Coleen Fitzgibbon, "La Maffia", 1979, exhibited at the 1980 Times Square Show
In Search of Historical Colab. This is the 11th in a series of posts from my memoir research in NYC. This post continues the account of delvings in the NYU library among the files of Andrea Callard, an early secretary of the Colab artists group. She wrote the record of the group’s struggles in the period 1977-79.
We Got the Money – How Do We Share It Out?
Colab became real when the federal NEA grant money arrived. Once the money came in, the question was how to split it up fairly and efficiently. A division among members was made, with each having so many shares. Members could vote their shares towards projects they preferred. “The group evolved to agree that when three or more individual artists planned to collaborate on a project,” Andrea wrote to me, “they would propose it to the group and ask for money. Sometimes, grant money was divided into $200 allotments and three or more people would take those for their projects.”
The record – In the Colab “Red Book” (folder 12) is minutes of a meeting of September 21, initialed by Michael McClard, which specifies that the grant monies received went out as $200 allotments which “can only be used on projects involving three or more people, two of whom must be from Collaborative Projects Inc.”
Odd Bits In There
The folders at NYU aren’t all in chronological order, and many notes are undated. For 1978 there’s not so much. One odd item – folder 1 contains a flyer from the “Friends of Astrid Proll Campaign”. She was the RAF member who fled Germany, and hid out in London squats. (She edited a book about her years there in 2010; Jon Savage wrote the intro.) Proll was exposed by a tabloid in ‘78, and fought extradition for a year. Her support campaign was organized by radical feminists. Many of us were fascinated by the radical left Europeans the mainstream media called “terrorists”.
The English way with news stories
Just Another Asshole
Folder 1 contains notes on “Colab direction” – “what do members really want?” The “basic need,” Andrea wrote, is “direct financial aid to artists who collaborate”. Another flyer invites contributors to the journal Just Another Asshole, organized by Barbara Ess and Jane Sherry. “Everything submitted will be included”. You can send it, or “come to 5 Bleecker St while the magazine is being compiled and compose your piece on the spot”.
Folder 2, also undated, includes an announcement for a meeting at Coleen’s 5 Bleecker store. There members could present “receipts for Colab activities – repayment only at meetings”. Some comments made during the meetings are randomly recorded: “bitter feelings for fools” (has to be Robin Winters); and “everything important happens in irregular ways”. That’s for sure.
All “money should be dished out according to policy – no money should be spent without the calling of an emergency meeting and the agreement of 10 or more members who can forfeit future shares”. It also developed that a quorum, a particular number of members, was required for an official group decision. “If I were making those notes these days instead of in 1978-80,” Andrea wrote me, “they would be dated and detailed.”
1978 Was a Happening Year
1978 was when things really started to take off in Colab. Everyone was busy. The “Red Book” (folder 12) was the first one assembled by the group to support Colab’s grant application to the federal NEA. It records activities 1977-78, and contains important selected records.
The Red Book notes numerous loft film screenings and self-organized group exhibitions. On the cable TV front, the All Color News group is meeting. The Potato Wolf live series is beginning. These meetings are open, and people come and go. Liza Béar’s Slow Scan video project happens. She invites her older artist friends and a few kids from Colab. The artists who will (or won’t) show films at the New Cinema next year are casting and shooting – John Lurie and James Nares, Men in Orbit; Tina L’hotsky and Michael Oblowitz, “Snake Woman”; Michael McClard, Motive; Cara Perlman and Jane Sherry, “Topless”; me with “Party Noise”; Eric Mitchell, Kidnapped and Red Italy; and Nares with Rome ‘78.
Still from "X Magazine Benefit", Moore/Fitzgibbon, 1978/2011, James Chance performing
Who Said What? Who Knows?
By March of ‘79 Colab has already purchased 3/4” video editing machines and they were being heavily used (folder 6). A catalogue of videos for distribution was being planned. (This was never realized; seven years later we would start MWF Video Club.) The Potato Wolf artists television series was producing; I made “Shipwreck” for them.
The next day in the archives I found folder 32, which contains an announcement for a March 16 (1979?) meeting at Kiki Smith’s place on South Street. It announces the “distemper agenda”, which concerned the fierce dust-up over the showing of Tom Otterness’ “Shot Dog Film” on the uncurated Redcurtain cable TV show run by Colab. The Kitchen’s Media Bureau and the state’s NYSCA had decided “not to fund Colab cable TV shows”. The officers wrote: “The NEA supports our position of showing non-censored, non-curated work but they receive 50-100 letters / day from taxpayers who complain about Co-lab’s dog. They need to defend their operation to Congress.” Discuss.
In a separate folder on the “Shot dog incident” (folder 37), Andrea’s notes make it clear that the Media Bureau, funded by NYSCA, pulled $1,500 of Colab funding that year. She notes that our choice was to “go along with NEA” or “withdraw our 1980 application”. (The agency demanded a disavowal.) A letter from Jim Sutcliffe deplores that Colab didn’t support a “policy of no editorial censorship in our organization”.
Rupert and the Dog
This wrenching incident was provoked and stoked by the New York Post newspaper. It had recently been acquired by Rupert Murdoch, who had English tabloid habits – always banging on the hot button – and rightward tendencies. (The Post had always been a Democratic paper; Rupert fixed that.) The incident caused dissension within Colab, rollicked our relationship with funders, and despite his oft-expressed remorse, did lasting damage to Otterness’ subsequent and highly unprovocative career.
Folder 35 contains an undated flyer stating “negotiations are being made with Annette Kuhn, Administrator for Cultural Affairs, NYC to acquire a space from the city”. This was well before the Real Estate Show (December 31, 1979-January 1, 1980), when a group of us just took one of the City’s innumerable buildings.
Annette was a friend of Marc Miller from the NYU graduate art history program. She was tight with Mayor Ed Koch, and had been appointed a functionary of the “art commission”, with an office in City Hall. I remember talking with her there, but I don’t think she ever took us seriously. She and others of her Voice colleagues looked upon us with some amusement, as if to say, “Oh yeah?”
Squat Theatre company in Paris, 1976, shortly before travelling to NYC
Annette’s Salon
During the 1970s Annette Kuhn wrote the “Culture Shock” column for the Village Voice, covering events in the NYC artworld. In her work for Mayor Ed Koch, she is noted as a “mayoral aide” running a “task force” to study the future use of the Tweed Courthouse, a building then in disrepair. (Paul Goldberger, “The Tweed Courthouse: From Venality To Disrepair...”, New York Times, June 14, 1978.) In ‘79 I met with her in her office in City Hall, just off the little-trafficked public art gallery that used to be there. The meet was inconclusive.
Years later in the ‘00s she ran a monthly salon in her Tribeca loft. She bought John Morton’s fiberglass building artwork from the Real Estate Show, and later another giant piece by Dick Miller. She wasn’t involved at all back then in the negotiations which our gang, called the Committee for the Real Estate Show, had with the HPD that led to ABC No Rio. So far as I know, she kept her mouth shut about her prior knowledge of our aims. I never talked to her about this before her death.
The Prototype of the Fax Machine
Another series of later folders contains announcements for early shows of 1977 (many of the best are reproduced in A Book About Colab), and a treasure trove of the QWIP facsimile transmissions from Colab’s experiments with this new technology. Before fax machines or the Internet, Liza Bear obtained six QWIP machines from the Exxon Corporation. You’d just plug them into the telephone.
Various members used them in their individual studios for a few weeks at a time then moved the machines to someone else. The machine would transmit drawings, texts, photos, and collages over the phone lines. The receiving machine would deposit carbon powder on special paper. There are many between Andrea and Robin Winters – (there was one in our apartments on Houston Street) – some by Robert Cooney and Cara Perlman who lived downstairs, and others in the Colab circle. The electrical connection made by the telephonic machine reinforced, preceded and echoed social connections. They describe meals, and some of Andrea’s botanical experiments. They seem to me very Fluxus – like, about what we eat and with whom.
Fax About What
Among the more various QWIPs from 1977-78 (in folders 46-50) I found my own “Writing Doctor” piece for the Doctors and Dentists show. I used a pile of old prescription pads I found on the street, most for narcotic painkillers. There’s one about the NEA taking Colab’s money away. A lot about sex. A number of Art-Rite number 21s, Judy Rifka’s totally hand drawn issue (it became a “you draw it” issue as, overwhelmed, she handed some blanks off to other artists). A drawing by Tom Otterness I recall, captioned “Co-Lab Cure / Blind Justice / Blind Force / The Leader”, and one prefiguring the Potato Wolf TV series: “Famous fish brings networks to bottom of sea”.
Still from "All Color News", 1978
The drawings and collages for QWIPs were put into a plastic sleeve, stuck onto a drum, spun, scanned and transmitted. With the sleeve holding the elements, changeable collages could be made without fixing the elements onto the paper. Some of the QWIPs were annotated and sent back. There is one with Scott and Beth B shown as a tourist couple with numerous snarky comments. The prints are remarkably stable, if dim, dull, and grimy-looking as they were originally. This series is remarkable in the social information it contains. It tells about relationships within Colab in ways I can’t imagine anything else now does.
Film, a Deadly Art
Folder 49 contains QWIPs from me about the Terrorist News Annual project dated February 17, 1979, which I produced at Coleen’s 5 Bleecker Street store. There’s one image of with a blown-up fragment of film of heads on pikes from the lost Super-8 film – lost, lost, all lost… like the deaths it records.
Notes in both folders 1 and 2 concern the May ‘79 meeting. Charlie Ahearn is showing his first feature, The Deadly Art of Survival, at Liza Béar’s Center for New Art Activities. Lindzee Smith’s Nightshift theatre group is staging a play by the German playwright, actor and Communist activist F.X. Kroetz, Men’s Business. An actor and director, Lindzee was at the center of a cadre of Australian artists who circulated through Colab. He was married to Betsy Sussler, who started X Motion Picture Magazine in 1977. The project continued in ‘78 and ‘79 as an open publication of Colab. Betsy dropped out of Colab, and went on to found Bomb magazine.
Aussies in Tribeca, Hungoricans Uptown
The Kroetz play was translated by the prolific translator, editor and publisher Michael Roloff (d. 2019). It was produced at the Squat Theater, the 23rd Street venue run by the Hungarian exile theater collective in 1979 (roloff.mysite.com, accessed April 2020; the site includes portions of his unpublished memoirs of his downtown NYC years). Both Roloff and the Squat Theatre were part of a bubbling emigre theater scene downtown during these years.
Folder 1 also shows that Willoughby Sharp was doing his own thing – “Sharpcom” – at 93 Grand Street, the building he still owned. R.L. Seltman, a key figure in the Little Italy scene of A’s and Storefront for Art & Architecture, was working with Ear Magazine, a publication of the New Wilderness Foundation, a Fluxus-related joint.
Willoughby and Liza during Avalanche magazine days
Never-To-Be Schemes
Folder 2 contains an April/May ‘79 list of Colab committees. Groups were working on making a video catalogue, getting space for the group – “projects – make abandoned building into hotel for transient or visiting artists”, a “type shop” and a “writers center”.
I have no recollection of these committees ever meeting. But they prefigure roles I would later play in Colab with the Real Estate Show and the MWF Video Club. Notes from June of ‘79 (also folder 2) reveal that Beth B and Charlie Ahearn want a video projector. They were both excluded from showing at the New Cinema; they didn’t get that device.
Issues around the editing equipment are discussed. The folder includes a list of members of Colab with many names now crossed out. The QWIP facsimile project arranged by Liza Béar was already over – “bring them back at the next meeting”.
July of 1979 (folder 3) is the most substantively annotated meeting of all. It’s a “financial planning meeting for NEA funding period August ‘79 - April ‘80”. The video decks must be sold because they can no longer be housed. We lost the front room space at Marty the Seltzer Man on Broome Street. Curiously, one of Marty’s home-delivered antique seltzer bottles exploded on Marc Miller’s porch in Brooklyn, mauling his leg. The resulting lawsuit spelled the end of Marty’s storefront.
Now What? Big Plans…
Membership is asked: “What do you think Colab should DO in the next year? NEA plans to send us $10,000 to foster exhibition, media, and publication activity”. Suggestions flew: an exhibition fund; a film/video production fund; “print a video catalogue and set up distribution procedure” (again, the seed of the MWF Video project); “buy big ads in national newspapers in which to make statements”; continue cable programs - “perhaps we could sell series of cable shows to companies outside NYC” (a recurrent fantasy, which no artist, not even Andy Warhol TV could realize); “use our ‘arts organization’ legal status to technically sponsor artists (and others) from other countries so that they can avoid the marriage route – as they make ‘unique and invaluable contributions to our community’”.
There is also a narrative description of this meeting. Michael McClard’s proposal for video distribution meets “considerable disagreement”, with “little faith” in our administrative capability, doubts that there would be sales, that advertising could work, and more. Andrea notes: “The cost/advantages discussion took on the quality of a personality free-for-all during which the idea of starting a social club at which beer was sold to make money came up.” That’s what would be done at ABC No Rio one year later.
Colab Ain’t So Unknown
It’s remarkable what a fruitcake’s worth of diverse activities early Colab contained.
Lindzee Smith
The Colab group itself has been noted for its shows in numerous contemporary articles, museum exhibition catalogues, and art history survey textbooks. But direct historical reckoning has been slow in coming. Shawna Cooper’s “Times Square Show Revisited” at Hunter College, CUNY (2012; timessquareshowrevisited.com) was the first small Colab-specific show. The “TSS” was invoked and many artworks included in the 2019 "Basquiat: The Artist and His New York Scene" exhibition at Schunck Museum in Heerlen, NL, because Jean-Michel debuted at that show.
The “Real Estate Show Revisited” series of related exhibitions was one organized more or less by ourselves, with the collaboration of galleries and small institutions. (I edited a zine of reminiscences and precedents for the action, as House Magic #6.)
The A More Store of artists’ multiples, a Colab staple around holiday time for many years, was recreated at the Printed Matter store for the launch of the 2015 A Book About Colab.
We had one exhibition survey of the group on the line a few years ago, but that fish got away.
Thanks again to Andrea Callard for her comments and amendments to this text.
NEXT: #12 All for One or Fall Apart?
LINKS
Astrid Proll, ed., Goodbye to London: Radical Art and Politics in the Seventies
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/9253229-goodbye-to-london
Squat Theatre Digital Archive Project
http://squattheatre.com/collection
That website has an amazing bibliography and timeline
http://squattheatre.com/bibliography.html
House Magic 6 (2014 Spring) “Real Estate Show Revisited”
https://archive.org/details/house_magic_6/house_magic_6/page/n3/mode/2
Tuesday, February 23, 2021
Thursday, February 11, 2021
Memoir #10: The Scratchings of a Library Rat
This is the 10th post from my memoir project, an account of my 30 years in the NYC artworld. The last post in this blog had me running around town during the 2019 research trip. Now begins the part where I actually hit the books/papers during a two month stay in the city.
Bombing around the city is fun. But it was the Fales collection I’d come to NYC to visit in that fall of ‘19. I’d presented my credentials and detailed my interests to the research librarians at NYU and NYPL.
In Search of Historical Colab
Andrea Callard and Coleen Fitzgibbon have been chipping away at the work of Colab history and the recovery of our videotapes for years.They held a series of oral history interviews a decade or so ago, and produced a DVD compendium of collaborative video work for the XFR Station show at the New Museum in 2013. Coleen mounted a website, and Andrea prepared and deposited her Colab files along with her creative work at NYU in ‘03.
Andrea was Colab secretary during some of its earliest years (1978-80), so a close look at her Colab files in the NYU research library was first on my list of archival tasks. But there had been big changes there. The NYU special collections are now all lumped together, and the premises renovated. They had reopened bare days before my arrival, and access procedures had changed. Online requests are required for everything, and the new system was still squeaky.
Cranking on NYU
NYU is constructed of different colleges, and so were the research collections. Now one can no longer bumble among the different archives and their collections, each in their own rooms and with distinct customs. The precincts of the Fales collection, with its oil paintings, oriental carpets, and shelves of antique books is gone. It’s harder to wander mentally through the holdings, since the analog (paper) guides are gone. Nor can one go to Tamiment labor history archive with its vitrine exhibitions of old labor movements which would spark new connections. Their policies were looser than Fales, so you might have a whole box put upon your desk. (Fales librarians were super-retentive.) These are now old ways of research. One labors today in antiseptic central precincts as anti-haptic and featureless as cyberspace.
Back room at Fales Library, NYU
Riches Out of Reach
The Fales collection is a treasure trove, but it can no longer be known directly. Whatever you might want must be submitted in advance online, and prepared from online descriptions. There is scant ‘item level description’ of folders, leaving one to guess what might be in them. A folder may contain only one card, or it might contain an undiscovered 12 page manuscript – you can’t know until you open it yourself. The people were nice and helpful for the most part, although there is still that certain kind of archivist who really only wants to serve you one folder at a time, and wants you to sit at the desk until it comes. And when you go to lunch the box goes back to general storage, so you have to wait for it to come back out on the truck. These folks clearly aspire to work for the Vatican.
“Let Me Out of Here, Baby”
Colab remains a deep mystery, a formative experience locked up in multiple memories and multiple conclusions: A crossroads, where all of us made our devil’s bargain. I’d been there, but the spells are now all long forgotten. During my week in scholarly lockup at NYU I hoped to recover some.
I didn’t find what I was hoping for in those files. That’s often the case with research. But I found a lot that doesn’t fit the picture of the group that anyone has drawn so far – those accounts aren’t granular -- and much that contradicted my own recollections. In the course of my interviews, which I’ll blog here in the months to come, I found still more dangling anomalies.
“Established 1978”
The group called Colab began to coalesce around 1977. The core of it was art students who had already met at art schools like San Francisco Art Institute, RISD, Chicago Art Institute, or in the recently-established Whitney Independent Study Program. They were inspired by the older artists who talked to them about the Art Workers Coalition of 1969-70, about European politics and cultural organization, about institutional prejudices in NYC and the realities of the art market. Some of those young artists also worked for the older ones. Out of this cloud of artists working in various disciplines who knew each other from living downtown, a group formed. Many really didn’t believe in such a formation. Some opposed the not-for-profit incorporation which was necessary to apply for funds. Others hated meetings. So they drifted away, sometimes starting with a project and not continuing.
Triangulating between a timeline Andrea and Coleen prepared, the recent A Book About Colab (Printed Matter, 2015), and the files at NYU might produce the clear account I hoped for. Into that you’d have to add the untranscribed oral histories Andrea and Coleen made some years ago, and new ones, specifically to flesh out the matter of the arguments that divided the first group and demotivated many others to continue. What did the group promise? And what did it fail to deliver to so many?
Andrea’s Colab box did not present anything like a clear administrative history of Collaborative Projects. There is still no account of how the group functioned, the arguments, and how it evolved. I mean a synoptic close-to-accurate account. Maybe that’s a project for the future.
Palimpsest – A Mortal Return
So many times after living it I have gone back over and reordered people, events, art and performance in my mind. I’m quoted in A Book About Colab (2015), from my book Art Gangs (2011), revised from the dissertation Collectivities (2000). Marc Miller and I compiled and published ABC No Rio Dinero with its Colab sections in ‘85. Earlier I worked on the Colab books prepared to support grant applications which document each period of activities.
(The Colab books I allude to are not all together in one place, accessible to scholars. There are three of them I know of – the “Red Book”, the “Black Book”, and a third book unnamed.)
While the group lived, I harried my comrades with various broadsides and missives. I’ve jumped houses, cities, now continents with concomitant losses, so I have only some of these books and papers now. I was opinionated, approving some actions and people and disparaging others in letters and manifestos. Later, as Marc and I edited our book, I was more scrupulous and dispassionate. After academic training even more so. In my dissertation, begun 20 years after the lived facts, I tried to chain Colab into a broader academic narrative of New York artists’ left collective formations.
Other Observations
My search for Colab past at NYU would be through the records of Andrea Callard. I didn’t find the coherent story I expected. Instead I found surprises.
Everything I wanted was in Andrea’s box number one. There are no notes in it from the very beginnings of the group. The 1978 “Red Book” includes this note under “Green Corporation [earliest name for the group]… History of Organization”: “First meeting: March, 1977. Weekly meetings with an average attendance of thirty people continued through June, 1977.” After meeting with the artists’ accountant Rubin Gorewitz, “we decide to become a production-oriented organization”. (box 1, folder 12) They immediately began the process of incorporation as a non-profit organization – no incorporation, no grant money.
First Projects
The earliest projects, All Color News cable show, X Magazine, and the loft studio exhibitions began in 1977. The earliest notes I saw were from a September ‘77 meeting of the All Color News group, taken by Beth Horowitz (later Beth B). Beth, along with Teri Slotkin, and Betsy Sussler, are the earliest officers who appear. They’re all women, a pattern Colab would follow. (Andrea recalls that the first officers included Betsy, Liza Béar and Beth, and perhaps Michael McClard; Katy Martin was an officer very briefly.)
How to Do This
The principles of work are given as: “A diversity of political and esthetic convictions is desirable. The major criteria for selected projects is social relevance. Decisions are reached governing our collaboration by operating on a democratic premise and using a democratic process”. (box 1, folder 9)
Christof Kohlhoefer in a Potato Wolf show
Talking with Andrea at her house soon after my sojourn at NYU, she pulled out copies of her Colab notes. Andrea spoke of Liza Béar and the first (second?) set of officers’ “executive decision” to buy 3/4” video editing decks with the first grant Colab received. Liza’s Center for New Art Activities non-profit was the sponsoring organization for Colab’s first grant. She perhaps felt entitled to determine how to spend the funds. But, there was a furor over that followed by a “turning point towards democracy” in the group. Andrea said also that those decks were heavily used to edit media works by various artists. Like the QWIP machines, they moved around to various people’s studios every few months. In Andrea’s notes, there is a log of who used the decks while they were with her.
News Team Colab
Folder 9 contains numerous plans for the ACN, including the scheme of color-coded content that gave the program its name. The idea of the All Color News embodied the idea that the news should be for all colors of people and events.
Among these papers is a tumbling manifesto, typed in all capital letters by James Nares. It’s a brief for guerrilla filmmaking. The “newsteam,” he writes is “…licensed by society to investigate and report the facts”, but they also purvey propaganda and manipulate opinion. The artists making ACN should be conscious of the “‘act’ of being a newsman/woman”, of “using our invested authority to gain access to events and places” and should “violate standard forms of behavior in our pursuit of information.”
The “strategy” of the TV program “is to start with a simple idea, a base from which to move, and then get out into the action and see what happens.” A list of his segment proposals includes “Pier. An hour or so with the guys lying around Roman orgy style at the far end of the southern gay pier hangout. Bodies in the sun.” This sounds like a seed of his great Super-8 feature film, Rome ‘78.
Libidinal Economies
I remember the Colab meetings of 1977 as being at first and at times intoxicating in the depth of artistic, political and social intelligence evident in the group discussions. Everyone was handsome, everyone was sexy. But they were also soon rivened with conflict. The axis of the early battles seemed to me to move between two couples, Robin Winters and Coleen Fitzgibbon, and Liza Béar and Michael McClard. Liza had edited the final issue of Avalanche magazine featuring all those artists, along with Diego Cortez. As I recall, he tended to stand outside the battles, making wry comments until his final decisive resignation.
Diego Vanishes
This theatrical moment and the letter he wrote on that occasion is nowhere noted in these files. Andrea writes, “I don’t believe Liza and Diego remained active in Colab after 1978 when I became secretary. Michael may have continued for a while. I recall that he visited and advised me on my Ailanthus tree film which was difficult to complete.”
As I recall, sharpest arguments in those early meetings revolved around representations made to curators by one or another as Colab which were not made public to the group. (This is actually what got Willoughby Sharp expelled from the Art Workers Coalition.) Andrea recalls that the most typical arguments were about “how to focus our group energy. There would be people with loud voices and there would be people others listened to and those might be different people.”
Steve Mass (left) with Diego Cortez
Hard Work
An undated text in folder 7 reflects the emotional toll this took on Andrea, a gently-spoken person who I’ve never seen angry. She is reflecting and speculating on the processes of Colab, with “cold and rainy characterizations”. “[O]ne lady has a machine gun mouth” – “supports lover’s space age vision”. “[H]e pretends to himself to want to work with others which he is incapable of doing”. “Americans aren’t set up to collaborate and cooperate: they’re competitive and ego ridden”. The “group doesn’t share a big vision, no active focus. Funding of an exclusive nature is unattractive to the egalitarian slice… those who have been unable to deal with their careers as such… those who don’t want others to achieve success of an individual nature at cost to the group. Practical needs to make and sell vs political needs to join & do. Private backbiting undermines public structure”. She elevates the conflict from the petty, concluding that it is a question of “mass audience vs private encounters with art”. This candid assessment pins the weaknesses of both factions.
Thanks to Andrea Callard for her comments and amendments to this text.
NEXT: Historical Colab Continued
LINKS
Guide to the Andrea Callard Papers 1966-2000, Fales Library, NYU
http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/fales/callard/
Collaborative Projects Inc. Colab - WordPress.com
“Colab is the commonly used abbreviation of the New York City artists' group Collaborative Projects…” It’s trademarked, but we could never hold onto it
https://collaborativeprojects.wordpress.com
“Tamiment labor history archive”
I link to an article recalling the late director, Michael Nash, and his work documenting Occupy Wall Street Evan Neely, “The Generosity of the Archivist”, August 31, 2012
The photo at the head of this post, of an obsoleted card catalogue planted with flowers, also comes from the Social Text blog, credited to Flickr user Aureusbay.
https://socialtextjournal.org/the-generosity-of-the-archivist/
A Book About Colab (Printed Matter, 2015)
https://www.printedmatter.org/catalog/42508/