[mdpls] zines @ the reading room

Miami-Dade Public Library + zines + guests.

The Reading Room
A Temporary Space for Artists’ Books, Publications and Multiples
Friday, June 11, Noon – 2 p.m.
Miami-Dade Public Library System, Main Library Children’s Room, 101 W. Flagler Street, Miami

With special guests:
Cristina Favretto, Head of Special Collections, University of Miami Libraries; founder of the Zine Collections at the Sallie Bingham Center for Women’s History and Culture at Duke University; Tasha Lopez de Victoria, artist, TM Sisters; Carol Todaro, artist, educator, bookmaker, printmaker; Ximena Izquierdo, artist, student, assistant director, University of Wynwood

With special feature:
A selection of zines from 1992-1996 from the collection of seminal zinestress Scapula Ray

Photo by Jenna Freedman, Barnard College Zine Library.
Photo by Jenna Freedman, Barnard College Zine Library.

On the second Friday of each month, a secret room in the Children’s Room at the Main Library becomes The Reading Room. Visitors can stop by any time between Noon and 2 p.m. to get up close and personal with selections from the Library’s collection of artists’ books, publications and multiples.

The theme of this month’s Reading Room is zines and obsolete technologies. There are many definitions for zines, but they tend to be do-it-yourself or independently produced and distributed publications. Often they are fueled by the personal expressions or obsessions of their creators. Some trace zines to fanzines, publications created by 1930s science fiction fans. Zine librarian Alycia Sellie writes, “Others believe that the medium was more influenced by the punk rock movement of the 1970’s. Many refer to the legacy of zines in the pamphlets and broadsides published as far back as Thomas Paine and Benjamin Franklin, or to the works of the Dada art movement.” In the 90s, zine culture thrived among women and girls as part of “the riot grrrl movement’s reaction to sexism in punk culture..and the rise of third wave feminism.”

Because zines are often created on Xerox machines, we’ll also be talking about the use of obsolete technologies in art and elsewhere. On special display this week is a selection of rare, early-mid 1990s punk/feminist photocopy zines from the collection of Oneco, FL-based zinestress Scapula Ray including Libel, Pawholes, Hey 19, Action Girl, and many others.

As always, there will be coffee and cookies. We may also talk about the World Cup.

For more information about exhibitions and programs at the Miami-Dade Public Library System, visit http://mdpls.org/news/exhibitions/exhibitions.asp

Reading Room @ MDPL

Artists’ books, multiples and stuff at the Miami-Dade Public Library‘s Reading Room

Subject: TOMORROW: New Arrivals at The Reading Room, 12-2pm

The Reading Room
A Temporary Space for Artists’ Books, Publications and Multiples
Friday, May 14, Noon – 2 p.m.
Main Library Children’s Room, 101 W. Flagler Street, Miami
Featuring: New Arrivals Reading Session

This week we’ll take a break from special guest discussions to do some actual reading. The Reading Room will be stocked with 25 artists’ books, multiples and publications added to the Library’s permanent art collection this year. Many of them are heavy on text and demand closer inspection. The most recent batch includes vintage artists’ publications like Avalanche Magazine No. 4 – the Lawrence Weiner issue, from 1972; handmade objects such as Ellen Knudson’s Wild Girls Redux, which won the Florida Artist’s Book Award; zines by Özlem Altin; Black Noise: A Tribute to Steven Parrino, a box set of 32 artist’s books in comic book format, edited by John Armleder, Amy Granat, and Mai-Thu Perret; Nava Atlas’s Love and Marriage, an altered comic; and Poemas, a 1969 livre d’artiste with lithographs by Raoul Veroni and poems by Delmira Agustini, an early 20th century Uruguayan poet whose sensual work made her a trailblazer for later feminist poets.

So take advantage to stop by and read; normally you’d have to make an appointment to see these books and publications. As always, there will be coffee and cookies. There may be music.

On the second Friday of each month, a secret room in the Children’s Room at the Main Library becomes The Reading Room. Visitors can stop by any time between 12 and 2pm to get up close and personal with selections from the Library’s collection of artists’ books, publications and multiples.

Mary Ceruti of the SculptureCenter@ the De La Cruz Collection

Lecture at the De La Cruz Collection, Thursday, April 22, 2010 AT 7 PM.  Take note of the SculptureCenter’s In Practice project series.

De La Cruz Collection
23 NE 41 Street Miami, FL 33137
305 576 6112
info@delacruzcollection.org
www.delacruzcollection.org

Mary Ceruti is the SculptureCenter’s Executive Director, Chief Curator and oversees all aspects of programming, planning, and organizational development.
Ms. Ceruti holds a B.A. in Philosophy from Haverford College and in Art History from Bryn Mawr College. She received her M.A. from the Inter-Arts Center at San Francisco State University after pursuing an in-depth study of community-based public art projects.

RSVP BY E-MAIL TO: INFO@DELACRUZCOLLECTION.ORG, WITH “MARY CERUTI” AS THE SUBJECT OF THE E-MAIL