Payment Methods Accepted
About This Item
Arcata, CA: Bug Press, 1977. First Edition. Fine. A collection of reproductions of Wong's Human Instamatic drawings of people and places in and around Eureka, California. Mostly printed offset in black; a few have an overprinting in red for his chop. One reproduces Wong's "Human Instamatic" blindstamp. Wong lived in Old Town, Eureka, at the time this book was published, and his exuberant drawings of the run-down sections of Eureka show his clear love of shabby splendor. He would take that aesthetic appreciation to New York, where his greatest works would document the Lower East Side.
Wong was a late-20th century artist whose influence has grown markedly in the last decade. Wong (1946-1999) was born in Portland, Oregon; raised in San Francisco's Chinatown; earned a degree in ceramics at Humboldt State University; lived in the Eureka area from about 1965 to about 1978, when he moved to New York. While in Eureka, Wong began painting but was best-known for his drawings. He called himself the Human Instamatic and drew portraits and local scenes with quick, fluid, organic lines.
When Wong died of AIDS, in 1999, he was known and respected by a small group of artists, collectors, and dealers. In the two decades since his death, his reputation and influence have blossomed with several published monographs, a traveling exhibition, skyrocketing auction prices, and tributes from other artists. In 2022, the first of his paintings to reach $1 million in a public sale crossed the auction block.
ARTnews named Danh Vo's "I M U U R 2", an installation of Martin Wong's belongings at the Guggenheim, as one of the most important works of art made in the 2010 decade. An international traveling exhibition is scheduled for 2023, to be accompanied by a large monograph that will explore Wong's queer identity, the way he incorporated Chinese art influences into his work, and how graffiti and calligraphy influenced his drawings and paintings.
Eureka is a very uncommon book. In twenty-five years of serious looking in and around Eureka, this is the fourth copy we've handled. OCLC locates two copies (one of which was previously sold by your humble bookseller; the second is Wong's own copy).
13 by 11 inches (oblong). [i], 1-10, ["Table Bluff"], 12-31 leaves, printed front side (rectos) only and plastic comb-bound across the top edge. Reproducing a total of 32 Wong drawings, including one printed next to John Ross's introduction. One might think of this as a collection of original prints, selected and produced by the artist.
OCLC: 59280837. A fine copy but for the slightest of edgewear; the nicest copy of this fragile book that I have seen in twenty years of active searching for this book. Virtually as new.
Wong was a late-20th century artist whose influence has grown markedly in the last decade. Wong (1946-1999) was born in Portland, Oregon; raised in San Francisco's Chinatown; earned a degree in ceramics at Humboldt State University; lived in the Eureka area from about 1965 to about 1978, when he moved to New York. While in Eureka, Wong began painting but was best-known for his drawings. He called himself the Human Instamatic and drew portraits and local scenes with quick, fluid, organic lines.
When Wong died of AIDS, in 1999, he was known and respected by a small group of artists, collectors, and dealers. In the two decades since his death, his reputation and influence have blossomed with several published monographs, a traveling exhibition, skyrocketing auction prices, and tributes from other artists. In 2022, the first of his paintings to reach $1 million in a public sale crossed the auction block.
ARTnews named Danh Vo's "I M U U R 2", an installation of Martin Wong's belongings at the Guggenheim, as one of the most important works of art made in the 2010 decade. An international traveling exhibition is scheduled for 2023, to be accompanied by a large monograph that will explore Wong's queer identity, the way he incorporated Chinese art influences into his work, and how graffiti and calligraphy influenced his drawings and paintings.
Eureka is a very uncommon book. In twenty-five years of serious looking in and around Eureka, this is the fourth copy we've handled. OCLC locates two copies (one of which was previously sold by your humble bookseller; the second is Wong's own copy).
13 by 11 inches (oblong). [i], 1-10, ["Table Bluff"], 12-31 leaves, printed front side (rectos) only and plastic comb-bound across the top edge. Reproducing a total of 32 Wong drawings, including one printed next to John Ross's introduction. One might think of this as a collection of original prints, selected and produced by the artist.
OCLC: 59280837. A fine copy but for the slightest of edgewear; the nicest copy of this fragile book that I have seen in twenty years of active searching for this book. Virtually as new.
Reviews
(Log in or Create an Account first!)
Details
- Bookseller
- Downtown Brown Books, ABAA (US)
- Bookseller's Inventory #
- 362935
- Title
- Eureka
- Author
- Wong, Martin
- Book Condition
- Used - Fine
- Quantity Available
- 1
- Edition
- First Edition
- Publisher
- Bug Press
- Place of Publication
- Arcata, CA
- Date Published
- 1977
- Keywords
- misc06
Terms of Sale
Downtown Brown Books, ABAA
All items are guaranteed as described and may be returned within 30 days for a refund. If the item arrives damaged or does not match the description, we'll refund the purchase price plus shipping.
About the Seller
Downtown Brown Books, ABAA
Biblio member since 2019
Portland, Oregon
About Downtown Brown Books, ABAA
Every book holds a clue. Shop open to the public by appointment only.
Glossary
Some terminology that may be used in this description includes:
- New
- A new book is a book previously not circulated to a buyer. Although a new book is typically free of any faults or defects, "new"...
- Leaves
- Very generally, "leaves" refers to the pages of a book, as in the common phrase, "loose-leaf pages." A leaf is a single sheet...
- Offset
- A technique of printing where the inked image or text is ...
- Blindstamp
- A blindstamp is a stamped impression, usually an image, logo, words, or design on the cover or spine of a book, without color or...
- First Edition
- In book collecting, the first edition is the earliest published form of a book. A book may have more than one first edition in...
- Fine
- A book in fine condition exhibits no flaws. A fine condition book closely approaches As New condition, but may lack the...