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Revolution as an Eternal Dream: the Exemplary Failure of the Madame Binh Graphics Collective

Artist
Mary Patten
Price
$14.00
Date
2011
Publisher
Half Letter Press
Format
Artists' Books
ISBN
978-0-9818023-1-2
Size
14 × 21.5 × 0.7 cm
Length
84 
Description

By Mary Patten, with a preface by Lucy Lippard and an afterword by Gregory Sholette. Designed by Heather Anderson.

Revolution as an Eternal Dream: the Exemplary Failure of the Madame Binh Graphics Collective (MBGC) examines the political practice and visual propaganda of a now-obscure women’s poster, printmaking, and street art collective based in New York City between 1975 and 1983. For a brief, intense period of time, the MBGC collaborated on projects against racism and in solidarity with national liberation movements, producing many beautiful multicolored silkscreened prints, note cards, banners, posters, and other print ephemera before withdrawing into the isolation of a sectarian and militaristic political line. By 1982 its core members were in prison or underground. Revolution as an Eternal Dream calls up the perpetual desire for revolution, but also the frailty of such dreams.

From the Preface by Lucy Lippard:

“Mary Patten’s penetrating discussion of her longtime commitment to the May 19th Communist organization and its somewhat independent graphics wing, the Madame Binh Graphics Collective, carries history lessons for political artists confined to art world contexts as well as for the sectarian Left. Although fragile alliances were formed in the 1970s and 1980s, the MBGC never trusted the art world, with good reason… Acting on the fringes of the Left as well as the fringes of the political art scene, MBGC forged ahead and made some stunning graphics in an era that excelled in that medium… Patten tells the story of a web of alliances and support that exemplifies the diversity of “political” art making in a period that today seems even more distant than it really is.”

Read what others are saying:

It is all too rare to see social movement history interwoven with art history—so what a pleasure it is to read Mary Patten’s memoir, which does exactly that. Patten recounts, through short essays paired with full-color graphics reproductions, her days in the May 19th Communist organization, working with particular commitment in the graphics and propaganda subcommittee known as the Madame Binh Graphics Collective from 1975 to 1983.

- Book Review: Revolution as an Eternal Dream by Mary Patten, by Daniel Tucker, Afterimage Vol. 39 No. 5, Spring 2012

Revolution as an Eternal Dream makes an important contribution to an ongoing conversation between left artists. Bringing it to fruition was a labor of love that involved many artists and cultural workers across the U.S. […] For Patten, the “tiny ‘art world left’ seems to provide the only nexus of spaces, ideas, and projects that can invigorate possibility, point to unmet needs, and sustain hope.” If revolution is an eternal dream, as the Zapatista-inspired title suggests, maybe waking up won’t help us. Dream on tiny art world left!

- Graphic Uprising, by Eric Triantafillou, The Brooklyn Rail, May, 2012

  1. Revolution as an Eternal Dream: the Exemplary Failure of the Mad
 

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