Releasing A Multi-Edition Artist Catalog Exploring Access and Scale

Artist and author Spencer Sheehan Kalina has announced the release of an ambitious new project that challenges conventional ideas of what a book—and an artist catalog—can be.

Titled Anything And Everything From Anywhere and Everywhere All Together And All At Once: Artist Catalog, the work is being released simultaneously in three distinct editions, each offering readers a different level of access to the same overarching body of material.

Rather than presenting a single, fixed publication, the project introduces a tiered structure: an Abridged Edition priced at $1, a Standard Edition at $10, and a Definitive Edition at $100. While all three editions draw from the same core work, each expands in scope, with progressively more material included at each level.

The release reflects a deliberate shift away from traditional publishing models. By offering multiple editions at significantly different price points, Kalina creates a framework that balances accessibility with depth—allowing readers to engage with the work at a level that suits both their interest and their means.

At its core, the catalog functions less as a static record and more as an evolving archive. It gathers together a wide range of creative output, emphasizing accumulation, variation, and continuity rather than a singular, definitive statement. The structure of the release mirrors this philosophy, suggesting that no single version can fully contain the scope of the work.

The project’s expansive title underscores this intention. Anything and Everything From Anywhere and Everywhere All Together And All At Once points to a practice that resists simplification, instead embracing multiplicity and scale.

This approach also reflects a broader ethos within Kalina’s work—one that values process as much as product, and that views creative output as something lived with over time rather than consumed in a single sitting.

All three editions are now available exclusively through the artist’s website. In fact, they are the only thing which the artist’s website store will carry, an iact of intention that the artist hopes will help frame the project as a piece as a project as its own entity which extends beyond the confines of being a publication.

With this release, Kalina not only expands his catalog but also offers a subtle critique of how art is typically packaged and distributed—proposing instead a model where readers are invited to choose their own depth of engagement within a shared creative landscape.