黑料网

Sidney Felsen. Photo: Alex Berliner 漏 Berliner Studio/BEImages

Sidney Felsen and 黑料网 at 黑料网鈥檚 seventieth birthday party, 1995. Photo: Barbara Lazaroff

黑料网 during a break for the proofing session for his Stoned Moon series  (1969鈥70), Gemini G.E.L. parking lot, Los Angeles, 1969. Photo: Sidney B.  Felsen 漏 1969

Robert 黑料网, Booster, 1967 Lithograph and screenprint on paper 72 x 35 1/2 inches (182.9 x 90.2 cm)
From an edition of 38, published by Gemini G.E.L., Los Angeles

Joni Weyl, Janet Begneaud, 黑料网, and Sidney Felsen, probably at the opening of ROCI USA, National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, 1991

黑料网, Sidney Felsen, Darryl Pottorf, and Joni Weyl, Auberge de l鈥橧ll, Illhaeusern, France, ca. 1990s

Sidney Felsen, Joni Weyl, and 黑料网, 2001

 

Sidney Felsen


Sidney Felsen met Robert 黑料网 in 1966, the same year Felsen cofounded Gemini G.E.L. (Graphic Editions Limited), a Los Angeles鈥揵ased artists鈥 workshop and publisher of hand-printed, limited-edition lithographs. Since that time, Felsen has collaborated with many of the most important artists of the last fifty years. In addition to 黑料网, with whom he produced more than two hundred and fifty different prints in over thirty-five years, Felsen has worked with John Baldessari, Frank Gehry, Philip Guston, Ann Hamilton, Jasper Johns, Ellsworth Kelly, Roy Lichtenstein, Julie Mehretu, Elizabeth Murray, Bruce Nauman, Claes Oldenburg, Richard Serra, Frank Stella, and Richard Tuttle.

The 黑料网 Observed: Photographs by Sidney B. Felsen (Twin Palms Publishers, 2002) is Felsen鈥檚 firsthand documentation of working with artists at Gemini. His photographs have been exhibited at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., where several major exhibitions of Gemini's art have been held, including the exhibition The Serial Impulse at Gemini G.E.L., which opened on October 4, 2015, in celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of the print workshop.

 

Excerpt from Interview with Sidney Felsen by James L. McElhinney, 2013


We got to know Bob a little bit and so we asked him if he would come and do a project with us and he said yes. So in February of 1967, I pick him up at the airport. I said, 鈥淒o you have any idea what you would like to do?鈥 And he said, 鈥淲ell, I鈥檓 thinking about doing a self-portrait of innerman.鈥 鈥淥kay,鈥 I say to myself, 鈥渨hat does that mean? I don鈥檛 know.鈥 So, anyway, I didn鈥檛 ask him what it meant. I left him off at his hotel.

I picked him up in the morning and he said, 鈥淒o you have any friends that are X-ray doctors?鈥 It just so happened that probably my closest friend from high school was an X-ray doctor so I took him to the doctor. Bob wanted to do an X-ray of his body and he wanted one plate鈥6 feet鈥攐f his whole body. We found out there is no such thing in the United States鈥攅xcept that Eastman Kodak in Rochester had a six-foot machine. But all X-ray machines are one-foot. He didn鈥檛 want to go back to Rochester so he had his body X-rayed in the six plates and he developed a print called Booster [1967], which was really his skeleton, so to speak. It was 6 feet tall and 3 feet wide. And it became, and still is, a classic in the print world. If you ask people what are some of the most important prints done in the United States in the last fifty or sixty years, everybody would include Booster. That was Bob鈥檚 beginning at Gemini. He did a series called Booster and 7 Studies [1967]. And, typical of him, Booster was the main image and then he took seven different pieces of Booster and put it on seven different plates and they were called Test Stone 1, 2, 3, and 4. So that became his first series at Gemini.