Gallery 98 is an online gallery for people interested in the recent history of art. Whether you are an artist, collector, dealer, educator, or just someone who has taken an art history course and wants to learn more, you will enjoy scrolling through our posted inventory of over 7,800 art ephemera items.
For researchers and scholars, Gallery 98 provides free and easy access to hard-to-find, primary documents like gallery announcement cards, posters, catalogues and magazine advertisements. Collectors of art ephemera will be pleased with the breadth and richness of Gallery 98’s holdings, and the many ways you can search for items.
Over the last six months visitor traffic to Gallery 98 has more than doubled and is often mentioned in online articles and blogs. Most recently the prolific art writer Miss Rosen summed it up accurately when she described Gallery 98 as “the greatest repository of downtown 1970s and 80s ephemera.”
From The Gallery 98 Homepage
Browse our selection of over 7,800 items of art ephemera dating from the 1960s to the early 2000s, grouped by artist, gallery, publication, and theme.
Other Gallery 98 Pages
About Gallery 98
Gallery 98 specializes in art ephemera: gallery announcement cards, posters, catalogues and other paper items connected to the promotion and appreciation of art. Our items date primarily from the 1960s through the early 2000s when advertising on paper was being replaced by digital communication.
Gallery 98 is a site for scholars and for collectors. For scholars, our goal is to provide a complete history of post-war art as preserved in art ephemera. To further this end, we do not remove sold items from the site. For the benefit of collectors, on the other hand, we have created the “hide sold items” option, which shows only items still available for purchase.
Gallery 98 was founded in 2014 by Marc H. Miller, an artist, art historian, curator, writer, and publisher, who has been active in the New York art world since the 1970s.
Miller received a Ph.D. in art history from NYU’s Institute of Fine Arts in 1979. As an artist he exhibited in New York and Europe throughout the 1970s and 80s. From 1981–85 he was the commentator and interviewer for ART/New York, an educational videotape series that covered art exhibitions. Miller also served as a columnist for the East Village Eye; as curator at the Queens Museum; as a board member for the alternative art space ABC No Rio; and was the founder of the publishing company Ephemera Press. He is currently an advisor to Howl! Happening, a non-profit gallery and archive devoted to the cultural history of the East Village. Find out more about Miller at his autobiographical website 98 Bowery: 1969 – 89 View From The Top Floor.