Something Else Press
Something Else Press was founded by Dick Higgins in 1963. It published many important Intermedia texts and artworks by Higgins, Ray Johnson, Gertrude Stein, George Brecht, Daniel Spoerri, Bern Porter, John Cage, Emmett Williams and others. The Something Else Press was an early publisher of Concrete poetry and other works by Fluxus artists throughout the 1960s. During the late 1960s in New York City some of the various artists who worked at the Something Else Press included Editor in Chief Emmett Williams, artist Alison Knowles, American/Israeli poet Larry Friefeld, Irish/American novelist Mary Flanagan, artist Ronnie Landfield, and publisher/founder Dick Higgins. Fluxus artist and scholar, Ken Friedman, acted as general manager for Higgins from New York and California in 1970 and 1971. Originally located in Chelsea in Manhattan, the Something Else Press eventually relocated to West Glover, in northern Vermont in the 1970s.[1]
Complete List of Something Else Press publications, 1960s
- Jefferson's Birthday/Postface - Dick Higgins - 1964
- Ample Food For Stupid Thought - Robert Filliou - 1965
- A Primer of Happenings & Time/Space Art - Al Hansen - 1965
- The Paper Snake - Ray Johnson - 1965
- The Four Suits - Alison Knowles, Tomas Schmit, Benjamin Patterson, Philip Corner - 1965
- DaDa Almanach - Richard Huelsenbeck - 1966
- An Anecdoted Topography of Chance - Daniel Spoerri - 1966
- The Making of Americans - Gertrude Stein - 1966
- de-coll/age happenings - Wolf Vostell - 1966
- Games at the Cedilla, or the Cedilla - George Brecht, Robert Filliou - 1967
- Dick's 100 Amusements - William Brisbane Dick - 1967
- Verbi-Voco-Visual Explorations - Marshall McLuhan - 1967
- An Anthology of Concrete Poetry - Emmett Williams - 1967
- Changes: Notes on Choreography - Merce Cunningham - 1968
- The Book of Hours and Constellations - Eugen Gomringer - 1968
- There's a Little Ambiguity Over There Among the Bluebells - Ruth Krauss - 1968
- Store Days - Claes Oldenburg- 1968[2]
- 246 Little Clouds - Dieter Roth - 1968
- Geography and Plays - Gertrude Stein - 1968
- Sweethearts - Emmett Williams - 1968
- New Musical Resources - Henry Cowell - 1969
- Notations - John Cage - 1969
- The Gutman Letter - Walter Gutman - 1969
- foew&ombwhnw - Dick Higgins - 1969
- Lucy Church Amiably - Gertrude Stein -1969
1970s
- The Aesthetics of Rock - Richard Meltzer - 1970
- The Mythological Travels of a Modern Sir John Mandeville, being an account of the Magic, Meatballs and other Monkey Business Peculiar to the Sojourn of Daniel Spoerri on the Isle of Symi, together with divers speculations thereon - Daniel Spoerri - 1970
- Fantastic Architecture - Wolf Vostell, Dick Higgins - 1970
- A Sailor's Caleder - Ian Hamilton Finlay, Gordon Huntly - 1971
- Stanzas for Iris Leak - Jackson Mac Low - 1971
- I've Left - Bern Porter - 1971
- Thomas Onetwo - Ernest M. Robson - 1971
- Typewriter Poems - ed. Peter Finch - 1972
- A Book About Love And War And Death - Dick Higgins - 1972
- 1 Walked out of 2 and Forgot It - Toby MacLennan - 1972
- Found Poems - Bern Porter - 1972
- Matisse, Picasso and Gertrude Stein - Gertrude Stein - 1972
- Cancer in My Left Ball - John Giorno- 1973
- Brion Gysin Let the Mice In - Brion Gysin, ed. Jan Herman, William S. Burroughs, Ian Sommerville - 1973
- Ring Piece - Geoffrey Hendricks - 1973
- The Making of Americans - play by Leon Katz based on the book by Gertrude Stein - 1973
- Breakthrough Fictioneers - ed. Richard Kostelanetz - 1973
- One Thousand American Fungi (1902 edition) - Charles McIlvaine, Robert K. MacAdam - 1973
- The Ten Week Garden - Cary Scher - 1973
- A Book Concluding with As a Wife Has a Cow - Gertrude Stein - 1973
- How to Write - Gertrude Stein - 1973
- A Valentine for Noel - Emmett Williams - 1973
- Bio-Music - Manford L. Eaton - 1974
- Something Else Yearbook - ed. Jan Herman - 1974
Other publications
Alongside book publications, Dick Higgins published a series of pamphlets titled "Great Bear Pamphlets". One can browse an entire collection of these on .[3]
Changes
While Higgins always remained the primary owner and publisher, other individuals served as editor, including Emmett Williams and Jan Herman. Herman took the job in 1973 and served until the press folded a year later. Higgins is quoted as saying about Herman:
"too much an editor, and too little a fund-raiser. His idea of doing business was to wrap books and mail them away - for that one has assistants (mailing books IS fun if one can afford the time) - and he spent too little time looking for production money from foundations and wealthy people. So the press went kaput the following year..." -Letter to H.R. December 27, 1976 - Fluxus, The Most Radical and Experimental Art Movement of the Sixties - Ruhe - 1979 - 'A', Leidsekruisstraat 10, Amsterdam.
Since Higgins had personal wealth, this account could be disputed. The press collapsed when Higgins's fortunes turned, and there was virtually no funding base in rural Vermont.
Herman disputes Higgins' account; see the talk page for details Talk:Something Else Press.
References
- ↑ Something Else Press essay PDF, retrieved April 2, 2009
- ↑ Hannah Higgins Fluxus experience 2002, p.127 retrieved April 2, 2009]
- ↑ Fluxus and Happenings and list of Something Else Press publications with introduction by Peter Frank, retrieved April 2, 2009
Sources
- Peter Frank, Something Else Press: An Annotated Bibliography 1983, published by McPherson and Company:documentext ISBN 0-914232-39-8
- Dick Higgins Intermedia. Something else Newsletter (Something Else Press), 1966.
- Hannah Higgins, Fluxus Experience, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, Fall, 2002, Summer, 2003 and Spring 2005.
External links
- Exhibition at the Visual Research Centre in Dundee
- Dick Higgins Collection at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County
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