Red Tape, A New Work by Les Levine, 1970 – To Engage the University in a Useless Task Which Will Allow It to Expose a Working Model of Its Sys

Les Levine author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Columbia Books on Architecture and the City

Published:8th Apr '16

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Red Tape, A New Work by Les Levine, 1970 – To Engage the University in a Useless Task Which Will Allow It to Expose a Working Model of Its Sys cover

In the summer of 1970, the artist Les Levine arrived at the University of Toronto to take part in the installation of site-specific work on the quadrangle in front of the University's Hart House. The intended piece-construction materials hung from high-tension rope between campus buildings-was quickly stymied as Levine encountered a series of bureaucratic impediments on the part of the University staff. What ensued was played into the conceptual conceit the artist had envisioned for the project. By collating the correspondence, telephone transcripts, and visual documentation of the eventual installation process, Levine used the work to demonstrate how the university itself functioned as a system. Red Tape publishes this project, which had existed only as a dossier in the artist's archive, for the first time. ?Red Tape is being published on the occasion of the exhibition "Les Levine: Bio-Tech Rehearsals 1965-1975," curated by Felicity D. Scott and Mark Wasiuta, at Columbia University's Arthur Ross Architecture Gallery.

ISBN: 9781941332252

Dimensions: 216mm x 158mm x 9mm

Weight: 258g

128 pages