0 to 9
0 to 9 was a conceptual art magazine that was published between 1967 and 1969 edited by Vito Acconci and Bernadette Mayer in New York City. Produced cheaply with a small print run, 0 to 9
Background
0 to 9 was published in the late 1960s. Vito Acconci and Bernadette Mayer were previously unknown poets working in the bohemian outpost of New York's Lower East Side. The two were related by marriage: Acconci was married to Mayer's sister Rosemary Mayer, and both used the magazine to seek out like minded writers and readers and discover new audiences. Both Acconci and Mayer wanted to use print to explore the limits of language and experiment with typography.Acconci and Mayer published experimental poetry, utilising procedural verse techniques and found texts to undermine conventional notions of authorship. They sought contributions to 0 to 9 from authors that were out of print and out of copyright, including the writings of poets Sir Walter Raleigh and Sir Arthur Gorge, Novalis, Hans Christian Andersen, Lord Herbert of Cherbury, Lord Stirling, Gustave Flaubert, Gertrude Stein, and Guillaume Apollinaire. They also included excerpts from Raymond Queneau's Exercises in Style, ninety-nine retellings of the same story, and Stefan Themerson's translation of Li Po's Drinking Alone by Moonlight. Kate Linker noted in her biography of Acconci that these writers were also chosen to be published alongside contemporary texts "in a search for predecessors for the new 'material' work of the 1960s."
Originally 0 to 9 was inspired by Jasper Johns's stencil paintings, and the magazine's title comes from Johns' work 0 Through 9. Acconci and Mayer were inspired by Johns' treatment of numbers and letters as physical entities. Acconci noted that the magazine's title was a conscious change from Johns' work – an attempt to view the magazine as an object rather than a message: 0 to 9 isn't language, so there couldn't be a language mistake, 0 to 9 is an icon, 0 to 9 is advertising." Acconci also said the magazine's numerical title "had more to do with trying to avoid expression and trying to get some cold, neutral system ."
Production
Due to low rent, many artists shared space in New York City in the 1960s, increasing artistic production and collaboration. Initially, Acconci and Mayer approached the New York School of Poets about their intention to produce a magazine; when they declined to be involved, saying the ideas were too obscure, Acconci and Mayer decided to embrace DIY press instead. Mayer found a mimeograph in her then boyfriend's father's office and used it to produce 0 to 9. The production process was slow; everything had to be meticulously typed, then the ink was left to dry on stencil film between the padding and backing sheets. The magazine's production often took place at night, when the office holding the mimeograph machine was closed.0 to 9 had a small print run, of between 100 and 350 copies per issue. Each issue was stapled together by hand on cheap xeroxed paper.
Acconci and Mayer then took copies of the magazine to independent booksellers or mailed them to artists and subscribers. They charged $1 per issue.
0 to 9 followed in the footsteps of other Greenwich Village self-published magazines including Ted Berrigan's C Magazine, John Ashbery's Art & Literature and Fuck You by Ed Sanders. Many of the contributions from living artists were friends of Acconci and Mayer; some artists approached, including Buckminster Fuller and John Cage, declined to contribute.
Themes
Art criticism and artists' income
The focus on words and wordplay in the magazine reflected a vast increase in artists' writing and activity throughout the 1960s; criticism of art helped to provide income for artists as well as the ability to get their messages out to a wider audience. Anna Lovatt has noted this in the work of Sol LeWitt, who contributed to 0 To 9:"For LeWitt's generation of artists, criticism provided a means of financial support and the opportunity to address a broader audience, via a proliferation of new art magazines."When the journal Artforum moved its office to New York in 1967, it helped to promote art criticism to even wider audiences.
Artists' spaces in 1960s New York
0 To 9 was a rejection of traditional artistic venues. Six issues were published with a variety of themes and covers. The magazines reflected shared social spaces in which artists and poets met and exchanged ideas: pieces are spread throughout the magazine between contributors and frequently one work is spread between others in the issue.Language
0 To 9 also echoed wider fears in the art community that art was being dematerialized into language alone. Language work by Joseph Kosuth, Lawrence Weiner and Robert Barry was also becoming more prominent in New York art galleries and exhibitions, demonstrating an increasingly aesthetic environment for artists. These works helped Acconci and others to see the art space as an open field that was open to experimentation and importations from other areas.In 0 To 9, meaning is hidden in plain sight and the magazine often plays with form to redefine the process of meaning making. This can be seen in Acconci's rejection letter to a 0 To 9 submission from Hugh Fox on 4 September 1968: "Not the kind of thing 0 to 9 is out for; for me, there's too much emphasis on message here, not enough on the space of the page."
Rejection of traditional artists' methods
Acconci was inspired to create work that consciously reacted against traditional art norms:"It was that blank wall, that museum as a repository of blank walls, that was the impetus for many people in my generation to make art; we made art as a reaction to, as a rebellion against, the clean, white space. We made art as a reaction against the "Do-not-touch" signs in the museum".
Impact
Alongside the journal Art-Language, 0 To 9 became a critical part of the linguistic turn that conceptual art underwent during the 1960s, as well as literature.Legacy
The shift made in 0 To 9 from visual art to public performance art reflected Acconci's own transition from writer to performer; by the magazine's final issue in 1969, Acconci was conceiving and documenting performances almost daily. This shift was in part due to Acconci realising that speaking poetry out loud is itself a transformation from the page to physical space. Acconci noted that the shift to street performance seen in the magazine changed the nature of the work permanently: "Once 0 To 9 had hit the streets, it couldn't go back to the page."After 0 To 9, Mayer's career as a poet continued; she taught writing workshops at St. Marks' Poetry Project for many years and published her work extensively.
According to critics,0 To 9 can be seen as "the most radically eclectic journal of the mimeograph revolution". It cut through many different disciplines, history and culture to explore language. 0 To 9
In 2006, Ugly Duckling Presse reprinted 0 To 9, including its supplements, in one single edition. Acconci and Mayer added a preface and commentary to the reprint. A special edition of the work was also printed, where each issue of 0 To 9 was staple bound in the style of the original issues.
Issues of ''0 to 9''
''0 to 9'' ISSUE 1 (1 April 1967)
An uncut mimeograph stencil was used as the cover to the first issue to show the materiality of the magazine through its printing process. Acconci recalled: "we hoped that the people we distributed it to would contribute to it".| Author of piece | Title of piece |
| Sir Arthur Gorges and Sir Walter Raleigh | Poem |
| Anonymous | THE ROUND TRIP OF ICE from NEHALEM TILLAMOOK TALES |
| Vito Hannibal Acconci | KAY PRICE AND STELLA PAJUNAS |
| Edoardo Sanguineti | ALPHABETUM |
| Bruce Marcus | Poems |
| Hans Christian Andersen | TWO BROWN EYES |
| Bernadette Mayer | BOTTLE |
| Novalis | from HEINRICH VON OFTERDINGEN |
| Robert Viscusi | DODECAHEDRON |
| Morton Feldman | Interview |
| V. C. Alexander | THE MAGIC STAIRWAY from STORY GAMES FOR EVERYBODY |
''0 to 9'' ISSUE 2 (August 1967)
| Author of piece | Title of piece |
| Robert Walser | Kleist in Thun |
| Bernadette Mayer | Poems |
| Anonymous | Andemanese Song |
| Anonymous | Australian Songs |
| Anonymous | Dama Song |
| Anonymous | Eskimo Songs |
| Anonymous | Semang Song |
| Gertrude Stein | IN |
| Anonymous | BILL'S EPITAPH |
| Judy Schiff, Daniel O'Sullivan, Rosemary Mayer | Drawings |
| Raymond Queneau | from EXERCISES IN STYLE |
| Vito Hannibal Acconci | TWELVE MINUTES |
| Aram Saroyan | Poems |
| Thomas Clark | Plays |
| Ron Padgett | LIMOUSINE |
| Stefan Themerson | from BAYAMUS |