1
Tony Price, 7/16/85 statement on the 40th anniversary of the first Atomic
Bomb test.
Poster for Governor’s Gallery exhibition.
2 Tony Price, 7/16/85 statement on the 40th anniversary
of the first Atomic Bomb test.
Poster for Governor’s Gallery exhibition.
3 Kirk Varnedoe, 2002 interview from “Faith &
Doubt at Ground Zero” produced by
Helen Whitney for PBS, Frontline
4 Tony Price, interview with Gay Dillingham - May 1998,
Reserve, NM
5 Tony Price, 7/16/85 statement on the 40th anniversary
of the first Atomic Bomb test.
Poster for Governor’s Gallery exhibition.
6 Dr. Joseph Traugott, Curator of 20th Century Art,
Museum of Fine Arts, Santa Fe, NM.
Interview with James Rutherford - September, 2002
7 Stuart Ashman, Director of the Museum of Spanish
Colonial Arts, Santa Fe, NM.
Interview with James Rutherford - September, 2002
8 David Bell– ‘Atomic Art’ Exhibit
Site Just One Unusual Aspect – Albuquerque Journal –
September 20, 1986
9 Dr. Ed Ladd, Zuni Pueblo (dec.). Former Curator of
Ethnography, Museum of Indian Arts &
Culture, Santa Fe, NM. From the story of the “Big Shell Society”
of Zuni Pueblo, as told to
Meridel Rubenstein and included in her piece “The Big Shell”.
Asked if the Zunis had a
weapon of ultimate destruction, he told the story of the Big Shell.
This was a conch shell that,
when blown, would pierce the hearts and weaken the bravery of the aggressors,
who became dizzy and dropped in their tracks. It was used in the battle
with the Spaniards during the Pueblo Revolt in 1680 when DeVargas came
to Zuni. After there was no need to use it for a long period, the songs
and rituals of how to use it were lost along with the disappearance
of the Big Shell Society. Usually what happens to an object like this
is that it is placed on a cliff or in a cave to let it disintegrate
into the atmosphere - a parallel Rubenstein draws to nuclear weapons.
(Tony Price was known to take objects made from Lab salvage and place
them in crevices in
the earth in Navajo land and other remote locations in the Southwest).
10 Sandy Bull (1941-2001) Established as the ultimate
eclecticist, whose albums combined a
wild assortment of genres and traditions. www.sandybull.com
11 Suzanne Seriff, Folklorist, curator – Folk
Art From the Global Scrap Heap: The Place of
Irony in the Politics of Poverty - from Recycled / Re-Seen: Art From
the Global Scrap Heap –
catalog from the exhibit of the same name presented by the Museum of
International Folk
Art, Santa Fe, a unit of the Museum of New Mexico.
12 Atomic Artist, 1982 film by Claudia Vianello and
Glen Silber
13 Joanne Cubbs and Eugene Metcalf, Jr. – Sci-Fi
machines and bottle Cap Kings: The
Recycling Strategies of Self-Taught Artists and the Imaginary Practice
of Contemporary
Consumption - from Recycled / Re-Seen – Harry Abrams in Association
with the Museum of International Folk Art, Santa Fe, a unit of the Museum
of New Mexico.
14 The word “primitive” is used as a generalized
term for the art referred to in this essay to
describe more or less non-centralized societies with simple technologies.
It is not meant to
imply many of the negative connotations often associated with the term.
15 Jack Flam – Matisse and the Fauves –
from catalog for “Primitivism in the 20th Century”, -
1984 - Museum of Modern Art, New York
16 Gail Levin – American Art - from catalog for
“Primitivism in the 20th Century”, -
1984 - Museum of Modern Art, New York
17 Tony Price, 7/16/85 statement on the 40th anniversary
of the first Atomic Bomb test.
Poster for Governor’s Gallery exhibition.
18 Kirk Varnedoe, - Abstract Expressionism - from catalog
for “Primitivism in the 20th
Century”, - 1984 - Museum of Modern Art, New York
19 Atomic Artist, 1982 film by Claudia Vianello and
Glen Silber
20 Octavio Paz – Convergences: Essays on Art
& Literature- 1979, 1983, 1984 - Harcourt,
Brace, Janovich
21 Atomic Artist, 1982 film by Claudia Vianello and
Glen Silber
22 Patrick Nagatani – Nuclear Enchantment / Photographs by Patrick
Nagatani – 1991
University of New Mexico Press
23 Patrick Nagatani – Nuclear Enchantment / Photographs
by Patrick Nagatani – 1991
University of New Mexico Press
24 Eugenia Parry Janis – essay for Nuclear Enchantment
/ Photographs by Patrick Nagatani –
1991 - University of New Mexico Press
25 Dr Paula Harper - from a catalogue on Judy Chicago.
Published by ACA Galleries,
New York, July 1986
26 Judy Chicago – description of her work Powerplay
(1982 – 1986)
www.judychicago.com
27 Ed Grothus – quote from Atomic Artist, 1982
film by Claudia Vianello and Glen Silber
28 Tony Price, interview with Gay Dillingham - May
1998, Reserve, NM
29 Tony Price, 7/16/85 statement on the 40th anniversary
of the first Atomic Bomb test.
Poster for Governor’s Gallery exhibition.
|
Credits
/ Acknowledgements |
Unless
otherwise footnoted, all quotes from Dr, Joseph Traugott, Wavy Gravy,
Godfrey Reggio, Stuart Ashman, Meridel Rubenstein, Woody & Steina
Vasulka, and Erika Wanenmacher are taken from interviews conducted by
James Rutherford between May and November, 2002. Special thanks to;
Douglas Kent Hall for his photographs and essay on Tony Price and his
work.; to Mark Robertson for the CD ROM and composite image of the Music
Box; to Gay Dilingham and Tom McCarthy for the exhibition video; and
to Lisa Law, Donald Woodman, Mariana Cook, Peter Menzel, James Hart,
Bob Shaw, Morty Breier, Rosé Cohen, Deborah Snyder, Marie Harding,
Elliott McDowell, Guy Cross and others for their images of Tony Price
and his work.
*Meridel Rubenstein and Ellen Zweig (with technical assistance by the
Vasulkas) From the collaborative project CRITICAL MASS: Archimedes Chamber
1990-3 12’x12’x12’ including outer portal: "If
Archimedes"..4 channel synchronized videowork with poetic text
by Ellen Zweig (from collection of NM Museum of Fine Arts) and Oppenheimer/Archimedes
#1 & 2 two columns of 5 palladium prints each with steel frames
each 101x 32”x1/2”,shown on either side of the video column.
interior: - a dark room with video projection device (mini tv., lens
system, mirror) video image projected onto round screen on floor, 5’
diameter.
ATOMIC ART COLLECTION
Tony’s long time and last wish was to keep the collection of one
hundred forty four atomic art sculptures together, to permanently house
it and make it available to public view. The idea for the traveling
exhibit of selected masks came from Stuart Ashman, former Director of
The Museum of Fine Arts, Santa Fe, so that a wider circle might become
aware of Tony’s work and message and learn about the developing
plans for the Tony Price/Atomic Art Museum. Initial designs of the museum
and sculpture gardens are viewable on this website - CLICK
HERE
Several sites in Santa Fe, New Mexico are under consideration. For more
information about this project and how you can support it materially
or financially contact:
Rosé Cohen
P.O. Box 2842
Santa Fe, NM 87504
505-988-5188 - rosetonka@aol.com
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I would like to express my gratitude to Tony Price for his artistic
vision and the compassionate commitment he made to his work. My thanks
to Rosé Cohen, Godfrey Reggio and Earl Rosner for being there
for Tony during his life and for keeping his memory alive – everyone
should be blessed with friends like these. Thanks to my family, Adam,
Taylor and Mary, who help me with everything, and are the most important
people in my life; to all the people I interviewed who confirmed what
I already knew of this unique artist; to all the staff at the Museum
of New Mexico for their work that made this project possible. I also
want to thank and congratulate all the exhibition sponsors, especially
Livingry Foundation: Andrew Ungerleider & Gay Dillingham, LifeWorks
Foundation: George & Pat Bullard, Elliott & Susan McDowell,
Mr. Joe Schepps, Jonathan & Claudia Richards, and Mr. Jack Silverman,
for matching the artist’s vision with incredible generosity. A
special thanks to Stuart Ashman for his support and encouragement from
the very beginning of this project and to everyone who assisted Tony
over the years and cared for him in sickness and in health. I would
like to dedicate my work on this project to all of these people and
to Tony’s children, Roseanna, Zara and Jed, the most important
people in Tony’s life who contributed and sacrificed significantly
towards their father’s art.
James Rutherford, exhibition curator
Tony Price / Atomic Art