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The New York Public Library



presents

* *

An Artist Dialogue Series
Event<http://www.nypl.org/events/programs/2012/12/05/artist-dialogue-ari-marcopoulos-and-andrew-roth>

* *

*OUT TO LUNCH
*

* *

*Ari Marcopoulos*

* in conversation with *

*Andrew Roth*

* *

Wednesday December 5, 2012

6:00 p.m.

* *

Margaret Liebman Berger Forum

Room 227 (2nd Floor)



The New York Public Library

Stephen A. Schwarzman Building

5thAvenue at 42nd Street

New York, NY 10018

917-275-6975

 *www.nypl.org*

(directions) <http://www.nypl.org/locations/tid/36/directions>



*Room 227 opens to the public at 5:30 p.m.*

All events are FREE and subject to last minute change or cancellation.

*Ari Marcopoulos and Andrew Roth discuss the book as exhibition space and
chart the history of Marcopoulos’ output from the earliest zines to **OUT
TO LUNCH**, his recent tour-de-force published by PPP Editions*.
Marcopoulos' first book *Portraits from the Studio and the Street* (1987)
was self-published and part of a larger series on Dutch-born photographers.
When he started working with skateboarders around 1993 he became interested
in making zines. Publishing independently allowed him to easily disseminate
his images and also helped him to formulate new directions in his work. He
views the zines and published books as exhibitions.

Ari Marcopoulos, prolific zine-maker and book maven, garners his
connoisseurship in this tour-de-force production. Crudely-bound, consisting
of individual zine sequences of previously unpublished photographs
(punctuated by black-and-white contact sheets, stickers, a screen-play and
over-sized, fold-out color posters] *OUT TO
LUNCH*<http://www.andrewroth.com/publications/ari-marcopoulos-out-to-lunch/>features
a small group of images from the 1980s and 90s that chart
Marcopoulos’ formative development as a portraitist (of the famous and the
anonymous) and his roots in street photography. These are blended with his
most recent technically refined and altered documents (through Xerox and
exaggerated printing on rice paper), from the diaristic to the obscure.
Fascinated with the graffiti that tattoo cityscapes, he haunts streets,
rooftops and bridges (often at night) in search of them. For Marcopoulos
photographing is prowling and publishing a facile method of shifting his
imagery into the world.

“The initial idea for *OUT TO LUNCH* came from a zine I made for the 2011
exhibition titled *Abandoned Sleep*. I printed my photos and some tags of
west coast graffiti writers on vinyl stickers. The sticker is used in
graffiti as a quick method of spreading a tag. Often, writers use whatever
sticker is at hand, like USPS mail stickers; they tag them and carry them
around to paste in public places. I was interested in having my images
distributed in this way: small stickers either placed alone at eye-level or
accompanying larger spots alongside existing stickers with tags. By putting
them in the zine, now others would start pasting my images in places of
their choice. We put 192 stickers in *OUT TO LUNCH* hoping it would become
known as my *STICKER BOOK*!

Following in the tradition of many Japanese photographic book artists like
Araki, Moriyama, Nakahira and Tadanori Yokoo, *OUT TO LUNCH* is more than a
collection of photographs, it is a radical object informed by history.

*Copies of the book are available for purchase and signing at the event*.

*Ari Marcopoulos* (born in Amsterdam in 1957) is a prolific book-maker and
photographer best known for his portraits and street photographs of
skateboard culture and graffiti art. He currently lives and works in New
York City. He has exhibited internationally, most recently presenting the
entire series of 1200 photographs from *Directory* (Rizzoli and Nieves,
2010) at the Fotomuseum Winterthur in Zurich, Switzerland. He has published
hundreds of zines<http://catalog.nypl.org/search~S48/?searchtype=X&searcharg=zines&searchscope=97&sortdropdown=-&SORT=DZ&extended=0&SUBMIT=Search&searchlimits=&searchorigarg=Xzines%26SORT%3DDZ>and
dozens of books since 1987. He
was featured in the Whitney
Biennial<http://whitney.org/Exhibitions/2010Biennial/AriMarcopoulos>in
2010 and 2002. His photographs are included in many private and public
collections including the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, The Whitney
Museum of American Art and the Fotomuseum Winterthur in Zurich. He is
represented in New York by Marlborough
Gallery<http://www.marlboroughgallery.com/exhibitions/ari-marcopoulos-wherever-you-go>.
He is currently finishing *Anyway*, a series of 52 zines (one a week for
one year) published by Dashwood Books. Recent books include *The Chance Is
Higher* (Dashwood Books, 2008) and *Out To Lunch* (PPP Editions, 2012).

*Andrew Roth* <http://www.andrewroth.com/> specializes in selling rare
photographic and artists’ books from the 20th century, while also
publishing limited edition books under his imprint PPP Editions. He
maintains a gallery in New York exhibiting the work of photographic
artist’s from the 60s and 70s, as well as contemporary art. Over the past
10 years he has presented exhibitions by key Japanese artists Makoto Aida,
Nobuyoshi Araki, Daido Moriyama, Shomei Tomatsu, Tadanori Yokoo, Keizo
Kitajima, and most recently Ishiuchi Miyako. He has also presented solo
exhibitions with Robert Adams, Lewis Baltz, Robert Heinecken, Ed Ruscha,
Collier Schorr, David Wojnarowicz, Asher Penn, Keith Haring and Georgia
Sagri to name but a few. In 2001, he edited and published *The Book of 101
Books: Seminal Photographic Books of the Twentieth
Century*<http://catalog.nypl.org/search~S1/?searchtype=t&searcharg=The+Book+of+101+Books%3A+Seminal+Photographic+Books+of+the+Twentieth+Century&searchscope=48&sortdropdown=-&SORT=D&extended=0&SUBMIT=Search&searchlimits=&searchorigarg=tThe+Book+of+101+Books%3A+Seminal+Photographic+Books+of+the+Twentieth+Century>—
a primer on the history of the photographic book, which went on to
help
define the rare photographic book market of today. Recent publications
include <http://www.andrewroth.com/publications/> Larry Clark’s *Punk
Picasso*, Leigh Ledare’s *Pretend You’re Actually Alive*, *Male: from the
Collection of Vince Aletti*, *In Numbers: Serial Publications by Artists
since 1955*, *Ishiuchi Miyako’s Sweet Home Yokosuka 1976-1980*, *William E.
Jones’ Killed: Rejected Images of the Farm Security Administration*, *Dash
Snow's Movie List, Alex Kitnick's Massage*, and *Ricardo Valentin's The New
Typography*.

Initiated and organized by Arezoo Moseni in 2004, *Artist Dialogues
Series*provide an open forum for understanding and appreciation of
contemporary
art. Artists are paired with critics, curators, gallerists, writers or
other artists to converse about art and the potential of exploring new
ideas.


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