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| Literary Constructs | Six artists working with text, poetry and altered books
| | 10 November—2 December 2006 |
| Chris Kenny | Vito Drago | | Liliane Lijn | Rupert Spira | | Arthur Giardelli | Georgia Russell |
Chris Kenny (b.1959) Kenny
produces poetry using collections of found text in three-dimensional
collage-constructions. Text fragments, culled from discarded books and
sorted into categories, are mounted on pins and fastidiously composed
in white glazed cases. The materiality of the strips of words, the
differing shades of ageing paper and the shadows cast, add a discreet
aesthetic to the minimalist presentation. Andrew Spira, has written
that ‘one can begin at any point in these works, and experience sorrow,
pity, inward smiles, out-loud laughter… and come away with a coherent
sense of meaning and pathos.’ Artist's page > |
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| Liliane Lijn (b.1939) Liliane
Lijn’s friendships with writers in Paris and New York first led her in
the 1960s to experiment with the written word and to collaborate with
poets in her first Poem Machines and Poem Cones.
These kinetic works make words revolve at speed: Lijn states that ‘the
word accelerated loses its identity and becomes a pattern pregnant
with… the energy of its potential meaning should it once again become a
word.’ In her book Crossing Map
the drawings interweave with the text, and Lijn ‘uses language as a
mirror for our culture, avoiding the use of nouns and punctuation, and
inventing a new prose structure’. Artist's page > |
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| Arthur Giardelli (b.1911) Arthur Giardelli has been making reliefs and constructions since the late 1940s: John Russell Taylor, writing in The Times
in 2001, described how one aspect of Giardelli’s art ‘is concerned with
literature and his fascination with the arbitrary, almost surreal,
verbal effects when pages from books are placed with seeming randomness
in his works…'. His constructions are ‘poised somewhere between the
knowingness of a Schwitters’ collage and the romantic melancholy of
Paul Nash’s seaside surrealism, with at least an incidental nod to
Joseph Cornell.’ Artist's page > |
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| Vito Drago (b.1973) Vito
Drago’s cased book-collage-constructions are the result of his long
obsession with books. He has always stressed that the books he uses and
manipulates in his work are ‘non-specific’, saying that ‘it is not the
message of a particular book that interests me… there is no element of
interpretation’, Drago takes the perception of books being representative of ‘knowledge’, and subverts and questions the certainty
of that concept in his altered book-works through deletion and
obliteration – the content is irrelevant. He asks: ‘what do we really
know?’ Artist's page > |
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| Rupert Spira (b.1960) Rupert
Spira combines ceramic vessels with poetic texts – the words explore
the nature of consciousness: this exploration is a subtle and elusive
undertaking and the effort to read the words should reflect this. To
begin with perhaps just a few words will be clear… like finding the
corners of a vast jigsaw puzzle. At each look a few more phrases will
appear and the character of the poem will begin to emerge. However the
content of the poem, like its subject matter, will always remain
difficult to grasp. The process of exploring it should be fascinating
but frustrating, drawing the viewer into the bowl on one level and into
the meaning of the words on another. |
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| Georgia Russell (b.1974) Georgia
Russell cuts and transforms ephemera: books, music scores, newspapers,
maps and photographs. She sees books as sculptural objects with an
inherent history, representing ‘the hands which have held them and the
minds they have passed through’. She uses a scalpel to dissect and flay
the pages of her chosen books, her intention being to give them ‘a new
life and new meaning’. The resulting works hover between object and
image, and she somehow manages to retain and reclaim the past life of
an object as much as her techniques attack it. Artist's page >
England & Co, 2006 |
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