At Krakow Witkin Gallery,
One Wall, One Work: Eleanor Antin centers on a single, influential project that continues to resonate within conceptual and narrative art practices. The exhibition presents a complete set of
100 Boots (1971–1973), a work that unfolds across 51 postcards, each documenting the imagined journey of a group of military surplus boots staged and photographed by Antin. Shown here as a unified sequence sent to one recipient, the piece regains its cumulative rhythm, echoing the experience of its original circulation through the mail.
Conceived at the height of the Vietnam War,
100 Boots operates on multiple registers. The repeated image of empty boots evokes the widespread conscription of young American men, while the episodic structure introduces an element of absurdity. The boots wander through banks, deserts, riverbanks and urban streets, gradually forming a loose, picaresque narrative. Antin frames these scenes with a deliberate deadpan tone, allowing humor and unease to coexist without resolution.
The work also reflects a broader shift in artistic strategies during the early 1970s. By distributing the images through postcards sent at irregular intervals, Antin bypasses traditional exhibition formats and inserts the work into everyday life. Recipients encounter the images unexpectedly, outside institutional spaces, turning spectatorship into an extended, participatory experience. In this sense,
100 Boots aligns with conceptual art’s interest in dematerialization while maintaining a strong narrative and visual identity.
Antin’s practice, which spans performance, film, writing and installation, often blurs the boundaries between fiction and historical reference.
100 Boots exemplifies this approach, functioning simultaneously as a photographic series, a performance enacted in the landscape and a serialized story. Decades after its initial circulation, the work retains a particular clarity: a simple premise expanded into a complex reflection on mobility, conflict and the distribution of images.
Presented today, the project underscores how modest means—postcards, repetition, staged scenes—can produce a work that remains both formally inventive and sharply attuned to its historical moment.
Image:
100 Boots 1971-1973 (detail). The complete series of fifty-one postcards, this group all mailed to the same recipient.
Postcard size: 4 1/2 x 7 inches each (11.4 x 17.8 cm)
(Inventory #40157)
© Eleanor Antin, courtesy of Krakow Witkin Gallery