JOCHEN FLINZER.GALERIE ANDREAS SCHLUTER Display books are like slipcases with inscriptions: hollow inside, title printed on the outside. Unassuming phrases shine forth from their spines--they might be designated Art, or The Golden City, or Good Form, depending on the purpose of the display. In furniture stores these ornaments of cultivation decorate bookshelves and cabinets; in store windows and other places they turn up as "decorative suggestions" among all conceivable types of displayed goods. To Jochen Flmzer such displays provide a welcome canvas for seven of the twenty-four works in his exhibition "Mein Feld ist die Welt "Die Welt" is also the name of a weekly publication founded in 1897 by Theodor Herzl in Vienna as organ of the Zionist movement. Die Welt (English: The World) is a German national daily newspaper published by the Axel Springer AG company. " (My field is the world). On them he embroiders images and texts--through the cover into the empty center and out the back cover again. With a single long thread Flinzer draws (he thinks of his embroidery as drawing) legible words and recognizable images on one side, leaving only the intimation of a script on the other. The color of the ink with which the manufacturer has printed the display book's title determines the color of the yarn that Flinzer uses--the green, red, or black threads stretching through this hollow literature and holding together the hole at its center. The connection between the color of the yarn and that of the title is the only link between the drawing on one of Flinzer's display books and its support. Other readings inform the drawing itself. On Kanwa jiten, the pictogram (text) pictogram - (Or "pictograph") A symbol which is a picture that represents an object or concept, e.g. a picture of an envelope used to represent an e-mail message. Pictograms are common in everyday life, e.g. of a tortoise together with its corresponding Japanese character A Japanese character may refer to:
The sophistication so·phis·ti·cate v. so·phis·ti·cat·ed, so·phis·ti·cat·ing, so·phis·ti·cates v.tr. 1. To cause to become less natural, especially to make less naive and more worldly. 2. of Flinzer's drawing lies in its double nature. The design on the front, the surface offered for presentation (whether that of a hollow book, or simply a piece of fabric or paper), is matched by a verso ver·so n. pl. ver·sos 1. A left-hand page of a book or the reverse side of a leaf, as opposed to the recto. 2. The back of a coin or medal. drawn with equal attention. The recto RECTO. Right. (q.v.) Brevederecto, writ of right. (q.v.) , with its relatively temperate, ordered, and familiar program of images, is answered on the verso by a kind of hermetic hermetic /her·met·ic/ (her-met´ik) impervious to air. her·met·ic or her·met·i·cal adj. Completely sealed, especially against the escape or entry of air. work-in-progress, an image-diagram whose contours and rhythms are decisively influenced by the experiential time of the work process. Thus Flinzer's technique presupposes two ways of reading drawing, formally differentiated by the opposition abstract/figurative, and in terms of content, revealed by the magnification of emotional traces. The coordinates, front and back, dissolve into a play of different times: the given and the personal, the external and the internal. Another recent series on view is "The language of flowers For the indie pop band, see . The language of flowers, sometimes called floriography, was a Victorian-era means of communication in which various flowers and floral arrangements were used to send coded messages, allowing individuals to express feelings which otherwise ," 1999, the only works here made without thread. These nine watercolor diptychs do, however, take off from embroidery patterns for flowers. Here, in place of the symbols normally used in such patterns to indicate colors, Flinzer has substituted letters. In the images themselves, these letters appear chosen at random, but when read in sequence with the help of the accompanying legends, they spell out words and phrases Words and Phrases® A multivolume set of law books published by West Group containing thousands of judicial definitions of words and phrases, arranged alphabetically, from 1658 to the present. taken from personal ads, such as "blow job" or "threesome." Together with their color-translation they construct a kind of encryption program reminiscent of the countless secret images and signs through which minorities of all kinds communicate in public without being recognized. The violet, the dandelion dandelion [Eng. form of Fr.,=lion's tooth], any plant of the genus Taraxacum of the family Asteraceae (aster family), perennial herbs of wide distribution in temperate regions. , or the rose: familiar but simultaneously secret images that speak only to those who recognize them. |
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