John P. Jacob: 1st.
International Portfolio of Artists Photography (1983)
opening: 3rd Aug 2017, Thursday 18:00
opened by: Péter Sáránszki (Art
Solutions), Yak & Yeti, and Balázs Pándi
exhibition: 4 Aug – 31 Aug 2017
The International Portfolio of Artists
Photography was an assembling book project conceived to
integrate mail art, book art, and photography. I invited
contributors to submit seventy-five copies of an original
photograph, which were assembled into books. Contributions were
solicited through the mail art community, in particular Judith
Hoffberg's Umbrella magazine.
The First Portfolio included works by
thirty-seven artists from fourteen nations, bound into a
tri-fold muslin folio. Two sets of prints were used to create
exhibition copies that traveled to venues in Europe, Asia, and
in the US during 1983 and '84. The “Notes” accompanying it
announced the project as a ten-year effort, with subsequent
volumes to focus on photography from specific geographical
regions. The Second Portfolio would focus on the Soviet Bloc
countries of Eastern Europe; the Third on South America; the
Fourth on Asia; and the Fifth, like the First, would be "open to
artists throughout the world." Only the First Portfolio was
completed.
The impetus to devote The Second Portfolio to
Eastern Europe arose from problems encountered during the making
of the First. Three artists from the region participated in that
volume: Robert Rehfeldt from East Germany, Robert Swierkewicz
from Hungary, and Waclaw Ropiecki from Poland. Rehfeldt, a
graphic designer and illustrator, was prohibited by East German
law from making multiples without authorization, therefore he
submitted a negative which I printed for him. Ropiecki's
submission disappeared in the mail, a common form of state
censorship. Only Swierkewicz, working under the somewhat less
repressive cultural laws of 1980s Hungary, succeeded in
submitting materials as required by the invitation to
participate.
Through correspondence with these three, as
well as addresses shared by mail artists Volker Hamann and
Henryk Gajewski, I expanded my list of contacts in East Germany,
Hungary, and Poland. From addresses shared by collector Jean
Brown and emigre artists Rimma and Valeriy Gerlovin, I made
contact with artists in Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union.
Taking advantage of an already vital mail art network in Eastern
Europe, each invitee was asked to share the invitation with
other artists, and the map of potential participants expanded to
include Bulgaria and Romania. Participants were asked to mail a
negative or photograph in an ordinary envelope, which I would
reproduce for the Second Portfolio.
Following my participation in the International
Day Art exhibition, Liget Galeria director Tibor Varnagy
proposed an exhibition of the Second Portfolio in Budapest.
Noting that it would be difficult, and possibly illegal, for
such an exhibition to be locally organized, Varnagy invited me
to transport and present the Second Portfolio as my personal
collection. The exhibition opened in May, 1986. Due to the
volume of the material submitted, a second exhibition venue, the
Galeria 11, was required to present it all.
The Second Portfolio exhibition included works
by seventy-five artists from throughout Eastern Europe, one from
the Soviet Union, and two Soviet emigre artists living in the
US. The exhibition catalog, xerox-printed with a six-page
gatefold of photographs by Polish artist Jozef Robakowski,
contained an essay by Hungarian photographer Laszlo Lugosi-Lugo,
and a co-authored text by Varnagy and me. An address list of
participants was mailed separately from the catalog by Varnagy.
The exhibition documented the existence of a parallel culture of
photo-based artists working within Eastern Europe while
contributing to the awareness of a small but vital network of
semi-official organizations committed to presenting such work.
First Portfolio Participants: Vittore Baroni
(Italy); George B. Benington (US); Guy Bleus (Belgium);
Christopher Burnett (US); Russell Butler (US); Charles Francois
(Belgium); H.R. Fricker (Switzerland); Henryk Gajewski
(Netherlands); Ubaldo Giacomucci (Italy); Pete Horobin
(Scotland); G.X. Jupitter Larsen (Canada); Dennis Letbetter
(US); Serge Luigetti (Italy); Peter Lyssiotis (Australia);
Ruggero Maggi (Italy); Giancarlo Martina (Italy); Des McLean
(US); Jurgen Olbrich (West Germany) Frank Oliver/Eric Finlay
(UK); Sjoerd Paridaen (Belgium); Irma Perez (US); Victor Perez
(US); Janice Peshke (Canada); Carlo Pittore/Mark Melnicove (US);
Steve Random (US); Steen Moller Rasmussen (Denmark); Larry
Rippel (US); Robert Rehfeldt (East Germany); Waclaw Ropiecki
(Poland (Missing)); Carsten Schmidt-Olsen (Denmark); Lon
Spiegelman (US); Robert Swierkewicz (Hungary); Patrick T (US);
B.J. Tisa (US); Emmett Walsh (US); Ioan Bunnus bei Widmaier
(West Germany); Gert Wibe (Sweden).
First Portfolio Exhibition Venues:
• Buro fur Kunstlerische,
Trogen, Switzerland (10/1983)
• Department of Art, Sung
Kyun Kwan University, Seoul, Korea (11/1983)
• Kunoldstrasse 34, Kassel,
West Germany (12/1983)
• Media Gallery, Gent,
Belgium (2/1984)
• Artestudio, Bergamo, Italy
(4/1984)
• Memorial Gallery, Glassboro
State College, Glassboro, NJ (9/1984)