Tuesday, March 7, 2023

Stephen Gill, A Series of Disappointments, Nobody and the Archive of Modern Conflict, UK, 2008, ed. 3000 [3 different covers]


I'm going to let this Brit artist who became interested in photography in early childhood because of his father's fascination with insects, explain what this humorous and quietly philosophical book is all about and how to exhibit it.

"These betting slips were discarded in and around many betting shops (71 at the time of publication) in the borough of Hackney in north-east London. The average number of betting shops in other London boroughs is 23.

Each of these papers began as hope, were shaped by loss or defeat, then cast aside. These new forms perhaps now possess a state of mind, shaped by nervous tension and grief.

After these images were made, little autopsies were performed on the papers to reveal the failed bets held within.

If betting shops move into places previously occupied by banks or solicitors, they are classed as financial services and dont have to apply for any special permit. In such numbers, they are beginning to feel like a burden around a borough that is trying to improve itself and the lives of its residents, and to shake off its bad reputation.

To exhibit this book, remove the book block from the outer cover, expand the pages and hang from nails or small hooks using the holes provided."

36 single-sided pages, individually 11.75" x 9", and fully opened 27ft.






back cover (one of 3 different ones)

Picasso Gaglione, A Bag Accordian Book, Knoxville, 2022

Another in the wild series of accordions that Knoxville-based mail artist and dadaist Picasso Gaglione has sent me over the last year or so.  A quick search of this blog will reveal 9 other accordions he's created using all sorts of different and readily available media. This work was created within a similar aesthetic and the simplest of materials — in this case a rubber stamp and a small thin brown paper bag!

4 pages, individually 3" x 2.5" and when fully open 10".






Antonio Ferrara, Ventiquattromila baci (Twenty four thousand kisses), Settenove edizioni, Cagli, Italy, 2021


Ferrara is an Italian writer, poet and illustrator and the winner of the 2015 Andersen Prize for another accordion book titled I Am Like This. This humorous accordion depicts kisses being exchanged by a host of different people and even animals! I particularly like how Ferrara has used the fold of the page as the crucial element that briefly separates the kissers as they are about to begin this amorous act.

22 double-side pages, individual pages 7.75" x 4.75", and when open 8ft 10.5".






reverse side





back cover


Monday, March 6, 2023

Santiago Escobar-Jaramillo, Can you hear us? (Puedes oirme?), Raya Editorial, Manizales, Columbia, 2022, ed. 200


Based in Manizales, Escobar-Jaramillo is an architect at the National University of Columbia who received an MA in the Photography and Urban Cultures course at Goldsmiths College, University of London. He is also a photographer who has published a number of books and has been an active participant in international photography festivals. 

This work with its provocative sub-heading in both English and Spanish that reads: "'Can you hear us?' says the pavement at Brick Lane. 'Can you hear us?' cries the ground in Columbia," is illustrated by photographs of a work by another Columbian artist, Doris Salcedo that was installed in the Turbine Hall in the Tate Gallery in 2007. The work's title was Shibboleth which wikipedia explains as "any custom or tradition, usually a choice of phrasing or even a single word, that distinguishes one group of people from another," was part of Salcedo's Unilever Series and consisted of creating a physical crack in the Turbine Hall's floor that ran the length of the building, as shown in this accordion.

I'm assuming the military figures placed at the edge of the crack are part of an intervention by Escobar-Jaramillo and that they are in dialogue with both the political history of Columbia in which Salcedo had family members who were 'disappeared,' and the immigrant and working class history of London's Brick Lane. In a recent email to me Santiago states that the "...placement of the scaled-down soldiers in front of the intervention allowed it to no longer be seen as a crack but as a chasm: one that divides and separates us as a society."

I'll let the Tate Gallery's explanation of this work help us expand our understanding of the underlying themes of this installation, as well as Escobar-Jaramillo's interest in making this work around a fellow Columbian's literally ground-breaking piece.

"In particular, Salcedo is addressing a long legacy of racism and colonialism that underlies the modern world. A ‘shibboleth’ is a custom, phrase or use of language that acts as a test of belonging to a particular social group or class. By definition, it is used to exclude those deemed unsuitable to join this group.

‘The history of racism’, Salcedo writes, ‘runs parallel to the history of modernity, and is its untold dark side’. For hundreds of years, Western ideas of progress and prosperity have been underpinned by colonial exploitation and the withdrawal of basic rights from others. Our own time, Salcedo is keen to remind us, remains defined by the existence of a huge socially excluded underclass, in Western as well as post-colonial societies.

In breaking open the floor of the museum, Salcedo is exposing a fracture in modernity itself. His work encourages us to confront uncomfortable truths about our history and about ourselves with absolute candidness, and without self-deception."

5 double-sided pages, individually 1.75" x 4.25' and when fully opened 1ft 9.25".




reverse



back of accordion


R. Clarke-Davis, a commonplace book: respair, Kiddie Viddy Press, 2023


The latest accordion/puzzle book from Clarke-Davis. Looking further into one rather curious word in the title — respair, I discovered that until recently it had been relegated to the backwaters of language. Respair means the opposite of 'despair' and thus suggests a period of regeneration and renewed hope. An article titled "Why Words Die" in The Economist in 2017 renewed interest in this neglected word. Follow this link for more about this noun & verb: Fritinancy: Word of the week: Respair

8 double-sided pages, individually 5" X 4", when opened 17".






back cover

David A. Carter, One Red Dot [A Pop-Up Book for Children of All Ages], Simon & Schuster, New York, 2004/2005


In my recent forays into the world of pop-up books one figure stands out and that's David A. Carter. As you can see from the pages below, One Red Dot delivers startlingly original and complex pop-ups in every two-page spread. Carter has done a large number of other pop-up books of equal quality, including an exhibition of his pop-ups enlarged to human scale, see here; The website of pop up artist and author David A. Carter

For more information about this prodigious pop-up artist, illustrator and author check out his really informative website: PopUpBooks - Author, paper engineer & illustrator David A. Carter

16 pages, individual pages 9" x 9".








back cover

Diane Borsato, Cloud Collection, Owens Art Gallery, Mount Allison University, Sackville, Canada, 2021


One category of accordions is the exhibition catalogue as they serve as an economical introduction to the artist(s) and the work on display, and for the most part they play a purely informative function. But sometimes they move beyond this utilitarian function and become objects of beauty in themselves, and this catalogue for an exhibition conceived by Diane Borsato does just that. Kudos should also go to JP King, the designer, for creating this wonderful design that seems so in sync with Borsato's cloud project.

The exhibition was comprised of works selected by Borsato from the permanent collection of the Owens Art Gallery that for her all related to clouds in different types of ways. In this catalogue Borsato combines reproductions of the works and accompanies each of them with short texts that illustrate the nature and topography of clouds. These texts and images all work beautifully together and this accordion left me with a renewed respect for these most elusive of nature's artifacts.

8 pages double-side, individual page 10" x 7.75", and when fully opened 6ft 2".




reverse side



back cover