<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p><strong>An artist's book compendium of the Hammer's Museum's entire incoming mail, designed in the style of a mail-order catalog</strong></p><p>For <i>Mail</i>, Los Angeles-based artist Mungo Thomson (born 1969) asked the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles to let its incoming mail accumulate unopened during the run of the exhibition. Over the course of the show a pile of correspondence and packages grew, forming a temporary archive. <p/>This book functions both as an artwork and as an elaborate and exhaustive documentation of the work as realized by the artist. Every letter, package, notice, magazine, flyer, restaurant menu, exhibition postcard, vendor catalog and piece of junk mail is represented. <p/>Featuring an essay by Hammer Museum curator Aram Moshayedi, <i>Mail</i> performs a kind of autopsy of the sculpture, displaying every facet and revealing the infrastructure of both the artwork and the museum. <p/>The design of the book loosely mimics a popular mail-order catalog, and Thomson's photography of the items in the mail pile at the Hammer was undertaken with this catalog design in mind. </p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>In 2018 as part of an exhibition at the Hammer Museum, Thomson asked that all incoming mail -- every "letter, package, notice, magazine, flyer, restaurant menu, exhibition postcard, vendor catalog and piece of junk mail that came to the museum" -- be collected and forwarded to an off-site location unopened, to be documented at the end of the show. This book examines that pile, in what was originally an homage to the history of mail art, but has since become a rousing salutation to the vital role of the USPS in a time of pandemic, privatization, and centrality to the function of democracy.--Shana Nys Dambrot "LA Weekly"<br><br>Mungo Thomson engages with how time is archived, chronicled, and immortalized through dispersed media.--Haley Mellin "Garage"<br><br>The contents of Mungo Thomson's newly documented piece, Mail, represents the "fleeting and ideologically fraught notion of exhibition time.--Emily Gosling "Elephant"<br>
Cheapest price in the interval: 33.99 on October 22, 2021
Most expensive price in the interval: 33.99 on November 8, 2021
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