Judy Malloy, "Memory", Detail of Recollection,
an artists book installed at the Heller Gallery,
UC Berkeley, 1982. The work was a documentation
of the landscape of a New Hampshire vacation,
interspersed with memories




Judy Malloy, detail of an artists book exhibited at the San Francisco
Public Library, (branch) 1978 in an installation sponsored by La Mamelle,
as part of the LOCATION project; partially funded by the National
Endowment for the Arts

Judy Malloy

Landscape Projects,
Artists Books and Installations

  • Trail Paintings, artists book in progress
    a series of small paintings created on Northern California trails form a visual narrative of trail walks from November 2008 to March 2009.

  • Desert Book, 1993, exhibited in Shaped Structures,
    Palos Verdes Art Center, 1993

  • Electronic Books, 1986-1991, exhibited:
    Photographic Book Art in the United States,
    Exhibition, Institute for Contemporary Art,
    New Orleans, LA, January, 1994 (show also traveled to
    The Washington Center for Photography, The Houston
    Center for Photography, CameraWork (San Francisco), and
    others)

  • Hearst Strip, card catalog, included in
    Location/Dislocation, Berkeley Art Center,
    April 25- May 23, 1980

  • Recollection, artists book installation,
    Heller Gallery, University of California at Berkeley,
    March 1-27, 1982

  • Wiggly Bush Meadow, artists book installation,
    San Francisco Public Library, April 18-May 27, 1978
    artists books: Judy Malloy;
    film and photographs: Doyle Saylor;
    sponsored by La Mamelle as part of the LOCATION project;
    partially funded by the NEA. The work consisted of
    an exploration by two artists of the landscape and terrain
    of an area in the Oakland Hills.
    
    

    Judy Malloy, Detail of an artists book/scroll exhibited at the San Francisco Public Library, (branch) 1978 in an installation sponsored by La Mamelle, inc. as part of the LOCATION project; partially funded by the National Endowment for the Arts









Narratives

where every luminous landscape


from Eastgate:

its name was Penelope