Thursday, December 11, 2025

Nienke Beukers, Scrabble Elfs, NINOC, Amsterdam, 2022, ed. 50


Nienke Beukers is an artist and art therapist based in the Netherlands. This publication came about from her experimentation with creating stories and poems using Scrabble boards and their wooden letters. This accordion is just one of the spin-offs from this visual research and in this case it led her to create poems with the linked words on a Scrabble board, as well as presenting the words and phrases along the side of each page. 


The themes underlying Beuker's choices of words and phrases all seem to reflect her therapy practice of which she states: 


In my work, I like to focus on strength, vulnerability, difficult emotions, and human struggles. Beauty and ugliness, pain and happiness are some of the contrasts I find important. I enjoy playing with them because they alternate and coexist.


I use visual research to explore how people cope in these times, how they recover from emotional pain caused by overstimulation, loss, injury, or damage, and how they subsequently learn to maintain their boundaries... whether these coping strategies are used consciously or unconsciously.


The goal of this research is to inspire people to reflect on their own resilience and how to further develop it. Because resilience helps people do more than just survive. Exercising, relaxing, enduring inevitable suffering, and simultaneously enjoying it, constitutes the art I call life.  [source: LinkedIn profile]


Follow this link for more about the results Beuker's Scrabble projects and testimonies from people who've engaged with it: ABOUT – Scrabble Stories


6 double-sided pages, individually 6" x 8", and when unfolded 4ft.



reverse side



 

back page

Tuesday, December 9, 2025

Jurgen Olbrich, Grey, Kassel, Germany, 2025

Front cover

This is not the first modified vintage photo-strip that I've received from Jurgen, with this one taken up with touristic views from around Lake Garda in Italy. Jurgen's 'grey' intervention obscures the views forcing the viewer to scramble for clues of what lies underneath. Ultimately its a futile activity and you reach a point where you just have to accept it for what is is — a series of photographs with daubs of grey paint smeared onto their surfaces. 

12 single-sided pages, individually 2.25" x 3.5" and unfolded 3ft 6".




back cover

leporello with No-Institute envelope


R. Clarke-Davis, A Book of Wander: Tarriff Aware and A Book of Wanderings, Kiddy Viddy Press, 2025

A Book of Wander: Tarriff Aware, 2025 

A cool new accordion from Clarke-Davis, the moody feeling of the work is emphasized by the film sprocket framing which also gives it a sense of movement. The camera becomes witness and documentarian of these darkened spaces of the night all of which resonates and seems very apropos for the present times.

6 single sided pages, individually 5" x 7" and when unfolded 3ft 6"





Back cover

________________________________________________________________

A Book of Wanderings, 2025

Another in Clarke-Davis' flaneur of the night books in which he documents deserted city streets. The following quote is from this book's end page, "A book of wanderings from the early morning without taxis or uber, if my sister only knew...".

What's interesting for me about this book is its structure, it has been printed in a long strip like an accordion, but both end pages are glued to the cover. The result is an accordion book that you can't open up and it forces the viewer/reader to experience it as a traditional book, although it is ostensibly two different kinds of books. An interesting dilemma for sure!

24 pages, individually 4.25" x 4".







back cover


Gary Panter, Recent Paintings and Works on Paper, Gracie Mansion Gallery, New York, 1989

Exhibition brochure's mailing envelope


One side of this exhibition brochure has this wild mash-up of 5 images in Panter's now familiar styles and sensibility. On the reverse side is a very informative summary of Panter's career by John Carlin.

5 double-sided pages, individually 5" x 7" and when unfolded 2ft 11".

Hardcore Panter fans might check out this link to another of his work's on this blog: 





reverse side

back of envelope with Panter drawing