The Anti- Catalog The Anti-Catalog is a protest against an exhibition of American art belonging to John D Rockefeller III which was held at the Whitney Museum of Art last Fall. Written and pictorial essays explore the way art is mystified, how art exhibitions influence our view of history, and how collectors such as JDR IIT benefit from tultural philanthropy. Specific essays z1lso look at women, blacks, native Americans, landscape painting and portraiture. The Anti-Catalog is the work of a collective associated with Artists Meeting for Cultural Change. 80 pages, numerous illustraticns. $3.50 plus 50¢ for postage and handling. The Catalog Committee, .[nc, 106 East 19th Street, #u, New York NY 10003. even Days Seven Days isn’t trying to sell you a new role model, an expensive lithograph, or the latest rage in the woman’s move- ment. What we will do is make every effort to give you comprehensive, straight- forward reporting about cultural and poHficaIeventsaroundthe\NoHd. Find out what's going on. Seven Days is the first mass-circulation radical news magazine. You can subscribe for $26 for 52 issues. Name _ 0000 OO O Address City _____ State Zip Clip and return to Seven Days, 206 Fifth Ave., N.Y., N.Y. 10010 The new magazine of women's culture [ | C]OWS@ 13 Each issue provides 150 pages of feature articles investigative reporting reviews criticism historical analysis theory creative writing visual art representing the broadest spectrum of feminist thought plus access to practical resources following the model of Chrysalis’s predecessors The New Woman's Survival Catalog and The New Woman'’s Survival Sourcebook Subscribe now — charter price $8 c/o The Woman's Building 1727 N. Spring St., Los Angeles, CA 90012 TWO NEW DUTTON PAPERBACKS Toward a People’s Art by Eva Cockeroft, John Weber and James Cockeroft foreword by Jean Charlot ($7.95) A detailed account of the community mural movement over the last decade, in the U.S. and Canada. Written by two muralists and a sociologist, it reflects the need of artists to break out of their studios and to make direct contact with the oppressed. From the Center: Feminist Essays on Women’s Art by Lucy R. Lippard ($6.95) An attempt to outline the beginnings of a feminist art and art criticism that would combine form and content, esthetics and politics. Collected articles date from 1970 to the present and include monographs and general essays as well as interviews and two brief fictions. Published by E.P. Dutton & Co., Inc., New York. 111