• Home
  • Introduction
  • Text & Word Works
    • Phenomenotes (3)
    • Sign Patterns
    • The Time Table
    • Focal Point (Energy Field)
    • Countdown (Millennial piece)
    • Fragments
    • Headstone (Laying NO to Rest)
    • Compact Record of Discarded Thoughts
    • Scroll of Babble
    • The Hour Of Our Fate
    • Postcards
  • Artist's Books/Bookworks
    • Graphite/Reflections
    • Four Day Diary
    • PM
    • Eye To Eye
    • Liber Dermis (Skin book)
    • Apothecary
    • Book of Maladies
    • John Brown's Body
    • Facade (Compendium Wall)
    • Giordano's Window
  • Drawings
    • Box Shadow Studies
    • Wall Charts
    • Composition of Images, Signs and Ideas
    • Untitled (Tondo drawings)
    • Dutch Manuscript
    • Untitled ('map & case')
    • Untitled
    • Untitled (smudge)
    • Shadow Work Series (6)
  • Constructions
    • Untitled (Rotor)/Mixer
    • Pairing Vessel
    • Untitled (Mill)
    • Turntable
    • Sensor
    • Sight/Site
    • Colonic Flute
    • Hooklinesinker
    • Dry T
    • Scale For The Blind
  • Assemblage
    • Caged Spring
    • Art of Bandaging
    • Breathing Station
    • Magritte's Old Saw
    • Mantle (After a Fashion)
    • Bucolic Strains
    • Enchanted Isle
    • Small World/Ringing Silence
    • Twilight of Eden
    • Shew Stone (After John Dee)
    • Casuality
  • Collage
    • Illustrated Man (Culture and Nature)
    • Poet's Journal (4)
    • History Lesson
    • Map of Chaos
    • Pulse
    • Shattered Illusion
    • Tangle
    • Dark Web (Machinations)
    • Recollections (4)
    • Emergent Self
    • Echo Chamber/Night Soil
    • Skeleton Crew
    • Shadows and Names Fool's/Gold
    • Crucible (Document)
    • Paradise
    • A Tale of Two Worlds
    • A Tale of Two Worlds (text)
  • Resume
PM 1976 Eight photocards in ink stamped envelope. 5 x 4 inches, edition of 50. PM, is a set of eight 4 x 6 inch cards showing images of various objects photographed at a flea market (or 'penny market'). The bookwork, printed by offset lithography in a small edition, explores the idea of a collection in a literal sense (photocards in a packet) as well as conceptually. When the photocards are removed from the envelope and arranged in a pile, the collection of overlapping cards takes on a virtual aspect. The work also references a primary source of material for many contemporary artists: found objects.

We use cookies to enable essential functionality on our website, and analyze website traffic. By clicking Accept you consent to our use of cookies. Read about how we use cookies.

Your Cookie Settings

We use cookies to enable essential functionality on our website, and analyze website traffic. Read about how we use cookies.

Cookie Categories

Essential

These cookies are strictly necessary to provide you with services available through our websites. You cannot refuse these cookies without impacting how our websites function. You can block or delete them by changing your browser settings, as described under the heading "Managing cookies" in the Privacy and Cookies Policy.

Analytics

These cookies collect information that is used in aggregate form to help us understand how our websites are being used or how effective our marketing campaigns are.