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By Hank Shaw, Xerox contributor. If you walk into Firstsite, an innovative contemporary art gallery in Colchester, Essex, in the U.K., the last thing you would expect to see is a working copy shop.
On View Basquiat Loved Photocopies So Much He Bought His Own Xerox Machine. Now the Artworks He Made With It Are Worth Millions. Didn't snag one of the 50,000 tickets for the Brant Foundation's ...
The Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, is featuring more than 30 of Barbara T. Smith’s Xerox pieces as part of her largest exhibition yet.
In the 1980s, Thomas Bayrle Rented a Xerox Machine by the Hour to Make Blasphemous Artworks. He’s Still Pushing Buttons Today The celebrated German artist has two solo exhibitions on view in Berlin.
Xerox founder Joe Wilson with the 914, which could make copies up to 9 by 14 inches. Courtesy of Xerox Corporation. Recently I visited Whisk, a Manhattan store that sells kitchen goods, and next ...
Gallery view of David Hockney's experiments in Xerography, made using a Xerox copier in the 1950s, on display at the Palm Springs Art Museum's "David Hockney: Perspective Should Be Reversed ...
By the second half of the 20th century, Xerox wasn’t the sole maker of photocopier machines, even if it was the dominant supplier. Companies like Kodak made and released devices based on patents ...
Old-school printing specialist Xerox has come up with the new-school idea to give inkjet technology an edge, unveiling a so-called Direct to Object Inkjet Printer that does exactly what its name ...
Xerox founder Joe Wilson with the 914, which could make copies up to 9 by 14 inches. Courtesy of Xerox Corporation. Recently I visited Whisk, a Manhattan store that sells kitchen goods, and next ...
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