with a telecommunication device.
February 15, 27 and March 7 from 2:30-4 p.m. Museum of Modern Art Print Studio, 4 West 54th St.
Source: canopycanopycanopy.com
Our friends at Project Projects have made some soft-core, I mean soft-cover, pornography out of the book we did together. Rated X for invalid.
More on Invalid Format: An Anthology of Triple Canopy, Volume One.
Source: canopycanopycanopy.com
A Message from the Ghost of Publication Future
Dear friends,
Four years after Triple Canopy first hit the Web, we’ve decided to put our survival in the hands of our readers. It’s not that we’re struggling or enjoy guilt trips. We’ve just come to realize that Triple Canopy can only continue to be successful and sustainable if readers decide they value the work we’re doing and, yes, assign a dollar amount to that value. And so we’re asking you to consider becoming a member of Triple Canopy for as little as $3 per month.
For a small monthly pledge, you’ll receive a copy of our new book, Invalid Format: An Anthology of Triple Canopy; free entry to events at 155 Freeman; and the JF & SON Grid Tote, a sturdy—yet sleek!—nylon canvas bag with a full-length side pocket, designed after Invalid Format.
Thanks for your readership and support, and happy holidays.
Regards,
The Editors
Source: canopycanopycanopy.com
Invalid Format: An Anthology of Triple Canopy, designed by Project Projects, arrives on our doorstep October 27. It’s a book as content-management system, a new design for reading, etc. Also, it’s now available for pre-order: http://bit.ly/gAlgsP







