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0 to 9

0 to 9 was a literary magazine that was published between 1967 and 1969 edited by Vito Acconci and Bernadette Mayer in New York City.[1] Produced cheaply with a small print run, 0 to 9's content explored issues around language, performance art, visual art and meaning making. It contained a mixture of out-of-copyright material and new work by emerging artists and is viewed as one of the most experimental journals of the mimeograph era.[2]

0 to 9
First issue, April 1, 1967
EditorBernadette Mayer, Vito Acconci
CategoriesVisual arts, avant garde, performance art
First issueApril 1967; 57 years ago (1967-04)
Final issueJune 1969; 54 years ago (1969-06)
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Background edit

0 To 9 was published in the late 1960s. Vito Acconci and Bernadette Mayer were previously unknown poets working in the bohemian outpost of New York’s Lower East Side. The two were related by marriage: Acconci was married to Mayer’s sister Rosemary Mayer, and both used the magazine to seek out like minded writers and readers and discover new audiences.[3][4] Both Acconci and Mayer wanted to use print to explore the limits of language and experiment with typography.[5]

Acconci and Mayer published experimental poetry, utilising procedural verse techniques and found texts to undermine conventional notions of authorship.[1] They sought contributions to 0 To 9 from authors that were out of print and out of copyright, including the writings of poets Sir Walter Raleigh and Sir Arthur Gorge, Novalis, Hans Christian Andersen, Lord Herbert of Cherbury, Lord Stirling, Gustave Flaubert, Gertrude Stein, and Guillaume Apollinaire.[6] They also included excerpts from Raymond Queneau's Exercises in Style, ninety-nine retellings of the same story, and Stefan Themerson’s translation of Li Po's Drinking Alone by Moonlight. Kate Linker noted in her biography of Acconci that these writers were also chosen to be published alongside contemporary texts "in a search for predecessors for the new 'material' work of the 1960s."[7]

Originally 0 To 9 was inspired by Jasper Johns' stencil paintings,[8] and the magazine's title comes from Johns' work 0 Through 9.[5][9][10] Acconci and Mayer were inspired by Johns' treatment of numbers and letters as physical entities.[5] Acconci noted that the magazine's title was a conscious change from Johns' work - an attempt to view the magazine as an object rather than a message:“ ‘0 to 9’ isn’t language, so there couldn’t be a language mistake, ‘0 to 9’ is an icon, ‘0 to 9’ is advertising.”[5] Acconci also claimed that the magazine's numerical title "had more to do with trying to avoid expression and trying to get some cold, neutral system [of language]."[11][12]

Production edit

Due to cheap rent, many artists shared space in New York City in the 1960s, increasing artistic production and collaboration.[5] Initially, Acconci and Mayer approached the New York School of Poets about their intention to produce a magazine; when they declined to be involved, claiming the ideas were too obscure, Acconci and Mayer decided to embrace DIY press instead.[5] Mayer found a mimeograph in her then boyfriend's father's office and used it to produce 0 To 9.[12] The production process was slow; everything had to be meticulously typed, then the ink was left to dry on stencil film between the padding and backing sheets.[5] The magazine's production often took place at night, when the office holding the mimeograph machine was closed.[13][12]

0 To 9 had a small print run, of between 100 and 350 copies per issue.[14] Each issue was stapled together by hand on cheap xeroxed paper.[5][15]

Acconci and Mayer then took copies of the magazine to independent booksellers (including Eighth Street, Gotham Book Mart, Sheridan Square and the East Side Bookstore) or mailed them to artists and subscribers.[5][12] They charged $1 per issue.[5]

0 To 9 followed in the footsteps of other Greenwich Village self-published magazines including Ted Berrigan's C Magazine, John Ashbery's Art & Literature and Fuck You by Ed Sanders.[12] Many of the contributions from living artists were friends of Acconci and Mayer; some artists approached, including Buckminster Fuller and John Cage, declined to contribute.[12]

Themes edit

Art criticism and artists' income edit

The focus on words and wordplay in the magazine reflected a vast increase in artists' writing and activity throughout the 1960s; criticism of art helped to provide income for artists as well as the ability to get their messages out to a wider audience. Anna Lovatt has noted this in the work of Sol LeWitt, who contributed to 0 To 9:

"For LeWitt's generation of artists (the first for whom a university education was not uncommon), criticism provided a means of financial support and the opportunity to address a broader audience, via a proliferation of new art magazines."[16]

When the journal Artforum moved its office to New York in 1967, it helped to promote art criticism to even wider audiences.[5]

Artists' spaces in 1960s New York edit

0 To 9 was a rejection of traditional artistic venues. Six issues were published with a variety of themes and covers.[17] The magazines reflected shared social spaces in which artists and poets met and exchanged ideas: pieces are spread throughout the magazine between contributors and frequently one work is spread between others in the issue.[18]

Language edit

0 To 9 also echoed wider fears in the art community that art was being dematerialized into language alone.[15] Language work by Joseph Kosuth, Lawrence Weiner and Robert Barry was also becoming more prominent in New York art galleries and exhibitions, demonstrating an increasingly aesthetic environment for artists.[7] These works helped Acconci and others to see the art space as an open field that was open to experimentation and importations from other areas.[7]

In 0 To 9, meaning is hidden in plain sight and the magazine often plays with form to redefine the process of meaning making.[5] This can be seen in Acconci's rejection letter to a 0 To 9 submission from Hugh Fox on 4 September 1968: "Not the kind of thing 0 to 9 is out for; for me, there's too much emphasis on message here, not enough on the space of the page."[19]

Rejection of traditional artists' methods edit

Acconci was inspired to create work that consciously reacted against traditional art norms:

"It was that blank wall, that museum as a repository of blank walls, that was the impetus for many people in my generation to make art; we made art as a reaction to, as a rebellion against, the clean, white space. We made art as a reaction against the “Do-not-touch” signs in the museum."[20]

Impact edit

Alongside the journal Art-Language, 0 To 9 became a critical part of the linguistic turn that conceptual art underwent during the 1960s, as well as literature (most clearly seen in the concrete poetry genre and works by Samuel Beckett).[16][19]

Legacy edit

The shift made in 0 To 9 from visual art to public performance art reflected Acconci's own transition from writer to performer; by the magazine's final issue in 1969, Acconci was conceiving and documenting performances almost daily.[20][21] This shift was in part due to Acconci realising that speaking poetry out loud is itself a transformation from the page to physical space.[7] Acconci noted that the shift to street performance seen in the magazine changed the nature of the work permanently: "Once 0 To 9 had hit the streets, it couldn't go back to the page."[13][12]

After 0 To 9, Mayer's career as a poet continued; she taught writing workshops at St. Marks’ Poetry Project for many years and published her work extensively.[22]

According to critics,0 To 9 can be seen as "the most radically eclectic journal of the mimeograph revolution."[23][19] It cut through many different disciplines, history and culture to explore language.[2] 0 To 9's experimentation with meaning and format echo issues that are debated today; its focus on how language evolves reflexively and the role of data are themes we currently explore in the digital era.[5][7] As writer Victor Brand notes, "0 to 9 created a niche that can now be located at the beginings of the Language and performance poetry movements."[24]

In 2006, Ugly Duckling Presse reprinted 0 To 9, including its supplements, in one single edition.[13] Acconci and Mayer added a preface and commentary to the reprint.[9] A special edition of the work was also printed, where each issue of 0 To 9 was staple bound in the style of the original issues.[25]

Issues of 0 to 9 edit

0 to 9 ISSUE 1 (1 April 1967) edit

An uncut mimeograph stencil was used as the cover to the first issue to show the materiality of the magazine through its printing process.[17] Acconci recalled: "we hoped that the people we distributed it to would contribute to it".[3]

Author of piece Title of piece
Sir Arthur Gorges and Sir Walter Raleigh Poem
Anonymous THE ROUND TRIP OF ICE from NEHALEM TILLAMOOK TALES
Vito Hannibal Acconci KAY PRICE AND STELLA PAJUNAS
Edoardo Sanguineti ALPHABETUM
Bruce Marcus Poems
Hans Christian Andersen TWO BROWN EYES
Bernadette Mayer BOTTLE
Novalis from HEINRICH VON OFTERDINGEN
Robert Viscusi DODECAHEDRON
Morton Feldman Interview
V. C. Alexander THE MAGIC STAIRWAY from STORY GAMES FOR EVERYBODY

0 to 9 ISSUE 2 (August 1967) edit

Author of piece Title of piece
Robert Walser Kleist in Thun
Bernadette Mayer Poems
Anonymous Andemanese Song
Anonymous Australian Songs
Anonymous Dama Song
Anonymous Eskimo Songs
Anonymous Semang Song
Gertrude Stein IN
Anonymous BILL'S EPITAPH
Judy Schiff, Daniel O'Sullivan, Rosemary Mayer Drawings
Raymond Queneau from EXERCISES IN STYLE
Vito Hannibal Acconci TWELVE MINUTES
Aram Saroyan Poems
Thomas Clark Plays
Ron Padgett LIMOUSINE
Stefan Themerson from BAYAMUS

0 to 9 ISSUE 3 (3 January 1968) edit

From Issue 3 of 0 to 9 onwards, Acconci began to use the magazine to experiment with the concept of interruption.[26] His poem 'On', whilst a single work, is scattered throughout the issue in between other writings.[13]

Author of piece Title of piece
Clark Coolidge Poem
Vito Hannibal Acconci ON
Guillaume Apollinaire POETRY
Aram Saroyan Poem
Robert Greene A pleasant Tale of a man that was married to sixteene Wiues, and how courteously his last wife intreated him.
Aram Saroyan Poem
Aram Saroyan Poem
Bernadette Mayer Poems
Aram Saroyan Poem
Gustave Flaubert CARNAC
Aram Saroyan Poem
John Giorno GOLDEN CYCLE
Aram Saroyan Poem
William McGonagall Poems
Aram Saroyan Poem
Aram Saroyan Poem
Clark Coolidge Six Works
Bruce Marcus Trainor pursues the __ of a sexless friend
Ron Padgett & Ted Berrigan INNER LANDSCAPES

0 to 9 ISSUE 4 (4 June 1968) edit

The cover of every copy of 0 to 9 Issue 4 was a softback book case from Acconci's or Mayer's own library.[13]

In Issue 4 of 0 to 9, Bernadette Mayer explored issues of translation when moving between points, a theme that was also taken up in the magazine by Adrian Piper and Hannah Weiner.[15] In Weiner's Issue 4 poem 'Follow Me', the end of poem sends the reader straight back to the beginning.[15] Conceptual poet Emmett Williams' work 'Musica' itemises the seven most common nouns in Dante's poem 'The Divine Comedy' and logs the words repeatedly.[5] From this issue onwards, the range of artists contributing to 0 to 9 widens: it includes composers and artists, especially those who moved between genres.[12] Issue 4 is also notable for being the first time Acconci and Mayer offered a formal subscription to the magazine - $4 for four issues.[12]

Author of piece Title of piece
Clark Coolidge NOTHING I - XIII
Harry Mathews THE NORDIC DISCIPLINES (part 3 of COLETTE)
John Giorno GROOVY AND LINDA
Steve Paxton SATISFYIN LOVER
Emmett Williams m u s i c a
Bernadette Mayer POEMS, ONE THING
Lord Herbert of Cherbury MELANDER ("SUPPOSED TO LOVE SUSAN BUT DID LOVE ANN")
Anonymous POEM
Lord Stirling "AN ECHO" from "AURORA"
Vito Hannibal Acconci POEMS
Jackson Mac Low biblical poems
Larry Freifeld QUESTION AND ANSWER POEM JOB #2460
Barrett Shaw POEM
Dick Higgins POEMS
Bern Porter POEMS
Sol LeWitt DRAWINGS
Hannah Weiner POEMS
Dan Graham DISCRETE SCHEME WITHOUT MEMORY
George Bowering NO TIME LEFT
John Perreault POEMS
Phil Corner THREE WORKS
Rosemary Mayer DRAWING

0 to 9 ISSUE 5 (5 January 1969) edit

Issue 5 of 0 to 9 is most well known for being the first time Sol LeWitt's 'Sentences on Conceptual Art' was published. This piece became one of the most widely cited artists' writings of the 1960s, exploring the relationship between art, practice and art criticism.[16]

In Issue 5, artist Adrian Piper used the magazine to experiment with paper as a material surface. Her untitled work in the issue involved numbering two grid squares from 1 - 64 and then verbally mapping all the ways the paths between the numbers could be explored.[27]

Choreographer and dancer Yvonne Rainer also contributed to the issue; her piece 'Lecture for a group of expectant people' explored the movements a single part of the body can make.[5]

Issue 5 also saw the start of 0 To 9's art move from the page to the streets of New York. The piece 'The Fashion Show Poetry Event Essay' accompanied a catwalk show, where Alex Katz, Les Levine, Claes Oldenburg and Andy Warhol designed clothing in response to poetry written by Eduardo Costa, John Perreault, and Hannah Weiner.[15]

Author of piece Title of piece
Sol LeWitt SENTENCES ON CONCEPTUAL ART
Richard Johnny John and Jerome Rothenberg SENECA SONGS
Robert Smithson NON-SITE MAP OF MONO LAKE, CALIFORNIA
John Perreault THREE POETRY EVENTS
Yvonne Rainer LECTURE FOR A GROUP OF EXPECTANT PEOPLE
Bernadette Mayer Untitled
Clark Coolidge SONNET XXI
Clark Coolidge SUITE VII ("triplicates")
Vito Hannibal Acconci Four Pages
Jerome Rothenberg Poem
Hannah Weiner Poems
Les Levine THE DISPOSABLE TRANSIENT ENVIRONMENT
Bernadette Mayer Poem
Adrian Piper Untitled
Adrian Piper Untitled
Eduardo Costa, John Perreault, and Hannah Weiner THE FASHION SHOW POETRY EVENT ESSAY
Kenneth Koch THE CONQUEST OF PIZARRO
Philip Corner I CAN WALK THROUGH THE WORLD AS MUSIC
Jack Anderson Poems
John Perreault SCRAMBLE
John Perreault SONNET  
Vito Hannibal Acconci ACT 3, SCENE 4
Clark Coolidge WARHOL
Rosemary Mayer FIRECRACKERS
John Inslee Poem
Bernadette Mayer MOON IN THREE SENTENCES
John Perreault ALTERNATIVES

0 to 9 ISSUE 6 (6 July 1969) edit

In Issue 6 of 0 to 9, Adrian Piper continued her work which began in Issue 5, questioning how translations between spaces can be conveyed and the role of the reader in this process.[15][27] Hannah Weiner wrote directly to the reader, asking for their input on questions of space and providing an address to reply to.[15][27]

In this issue, which Mayer edited with Acconci, two pieces by artist Robert Barry were included: 'The Space Between Pages 29 & 30' and The Space Between Pages 74 & 75'. These blank pieces only exist in the table of contents, which critics have argued helps to model imaginative space for readers, who can extend the works by thinking through the implied possibilities.[28]

0 to 9 ended after its sixth issue because Mayer and Acconci found it too difficult to maintain the magazine both creatively and financially, despite profit never being their main goal.[5] When asked about the end of 0 To 9 in an interview, Acconci responded "Why was it the last issue? It had to be - I wasn't on the page anymore."[29]

Writer Kate Linker, who discusses 0 to 9 in the wider context of Acconci's career, notes that by 1969 the artist's interests had changed away from print: "Steadily, Acconci's works were moving towards the materialization of activity, inscribing the artist's presence in duration and extension."[7]

Author of piece Title of piece
Jasper Johns SKETCHBOOK NOTES
Yvonne Rainer auotomatic writing from my movies
Alan Sondheim ON MACHINES
Lee Lozano DIALOGUE PIECE
Lawrence Weiner
Steve Paxton STATE
Vito Acconci CONTACTS/CONTEXTS (FRAME OF REFERENCE) : ten pages of reading Roget's Thesaurus (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1965)
Bernar Venet PROPOSITION FOR A PLAY
Robert Barry The Space Between Pages 29&30
Dan Graham EISENHOWER AND THE HIPPIES
Philip Corner [Untitled work]
John Giorno [Untitled work]
Douglas Heubler [Untitled work]
John Perreault SOLO (A DANCE)
Lee Lozano GENERAL STRIKE PIECE
Robert Smithson Map
Karen Pirups-Hvarre [Untitled work]
Michael Heizer NINE NEVADA DEPRESSIONS
Clark Coolidge Pages from SUITE V
Robert Barry The Space Between Pages 74&75
Bernadette Mayer DEFINITIONS AT THE CENTER OF THE NEWSPAPER, JUNE 13, 1969
Adrian Piper [Untitled work]
Nels Richardson (WHITE DWARF)
Larry Fagin FOR DON JUDD
Rosemary Mayer [Untitled work]
Douglas Heubler [Untitled work]
Bern Porter [Untitled work]
Hannah Weiner TRANS-SPACE COMMUNICATION
Robert Smithson UPSIDE DOWN TREE
Adrian Piper [Untitled work]
Rosemary Mayer [Untitled work]
Dan Graham [Untitled work]
Bernadette Mayer X ON PAGE 50
Sol LeWitt [Untitled work]

Supplements edit

0 To 9 ISSUE 6 SUPPLEMENT edit

Titled Street Works, this supplement was a document of public performances by artists and poets with the same title. Each contributor submitted a specific number of copies of his or her work to be collated by the editors. Organised by John Perreault, Marjorie Strider and Hannah Weiner, Street Works took place in New York in March, April, May and September 1969 utilising urban space as context for action.[12]

Contributors: Vito Acconci; Scott Burton; Rosemary Mayer; Adrian Piper

Editions edit

  • 0 to 9: the complete magazine: 1967-1969 / edited by Vito Acconci & Bernadette Mayer. ISBN 9781933254203. Brooklyn, New York: Ugly Duckling Presse, 2006.[13]

Sources edit

  • Allen, Gwen (2011). Artists' Magazines: An Alternative Space for Art. MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-01519-6. OCLC 636567924.
  • Finkelpearl, Tom (2000). Dialogues in Public Art. MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-56148-8. OCLC 45728232.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Allen 2011, p. 69.
  2. ^ a b Kotecha, Shiv (2012). Before a Viewer: Appearance and Antagonism in the Poetic and Videographic Works of Vito Acconci (Thesis). ProQuest 1029864166.[page needed]
  3. ^ a b Allen 2011, p. 72.
  4. ^ Kennedy, Randy (28 April 2017). "Vito Acconci, Performance Artist and Uncommon Architect, Dies at 77". The New York Times.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Reagan, Caroline (23 March 2020). "Look inside '0-9,' the radically experimental magazine that broke all the rules of language". Document Journal.
  6. ^ Allen 2011, p. 75.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Linker, Kate; Acconci, Vito (1994). Vito Acconci. Rizzoli. ISBN 978-0-8478-1645-3.[page needed]
  8. ^ Allen 2011, p. 77.
  9. ^ a b Finch, Elizabeth (2006). "Review of 0 TO 9: THE COMPLETE MAGAZINE 1967-1969". Art on Paper. 11 (1): 95. JSTOR 24557030.
  10. ^ "Jasper Johns | 0 Through 9". whitney.org. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  11. ^ Dávila, Mela, ed. (2004). Vito Hannibal Acconci Studio. Buch. Barcelona: Museu d'Art Contemporani. ISBN 978-84-95951-71-7.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Roth, Andrew; Aarons, Philip E.; Brand, Victor (2009). In numbers: serial publications by artists since 1955. Zürich: JRP Ringier. ISBN 978-3-03764-085-2.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Acconci, Vito; Mayer, Bernadette, eds. (2006). 0 to 9 : the complete magazine : 1967-1969. Brooklyn, N.Y.: Ugly Duckling Presse. ISBN 1-933254-20-3. OCLC 77517817.[page needed]
  14. ^ "Granary Books" (PDF). Granary Books.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g Olsen, Redell (2002-01-01). "'Simultaneous Equivalents'". Performance Research. 7 (2): 60–65. doi:10.1080/13528165.2002.10871853. ISSN 1352-8165. S2CID 191405670.
  16. ^ a b c Lovatt, Anna (October 2012). "The mechanics of writing: Sol LeWitt, Stéphane Mallarmé and Roland Barthes". Word & Image. 28 (4): 374–383. doi:10.1080/02666286.2012.740187. S2CID 192233226.
  17. ^ a b Allen 2011, p. 71.
  18. ^ Allen 2011, p. 70.
  19. ^ a b c Acconci, Vito; Dworkin, Craig (2006). Language to cover a page: the early writings of Vito Acconci. The MIT Press writing art series. Cambridge, Mass.: The MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-01224-9.
  20. ^ a b Finkelpearl 2000, p. [page needed].
  21. ^ Kennedy, Randy (2016-06-02). "Vito Acconci, an Artist as Influential as He Is Eccentric". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  22. ^ Robinson, Sophie (2013). "Bernadette Mayer". In Hamilton, Ian; Noel-Tod, Jeremy (eds.). The Oxford Companion to Modern Poetry (2nd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 407. ISBN 978-0-19-174452-5. OCLC 869364784.
  23. ^ Clay, Steven; Phillips, Rodney (1998). A secret location on the Lower East Side: adventures in writing, 1960-1980 [exhibition, New York public library, 1998]. New York public library. New York: the New York public library Granary books. ISBN 978-1-887123-19-8.
  24. ^ Brand, Victor (2009). Aarons, Philip (ed.). In Numbers: Serial Publications by Artists since 1955. Switzerland: PPP Editions in association with Andrew Roth. pp. 33–37. ISBN 9780971548077.
  25. ^ "Ugly Duckling Presse: 0 to 9: The Complete Magazine: SPECIAL EDITION". Retrieved 2023-04-28.
  26. ^ Hudson, Suzanne (30 September 2003). "Feedback: Vito Acconci and the Space of His Public". Critical Matrix. 14: 8. ProQuest 89070465.
  27. ^ a b c "0 to 9". 0 to 9 (5). Vito Acconci. 1969. JSTOR community.28031924.
  28. ^ Anderson, Stephanie (2 July 2020). "'The Spaces Between': Bernadette Mayer's Memory and the Interstitial Archive". Lit. 31 (3): 257–277. doi:10.1080/10436928.2020.1790976. S2CID 228135872.
  29. ^ Allen 2011, p. [page needed].

External links edit

literary, magazine, that, published, between, 1967, 1969, edited, vito, acconci, bernadette, mayer, york, city, produced, cheaply, with, small, print, content, explored, issues, around, language, performance, visual, meaning, making, contained, mixture, copyri. 0 to 9 was a literary magazine that was published between 1967 and 1969 edited by Vito Acconci and Bernadette Mayer in New York City 1 Produced cheaply with a small print run 0 to 9 s content explored issues around language performance art visual art and meaning making It contained a mixture of out of copyright material and new work by emerging artists and is viewed as one of the most experimental journals of the mimeograph era 2 0 to 9First issue April 1 1967EditorBernadette Mayer Vito AcconciCategoriesVisual arts avant garde performance artFirst issueApril 1967 57 years ago 1967 04 Final issueJune 1969 54 years ago 1969 06 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglish Contents 1 Background 2 Production 3 Themes 3 1 Art criticism and artists income 3 2 Artists spaces in 1960s New York 3 3 Language 3 4 Rejection of traditional artists methods 4 Impact 5 Legacy 6 Issues of 0 to 9 6 1 0 to 9 ISSUE 1 1 April 1967 6 2 0 to 9 ISSUE 2 August 1967 6 3 0 to 9 ISSUE 3 3 January 1968 6 4 0 to 9 ISSUE 4 4 June 1968 6 5 0 to 9 ISSUE 5 5 January 1969 6 6 0 to 9 ISSUE 6 6 July 1969 7 Supplements 7 1 0 To 9 ISSUE 6 SUPPLEMENT 8 Editions 9 Sources 10 References 11 External linksBackground edit0 To 9 was published in the late 1960s Vito Acconci and Bernadette Mayer were previously unknown poets working in the bohemian outpost of New York s Lower East Side The two were related by marriage Acconci was married to Mayer s sister Rosemary Mayer and both used the magazine to seek out like minded writers and readers and discover new audiences 3 4 Both Acconci and Mayer wanted to use print to explore the limits of language and experiment with typography 5 Acconci and Mayer published experimental poetry utilising procedural verse techniques and found texts to undermine conventional notions of authorship 1 They sought contributions to 0 To 9 from authors that were out of print and out of copyright including the writings of poets Sir Walter Raleigh and Sir Arthur Gorge Novalis Hans Christian Andersen Lord Herbert of Cherbury Lord Stirling Gustave Flaubert Gertrude Stein and Guillaume Apollinaire 6 They also included excerpts from Raymond Queneau s Exercises in Style ninety nine retellings of the same story and Stefan Themerson s translation of Li Po s Drinking Alone by Moonlight Kate Linker noted in her biography of Acconci that these writers were also chosen to be published alongside contemporary texts in a search for predecessors for the new material work of the 1960s 7 Originally 0 To 9 was inspired by Jasper Johns stencil paintings 8 and the magazine s title comes from Johns work 0 Through 9 5 9 10 Acconci and Mayer were inspired by Johns treatment of numbers and letters as physical entities 5 Acconci noted that the magazine s title was a conscious change from Johns work an attempt to view the magazine as an object rather than a message 0 to 9 isn t language so there couldn t be a language mistake 0 to 9 is an icon 0 to 9 is advertising 5 Acconci also claimed that the magazine s numerical title had more to do with trying to avoid expression and trying to get some cold neutral system of language 11 12 Production editDue to cheap rent many artists shared space in New York City in the 1960s increasing artistic production and collaboration 5 Initially Acconci and Mayer approached the New York School of Poets about their intention to produce a magazine when they declined to be involved claiming the ideas were too obscure Acconci and Mayer decided to embrace DIY press instead 5 Mayer found a mimeograph in her then boyfriend s father s office and used it to produce 0 To 9 12 The production process was slow everything had to be meticulously typed then the ink was left to dry on stencil film between the padding and backing sheets 5 The magazine s production often took place at night when the office holding the mimeograph machine was closed 13 12 0 To 9 had a small print run of between 100 and 350 copies per issue 14 Each issue was stapled together by hand on cheap xeroxed paper 5 15 Acconci and Mayer then took copies of the magazine to independent booksellers including Eighth Street Gotham Book Mart Sheridan Square and the East Side Bookstore or mailed them to artists and subscribers 5 12 They charged 1 per issue 5 0 To 9 followed in the footsteps of other Greenwich Village self published magazines including Ted Berrigan s C Magazine John Ashbery s Art amp Literature and Fuck You by Ed Sanders 12 Many of the contributions from living artists were friends of Acconci and Mayer some artists approached including Buckminster Fuller and John Cage declined to contribute 12 Themes editArt criticism and artists income editThe focus on words and wordplay in the magazine reflected a vast increase in artists writing and activity throughout the 1960s criticism of art helped to provide income for artists as well as the ability to get their messages out to a wider audience Anna Lovatt has noted this in the work of Sol LeWitt who contributed to 0 To 9 For LeWitt s generation of artists the first for whom a university education was not uncommon criticism provided a means of financial support and the opportunity to address a broader audience via a proliferation of new art magazines 16 When the journal Artforum moved its office to New York in 1967 it helped to promote art criticism to even wider audiences 5 Artists spaces in 1960s New York edit 0 To 9 was a rejection of traditional artistic venues Six issues were published with a variety of themes and covers 17 The magazines reflected shared social spaces in which artists and poets met and exchanged ideas pieces are spread throughout the magazine between contributors and frequently one work is spread between others in the issue 18 Language edit 0 To 9 also echoed wider fears in the art community that art was being dematerialized into language alone 15 Language work by Joseph Kosuth Lawrence Weiner and Robert Barry was also becoming more prominent in New York art galleries and exhibitions demonstrating an increasingly aesthetic environment for artists 7 These works helped Acconci and others to see the art space as an open field that was open to experimentation and importations from other areas 7 In 0 To 9 meaning is hidden in plain sight and the magazine often plays with form to redefine the process of meaning making 5 This can be seen in Acconci s rejection letter to a 0 To 9 submission from Hugh Fox on 4 September 1968 Not the kind of thing 0 to 9 is out for for me there s too much emphasis on message here not enough on the space of the page 19 Rejection of traditional artists methods editAcconci was inspired to create work that consciously reacted against traditional art norms It was that blank wall that museum as a repository of blank walls that was the impetus for many people in my generation to make art we made art as a reaction to as a rebellion against the clean white space We made art as a reaction against the Do not touch signs in the museum 20 Impact editAlongside the journal Art Language 0 To 9 became a critical part of the linguistic turn that conceptual art underwent during the 1960s as well as literature most clearly seen in the concrete poetry genre and works by Samuel Beckett 16 19 Legacy editThe shift made in 0 To 9 from visual art to public performance art reflected Acconci s own transition from writer to performer by the magazine s final issue in 1969 Acconci was conceiving and documenting performances almost daily 20 21 This shift was in part due to Acconci realising that speaking poetry out loud is itself a transformation from the page to physical space 7 Acconci noted that the shift to street performance seen in the magazine changed the nature of the work permanently Once 0 To 9 had hit the streets it couldn t go back to the page 13 12 After 0 To 9 Mayer s career as a poet continued she taught writing workshops at St Marks Poetry Project for many years and published her work extensively 22 According to critics 0 To 9 can be seen as the most radically eclectic journal of the mimeograph revolution 23 19 It cut through many different disciplines history and culture to explore language 2 0 To 9 s experimentation with meaning and format echo issues that are debated today its focus on how language evolves reflexively and the role of data are themes we currently explore in the digital era 5 7 As writer Victor Brand notes 0 to 9 created a niche that can now be located at the beginings of the Language and performance poetry movements 24 In 2006 Ugly Duckling Presse reprinted 0 To 9 including its supplements in one single edition 13 Acconci and Mayer added a preface and commentary to the reprint 9 A special edition of the work was also printed where each issue of 0 To 9 was staple bound in the style of the original issues 25 Issues of 0 to 9 edit0 to 9 ISSUE 1 1 April 1967 edit An uncut mimeograph stencil was used as the cover to the first issue to show the materiality of the magazine through its printing process 17 Acconci recalled we hoped that the people we distributed it to would contribute to it 3 Author of piece Title of piece Sir Arthur Gorges and Sir Walter Raleigh Poem Anonymous THE ROUND TRIP OF ICE from NEHALEM TILLAMOOK TALES Vito Hannibal Acconci KAY PRICE AND STELLA PAJUNAS Edoardo Sanguineti ALPHABETUM Bruce Marcus Poems Hans Christian Andersen TWO BROWN EYES Bernadette Mayer BOTTLE Novalis from HEINRICH VON OFTERDINGEN Robert Viscusi DODECAHEDRON Morton Feldman Interview V C Alexander THE MAGIC STAIRWAY from STORY GAMES FOR EVERYBODY 0 to 9 ISSUE 2 August 1967 edit Author of piece Title of piece Robert Walser Kleist in Thun Bernadette Mayer Poems Anonymous Andemanese Song Anonymous Australian Songs Anonymous Dama Song Anonymous Eskimo Songs Anonymous Semang Song Gertrude Stein IN Anonymous BILL S EPITAPH Judy Schiff Daniel O Sullivan Rosemary Mayer Drawings Raymond Queneau from EXERCISES IN STYLE Vito Hannibal Acconci TWELVE MINUTES Aram Saroyan Poems Thomas Clark Plays Ron Padgett LIMOUSINE Stefan Themerson from BAYAMUS 0 to 9 ISSUE 3 3 January 1968 edit From Issue 3 of 0 to 9 onwards Acconci began to use the magazine to experiment with the concept of interruption 26 His poem On whilst a single work is scattered throughout the issue in between other writings 13 Author of piece Title of piece Clark Coolidge Poem Vito Hannibal Acconci ON Guillaume Apollinaire POETRY Aram Saroyan Poem Robert Greene A pleasant Tale of a man that was married to sixteene Wiues and how courteously his last wife intreated him Aram Saroyan Poem Aram Saroyan Poem Bernadette Mayer Poems Aram Saroyan Poem Gustave Flaubert CARNAC Aram Saroyan Poem John Giorno GOLDEN CYCLE Aram Saroyan Poem William McGonagall Poems Aram Saroyan Poem Aram Saroyan Poem Clark Coolidge Six Works Bruce Marcus Trainor pursues the of a sexless friend Ron Padgett amp Ted Berrigan INNER LANDSCAPES 0 to 9 ISSUE 4 4 June 1968 edit The cover of every copy of 0 to 9 Issue 4 was a softback book case from Acconci s or Mayer s own library 13 In Issue 4 of 0 to 9 Bernadette Mayer explored issues of translation when moving between points a theme that was also taken up in the magazine by Adrian Piper and Hannah Weiner 15 In Weiner s Issue 4 poem Follow Me the end of poem sends the reader straight back to the beginning 15 Conceptual poet Emmett Williams work Musica itemises the seven most common nouns in Dante s poem The Divine Comedy and logs the words repeatedly 5 From this issue onwards the range of artists contributing to 0 to 9 widens it includes composers and artists especially those who moved between genres 12 Issue 4 is also notable for being the first time Acconci and Mayer offered a formal subscription to the magazine 4 for four issues 12 Author of piece Title of piece Clark Coolidge NOTHING I XIII Harry Mathews THE NORDIC DISCIPLINES part 3 of COLETTE John Giorno GROOVY AND LINDA Steve Paxton SATISFYIN LOVER Emmett Williams m u s i c a Bernadette Mayer POEMS ONE THING Lord Herbert of Cherbury MELANDER SUPPOSED TO LOVE SUSAN BUT DID LOVE ANN Anonymous POEM Lord Stirling AN ECHO from AURORA Vito Hannibal Acconci POEMS Jackson Mac Low biblical poems Larry Freifeld QUESTION AND ANSWER POEM JOB 2460 Barrett Shaw POEM Dick Higgins POEMS Bern Porter POEMS Sol LeWitt DRAWINGS Hannah Weiner POEMS Dan Graham DISCRETE SCHEME WITHOUT MEMORY George Bowering NO TIME LEFT John Perreault POEMS Phil Corner THREE WORKS Rosemary Mayer DRAWING 0 to 9 ISSUE 5 5 January 1969 edit Issue 5 of 0 to 9 is most well known for being the first time Sol LeWitt s Sentences on Conceptual Art was published This piece became one of the most widely cited artists writings of the 1960s exploring the relationship between art practice and art criticism 16 In Issue 5 artist Adrian Piper used the magazine to experiment with paper as a material surface Her untitled work in the issue involved numbering two grid squares from 1 64 and then verbally mapping all the ways the paths between the numbers could be explored 27 Choreographer and dancer Yvonne Rainer also contributed to the issue her piece Lecture for a group of expectant people explored the movements a single part of the body can make 5 Issue 5 also saw the start of 0 To 9 s art move from the page to the streets of New York The piece The Fashion Show Poetry Event Essay accompanied a catwalk show where Alex Katz Les Levine Claes Oldenburg and Andy Warhol designed clothing in response to poetry written by Eduardo Costa John Perreault and Hannah Weiner 15 Author of piece Title of piece Sol LeWitt SENTENCES ON CONCEPTUAL ART Richard Johnny John and Jerome Rothenberg SENECA SONGS Robert Smithson NON SITE MAP OF MONO LAKE CALIFORNIA John Perreault THREE POETRY EVENTS Yvonne Rainer LECTURE FOR A GROUP OF EXPECTANT PEOPLE Bernadette Mayer Untitled Clark Coolidge SONNET XXI Clark Coolidge SUITE VII triplicates Vito Hannibal Acconci Four Pages Jerome Rothenberg Poem Hannah Weiner Poems Les Levine THE DISPOSABLE TRANSIENT ENVIRONMENT Bernadette Mayer Poem Adrian Piper Untitled Adrian Piper Untitled Eduardo Costa John Perreault and Hannah Weiner THE FASHION SHOW POETRY EVENT ESSAY Kenneth Koch THE CONQUEST OF PIZARRO Philip Corner I CAN WALK THROUGH THE WORLD AS MUSIC Jack Anderson Poems John Perreault SCRAMBLE John Perreault SONNET Vito Hannibal Acconci ACT 3 SCENE 4 Clark Coolidge WARHOL Rosemary Mayer FIRECRACKERS John Inslee Poem Bernadette Mayer MOON IN THREE SENTENCES John Perreault ALTERNATIVES 0 to 9 ISSUE 6 6 July 1969 edit In Issue 6 of 0 to 9 Adrian Piper continued her work which began in Issue 5 questioning how translations between spaces can be conveyed and the role of the reader in this process 15 27 Hannah Weiner wrote directly to the reader asking for their input on questions of space and providing an address to reply to 15 27 In this issue which Mayer edited with Acconci two pieces by artist Robert Barry were included The Space Between Pages 29 amp 30 and The Space Between Pages 74 amp 75 These blank pieces only exist in the table of contents which critics have argued helps to model imaginative space for readers who can extend the works by thinking through the implied possibilities 28 0 to 9 ended after its sixth issue because Mayer and Acconci found it too difficult to maintain the magazine both creatively and financially despite profit never being their main goal 5 When asked about the end of 0 To 9 in an interview Acconci responded Why was it the last issue It had to be I wasn t on the page anymore 29 Writer Kate Linker who discusses 0 to 9 in the wider context of Acconci s career notes that by 1969 the artist s interests had changed away from print Steadily Acconci s works were moving towards the materialization of activity inscribing the artist s presence in duration and extension 7 Author of piece Title of piece Jasper Johns SKETCHBOOK NOTES Yvonne Rainer auotomatic writing from my movies Alan Sondheim ON MACHINES Lee Lozano DIALOGUE PIECE Lawrence Weiner Steve Paxton STATE Vito Acconci CONTACTS CONTEXTS FRAME OF REFERENCE ten pages of reading Roget s Thesaurus New York St Martin s Press 1965 Bernar Venet PROPOSITION FOR A PLAY Robert Barry The Space Between Pages 29 amp 30 Dan Graham EISENHOWER AND THE HIPPIES Philip Corner Untitled work John Giorno Untitled work Douglas Heubler Untitled work John Perreault SOLO A DANCE Lee Lozano GENERAL STRIKE PIECE Robert Smithson Map Karen Pirups Hvarre Untitled work Michael Heizer NINE NEVADA DEPRESSIONS Clark Coolidge Pages from SUITE V Robert Barry The Space Between Pages 74 amp 75 Bernadette Mayer DEFINITIONS AT THE CENTER OF THE NEWSPAPER JUNE 13 1969 Adrian Piper Untitled work Nels Richardson WHITE DWARF Larry Fagin FOR DON JUDD Rosemary Mayer Untitled work Douglas Heubler Untitled work Bern Porter Untitled work Hannah Weiner TRANS SPACE COMMUNICATION Robert Smithson UPSIDE DOWN TREE Adrian Piper Untitled work Rosemary Mayer Untitled work Dan Graham Untitled work Bernadette Mayer X ON PAGE 50 Sol LeWitt Untitled work Supplements edit0 To 9 ISSUE 6 SUPPLEMENT edit Titled Street Works this supplement was a document of public performances by artists and poets with the same title Each contributor submitted a specific number of copies of his or her work to be collated by the editors Organised by John Perreault Marjorie Strider and Hannah Weiner Street Works took place in New York in March April May and September 1969 utilising urban space as context for action 12 Contributors Vito Acconci Scott Burton Rosemary Mayer Adrian PiperEditions edit0 to 9 the complete magazine 1967 1969 edited by Vito Acconci amp Bernadette Mayer ISBN 9781933254203 Brooklyn New York Ugly Duckling Presse 2006 13 Sources editAllen Gwen 2011 Artists Magazines An Alternative Space for Art MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 01519 6 OCLC 636567924 Finkelpearl Tom 2000 Dialogues in Public Art MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 56148 8 OCLC 45728232 References edit a b Allen 2011 p 69 a b Kotecha Shiv 2012 Before a Viewer Appearance and Antagonism in the Poetic and Videographic Works of Vito Acconci Thesis ProQuest 1029864166 page needed a b Allen 2011 p 72 Kennedy Randy 28 April 2017 Vito Acconci Performance Artist and Uncommon Architect Dies at 77 The New York Times a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Reagan Caroline 23 March 2020 Look inside 0 9 the radically experimental magazine that broke all the rules of language Document Journal Allen 2011 p 75 a b c d e f Linker Kate Acconci Vito 1994 Vito Acconci Rizzoli ISBN 978 0 8478 1645 3 page needed Allen 2011 p 77 a b Finch Elizabeth 2006 Review of 0 TO 9 THE COMPLETE MAGAZINE 1967 1969 Art on Paper 11 1 95 JSTOR 24557030 Jasper Johns 0 Through 9 whitney org Retrieved 2023 05 02 Davila Mela ed 2004 Vito Hannibal Acconci Studio Buch Barcelona Museu d Art Contemporani ISBN 978 84 95951 71 7 a b c d e f g h i j Roth Andrew Aarons Philip E Brand Victor 2009 In numbers serial publications by artists since 1955 Zurich JRP Ringier ISBN 978 3 03764 085 2 a b c d e f Acconci Vito Mayer Bernadette eds 2006 0 to 9 the complete magazine 1967 1969 Brooklyn N Y Ugly Duckling Presse ISBN 1 933254 20 3 OCLC 77517817 page needed Granary Books PDF Granary Books a b c d e f g Olsen Redell 2002 01 01 Simultaneous Equivalents Performance Research 7 2 60 65 doi 10 1080 13528165 2002 10871853 ISSN 1352 8165 S2CID 191405670 a b c Lovatt Anna October 2012 The mechanics of writing Sol LeWitt Stephane Mallarme and Roland Barthes Word amp Image 28 4 374 383 doi 10 1080 02666286 2012 740187 S2CID 192233226 a b Allen 2011 p 71 Allen 2011 p 70 a b c Acconci Vito Dworkin Craig 2006 Language to cover a page the early writings of Vito Acconci The MIT Press writing art series Cambridge Mass The MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 01224 9 a b Finkelpearl 2000 p page needed Kennedy Randy 2016 06 02 Vito Acconci an Artist as Influential as He Is Eccentric The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 05 02 Robinson Sophie 2013 Bernadette Mayer In Hamilton Ian Noel Tod Jeremy eds The Oxford Companion to Modern Poetry 2nd ed Oxford Oxford University Press p 407 ISBN 978 0 19 174452 5 OCLC 869364784 Clay Steven Phillips Rodney 1998 A secret location on the Lower East Side adventures in writing 1960 1980 exhibition New York public library 1998 New York public library New York the New York public library Granary books ISBN 978 1 887123 19 8 Brand Victor 2009 Aarons Philip ed In Numbers Serial Publications by Artists since 1955 Switzerland PPP Editions in association with Andrew Roth pp 33 37 ISBN 9780971548077 Ugly Duckling Presse 0 to 9 The Complete Magazine SPECIAL EDITION Retrieved 2023 04 28 Hudson Suzanne 30 September 2003 Feedback Vito Acconci and the Space of His Public Critical Matrix 14 8 ProQuest 89070465 a b c 0 to 9 0 to 9 5 Vito Acconci 1969 JSTOR community 28031924 Anderson Stephanie 2 July 2020 The Spaces Between Bernadette Mayer s Memory and the Interstitial Archive Lit 31 3 257 277 doi 10 1080 10436928 2020 1790976 S2CID 228135872 Allen 2011 p page needed External links edit0 To 9 magazine held in the Small Press collections at University College London 0 To 9 magazine incomplete digitized collection at JSTOR 0 To 9 archive at the Fales Library and Special Collections New York Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 0 to 9 amp oldid 1219961661, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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