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A showcard is simply a card containing a tradesman's advertisement of goods -- usually combining text and image. Water-based showcard (or 'poster') paints are often bright and eye-catching. And there are also show biz and showcase, the latter a glass case for exhibiting delicate and valuable articles in a shop or museum. All these references inflect upon General Idea's open-ended series of standardized silkscreened cards with mounted glossy photographs and stamped and handwritten text. Dating from 1975 to 1979, they are a publication prototype of idiosyncratic graphic design; they are also a collection of theses, an intellectual proposition, a diary. Like much of the production of General Idea, they blend art and life, performance and revelation. Formally they seem to be a book's layout sheets, but they remain nevertheless a series of single units; like much of the textual content of the series, their future remains latent.
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"Showcards, an installation to celebrate the donation, by General Idea, of 152 showcards to the Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography in 1993, was shown at CMCP, Ottawa, from Feb. 2 to Apr. 10, 1994." - t.p. verso.
Includes bibliographical references.
Text in English with French Translation at the end.
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- Created October 23, 2008
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August 30, 2024 | Edited by MARC Bot | import existing book |
December 7, 2020 | Edited by MARC Bot | import existing book |
December 15, 2009 | Edited by WorkBot | link works |
October 23, 2008 | Created by ImportBot | Imported from University of Toronto MARC record |