Verlag: GMT Games, 1999
Anbieter: Noble Knight Games, Fitchburg, WI, USA
Zustand: New. GMT Games American Revolution Series American Revolution Tri-Pack (Monmouth, Germantown, Newtown) (SW (MINT/New))Manufacturer: GMT GamesProduct Line: American Revolution SeriesType: Box SetCode: GMT2503Copyright Date: 2025Author: Mark MiklosPlease review the condition and any condition notes for the exact condition of this item. All pictures are stock photos. The condition of the item you will receive is SW (MINT/New). Our grading system is explained in the terms of sale section of our bookseller page. Please feel free to contact us with any questions. Product Description:GMT Games and designer Mark Miklos are happy to announce the long awaited and much anticipated second Tri-Pack in the award winning Battles of the American Revolution series. You spoke, and we listened. Hundreds of players responded to polls conducted on various social media and other sites, and the votes are in. You asked for Monmouth Courthouse, Germantown, and Newtown to be included in American Revolution Tri-Pack #2, and we are proud to bring them to you.All games will feature hard-mounted maps and the deluxe, thick-cut counters that are the hallmark of GMT quality components. Player aids and rulebooks will be printed in color. Each game will feature all replacement counters that have been issued for it over the years, so your sets will be the most complete and up to date available.New features will include a 1-page matrix-style player aid listing all the unique capabilities for the Indian player in Newtown, making it easier to keep up with those capabilities without having to refer to the rule book. The Battle of Oriskany, the bonus game included with Newtown, features a new scenario in which General Benedict Arnold leads a relief force to the rescue of Fort Stanwix and introduces opportunity cards to the game for the first time. Also included in the Tri-Pack is the Solitaire Tactics Card player aid designed by Joel Toppen that was released in C3i magazine Nr 22. Players have found this tool most helpful when playing BoAR games solitaire. Finally, the Germantown rulebook will receive a needed upgrade to clarify some ambiguities in the original rule set.Just as with the first Tri-Pack that featured Saratoga, Brandywine, and Guilford Courthouse/Eutaw Springs, players will get three titles that actually include four distinct battles with multiple scenarios. This is a real value and an excellent way to complete or upgrade your collection. American Revolution Tri-Pack #2 will afford you hours upon hours of replay value as you chase the secret sauce of complete victory in these classic American Revolutionary War battles.
Verlag: Form Magazine 1966-1969, Cambridge, 1966
Anbieter: William Allen Word & Image, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
Erstausgabe
EUR 1.014,61
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbPaperback. Zustand: Very Good + / Near Fine. 1st Edition. FORM MAGAZINE. Complete set: Issues 1-10. (Summer) 1966- (October )1969.The most significant British magazine of the 60s concentrating on pure abstraction and through this art theory, architecture, avant-garde magazines et al. Interest in FORM itself has grown in recent years: while studying for his Ph.D. the Portuguese architect Joaquim Moreno made a particular study of the magazine, contending that it is essentially a magazine about little magazines of the avant-garde. Moreno was part of the research group that produced 'Clip Stamp Fold' (M + M books, Princeton, 2011), which features interviews with Bann and Steadman. Issues often include a Great Little Magazines section. Each issue is about 9.5 inches square, illustrated, with 32pp (apart from one issue with 36pp). Number 1: Contents includes Film as Pure form by Theo Van Doesburg (first translation of 1929 essay), The Activity of Structuralism by Roland Barthes, Experimental Aesthetics by Carlyn Cumming, essay on Fernand Leger, Great Little Magazines No.1 : Secession with work by William Carlos Williams, Hans Arp Yvor Winters / Number 2: Contents includes Le Parc and The Group Problem by Frank Popper; A Little Night Music by Charles Tomlinson; Articles by Gillo Dorfles; Poem by Charles Tomlinson; William Carlos Williams on Emanuel Romano. Great Little Magazines No.2: Blues with work by Gertrude Stein, Sidney Hunt, Parker Tyler, Kenneth Rexroth, Charles Henri Ford./ Number 3: Contents includes Poems by Ian Hamilton Finlay, Ernst Jandl, Paul de Vree, Kenneth Robinson. Articles on and by Charles Biederman and 'The Electrical -Mechanical Spectacle' by El Lissitzky. Great Little Magazines No 3: 'G' with work by Kurt Schwitters, Theo van Doesburg, Mies van der Rohe, Miklos Bandi./ Number 4: Contents includes: Brighton Concrete Poetry Exhibition , notes, map & full review (exhibition organised by Form's editors), Black Mountain College, Albers 'Graphic Tectonics', 'What is Kentetism' ? Two essays by Charles Biederman, Poems by Anselm Hollo. Review of Mecano magazine in Great Little Magazines No.4 (therefore discussion of Van Doesburg) - which includes translation of Van Doesburg text. / Number 5: Contains Hans Jaffes - De Stijl and Architecture, features on Bernard Lassus and Raul Hausmann, and in the Black Mountain Series John A. Rice, George Zabriskie and designs for college buildings by Walter Gropius and Marcel Breuer. Great Little Magazines No.5 'RAY' with work by Sidney Hunt, I. K. Bonset ( Theo Van Doesburg) and Kurt Schwitters./ Number 6: The contents include essays on Russian unofficial art, and on the work of Laszlo Moholy Nagy; John Evarts and Jean Charlot writing on Black Mountain; and poems by David Chaloner. Great Little Magazines No.6 'De Stijl' (Part 1). / Number 7: March / 1968. Contents include Kinetic Art in Czechoslovakia, Cinema and Semiology, by Peter Wollen, new American Photography, Abraham Moles on Vasarely. Airfields by Simon Cutts. Great Little Magazines No.6 'De Stijl' (author index part 2). / Number 8: The contents include Russian Exhibitions 1904 to 1922, Xanti Schawinskys - Spectodrama, and a feature on Pierre Albert-Birot with Barbara Wrights translations from - Grabinoulor. Great Little Magazines No.7 'SIC' with work by Apollinaire, Tristan Tzara, Pierre Albert-Birot. / Number 9: Contents includes articles by Hans Richter, Joost Baljeu, H. H. Stuckenschmidt. 'Notes on Theatre at Black Mountain College (1948-1952)' by Mark Hedden. 'Theo van Doesburg is of Today' by Maurice Agis and Peter Jones. Great Little Magazines section No 8: 'Kulchur' with work by Robert Indiana./ Number 10: The Aesthetic of Ian Hamilton Finlay by Simon Cutts. Art in Crisis by Charles Biederman, Structuralism & Literary Criticism by Gerard Genette. Great Little Magazines : LEF by Richard Sherwood & articles from LEF by Brik, Arvatov, Mayokovsky. Together with printed letter from the editor, Philip Steadman, sent to contributors when the magazine finished & flier for Form subs.
Verlag: György Galántai 1983 - 1985, Budapest, 1983
Anbieter: William Allen Word & Image, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 3.580,97
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbZustand: Very Good. György Galántai and Júlia Klaniczay eds., AL: Artpool letter = Aktuális levél No.1-11 (Complete Set), György Galántai, Budapest, Hungary, 1983 -1985. A complete set of this historic samizdat art magazine, published from 1983 to 1985 by Galántai/Artpool. Texts mainly in Hungarian with some English summaries. Design, layout, and production by György Galántai. Contributors include: György Galántai and Júlia Klaniczay (Eds.), Francesca Alinovi, Imre Bak, Bela Bartok, Miklos Beladi, Akos Birkas, Julien Blaine, William Burroughs, Monty Cantsin, Henri Chopin, Miklos Erdely, Wolfgang Ernst, Eva Forgacs, Tibor Hajas, Istvan Haraszty, Jozef Jakovits, Joan Jonas, Beke Laszlo, Kassak Theatre, Dora Maurer, Erdely Miklos, Tobit Papp, Gyula Pauer, Geza Perneczky, Mark Perry, Miklos Szentkuthy, Janos Szirtes, Annamaria Szoke, Adam Tabor, Min Tanaka, Gabor Toth, Ben Vautier, Janos Veto and others. A list of contributions can be seen at www.artpool.hu/Al/al01.html."AL tries to establish a little known art-from in Hungary - bookwork - and to explore its possibilities while looking for solutions only possible in workshop activities" - György Galántai statement on back cover of issue 2. In fact, this is definitely a Samizdat magazine but had to be declared as a bookwork as Júlia Klaniczay has written to us "We declared our Artpool Letter to be a bookwork (a graphic work). This way we by-passed the need to ask for a permission for publishing (which we would never get)."The first 9 issues have various interventions including rubber stamps, stickers, inserts, folded poster, plastic envelope inserts with printed cards etc. Very unusually, we have the complete set of envelopes for the first 9 issues (A5 format) which are each uniquely hand-stamped with three numbers. When you correspond this with the information on the booklets, one understands the numbering system. The first number on the envelope is the issue number. The second number is the the print run for that issue (there appears to be 5 print runs of 50 copies each). The final number is the individual number within that print run. The envelopes are in poor condition with tears and wear, but it is still important to have them to work out the unusual numbering system. All copies of the magazine have a slightly different but corresponding numbering system handwritten and signed by Galántai either on the back cover on inside back cover where the print run of 50 copies is indicated by roman numerals. 300 - 500 copies of each issue were printed.The complex numbering system was due to restrictions by the authorities on publications. As Júlia Klaniczay explains, artists could produce books u to an edition of 50 copies without applying for permission from the authorities. In the case of this magazine, "whenever a series of 50 was sold, we printed another 50." On page 69 of AL 5, there is a pencil-ticked book reference for publications relating to Galántai's Balatonboglari Chapel exhibition project in the early 1970s. Further to this a previous owner has added their own more expansive list of related publications to this important collective art project (loose sheet, biro and pencil on both sides, over 25 publications listed by hand).Together with double-sided broadsheet, describing the AL Letters published by Artpool at the same time as AL 4 was published, dated March 1984. Issues 1-9 measure 210x145 mm. Issues 10-11 measure 293x210 mm.