Ed Ruscha: Leave Any Information at the Signal: Writings, Interviews, Bits, Pages (2002)

7 October 2012, dusan

“Ed Ruscha is among the most innovative artists of the last forty years. He is also one of the first Americans to introduce a critique of popular culture and an examination of language into the visual arts. Although he first made his reputation as a painter, Ruscha is also celebrated for his drawings (made both with conventional materials and with food, blood, gunpowder, and shellac), prints, films, photographs, and books. He is often associated with Los Angeles as a Pop and Conceptualist hub, but tends to regard such labels with a satirical, if not jaundiced, eye. Indeed, his work is characterized by the tensions between high and low, solemn and irreverent, and serious and nonsensical, and it draws on popular culture as well as Western art traditions.

Leave Any Information at the Signal not only documents the work of this influential artist as he rose to prominence but also contains his writings and commentaries on other artistic developments of the period. The book is divided into three parts, each of which is arranged chronologically. Part one contains statements, letters, and other writings. Part two consists of more than fifty interviews, some of which have never before been published or translated into English. Part three contains sketchbook pages, word groupings, and other notes that chart how Ruscha develops ideas and solves artistic problems. They are published here for the first time. The book also contains more than eighty illustrations, selected and arranged by the artist.”

Edited and with an Introduction by Alexandra Schwartz
Publisher MIT Press, 2002
October Books series
ISBN 0262182203, 9780262182201
473 pages

Publisher

PDF (updated on 2022-11-13)


3 Responses to “Ed Ruscha: Leave Any Information at the Signal: Writings, Interviews, Bits, Pages (2002)”

  1. Notes on Austria: A Miracle Reader - Fabricatorz on January 5, 2013 5:27 pm

    […] in Bregenz, I found myself confronting another miracle. Namely, Ed Ruscha‘s Miracle (1975), a film that follows a mustachioed mechanic around his centerfold-adorned […]

  2. Kim on November 12, 2022 8:20 pm

    Bug report: The PDF link is returning an error.

  3. dusan on November 13, 2022 8:58 am

    fixed

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