Allen Ruppersberg.If Allen Ruppersberg Born in 1944 in Cleveland, Ohio, Allen Ruppersberg is one of the first generation of American Conceptual artists that changed the way art was thought about and made. His work includes paintings, prints, photographs, sculptures, installations, and books. has always had a severe case of bibliomania bib·li·o·ma·ni·a n. An exaggerated preoccupation with the acquisition and ownership of books. bib conceptualis so much the better for us. His most recent show investigated the secret lives of books - as admired and debased de·base tr.v. de·based, de·bas·ing, de·bas·es To lower in character, quality, or value; degrade. See Synonyms at adulterate, corrupt, degrade. [de- + base2. objects, embodiments of a zeitgeist, and repositories of laughter, value, and mourning. Portraits of books were presented as though the tomes themselves were famous personages. Fiction, 1991, is a drawing of a book whose cover modestly declares: "Good Stories by the Best Authors of the Day. 10 cents." This piece sets the show's tone: tongue-in-cheek reverence mixed with sly elegance. Low to High, 1994-96, gives us republished versions of books from the '20s, '30s, and '40s stacked on a library-ish mahogany staircase with the words PRESENT and ABSENT inlaid in·laid v. Past tense and past participle of inlay. adj. 1. Set into a surface in a decorative pattern: a mahogany dresser with an inlaid teak design. 2. on the vertical faces of alternating steps. Some of the volumes are exact reproductions of old books, others sport the original covers of old editions but the pages are blank. Are these books paired with their own ghosts or are they tabulae rasae? This piece has a complex conceptual sub-text. It attempts to evoke a historical moment by reproducing the popular novels likely to have been read by soldiers who fought in World War II's 1944 Battle of Arnhem. Ruppersberg's penchant for linking literature to his art production is so strong it's as though books were a species of sacred animal he had decided to breed because he could not get enough of their company. This playful show was delicately balanced between the giddy and the grave. Here Ruppersberg toyed with issues of the handmade versus the mass-produced, and with high/low dichotomies, by redrawing mechanically printed texts and by presenting low-brow or expendable forms of writing as though they were precious and deeply significant. Paul Barrett Humes, Peter Alan Ginn, Gregory L. Broyles, and Jonathan Schenker (all subtitled "Study for Bookmark A stored location for quick retrieval at a later date. Web browsers provide bookmarks that contain the addresses (URLs) of favorite sites. Most electronic references, large text databases and help systems provide bookmarks that mark a location users want to revisit in the future. ," all 1994) are graphite-and-ink renderings of bookmark-shaped, single-column newspaper obituaries of men who died of AIDS. The typography typography (tīpŏg`rəfē), the art of printing from movable type. The term typographer is today virtually synonymous with a master printer skilled in the techniques of type and paper stock selection, ornamentation, and composition. is enlarged and redrawn on the white paper often used for funeral announcements. Somber, wreathlike decorations float above and below, hemmed in by black frames. Part of the hand-drawn type looks uniformly machine-printed, the rest determinedly alive (the typewriter-aping shaky pencil letters seem to squirm). Bemused rather than irreverent, these pieces appear to grapple with to enter into contest with, resolutely and courageously. See also: Grapple the best way to "mark" losses: to record deaths and shape memories of the departed into items of daily use, preferably something kept as close to hand as a much-used bookmark. Good Dreams, Bad Dreams, What was Sub-Literature?, 1996, was a witty installation showcasing Ruppersberg's fondness for B-grade literature, hand-painted signs, and juicy American slang. From 19 brightly hand-painted signs blared hilarious lists of cheesy cheesy (che´ze) caseous. , melodramatic pulp-fiction titles, some paired with authors' names (Too Young to Die; So Fair, So Evil; The Incurable Wound; and so on). Below the eye-poppin' book-title signage, large color photos of building signs which, due to urban wear and tear have lost their lettering, leaned against the wall. A small sign with moveable letters, the kind churches use to announce sermon topics, stood in front of the piece, inscribed in·scribe tr.v. in·scribed, in·scrib·ing, in·scribes 1. a. To write, print, carve, or engrave (words or letters) on or in a surface. b. To mark or engrave (a surface) with words or letters. with the work's title, followed by "LECTURE TODAY, 4 PM." The viewer was placed in a state of alert anticipation, imagining the impending im·pend intr.v. im·pend·ed, im·pend·ing, im·pends 1. To be about to occur: Her retirement is impending. 2. lecture, and at the same time, hearing versions of it blurted, whispered, and mumbled by all the elements in the show. |
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