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For some contemporary artists, the traditional idea of the book as paper and ink is up for grabs as was shown at a recent conference at Wellesley College.
"ABC: The Artists' Book Conference"
by Milo Miles
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image from "ABC: The Artists' Book Conference" |
Wellesley, MA - July 19, 2005 -
Last June, Wellesley College sponsored "ABC: The Artists' Book Conference." In this too-wised-up-for-its-own-good era, "Artists' Book" is one of the few terms that evoke a blank-page stare. You mean a biography
or a collected works, someone will ask? No, and it is not a monograph. It is
a work of art, generated by some combination of artist, writer and printer.
But
is that a book? And does it matter if it is a book or not? The simplest answer
to both questions is that the proof is in the pudding or in this case, the
binding. And the case has been made, many times over, in conferences such at
the one at Wellesley College. It is a niche that has the benefits of escaping
the predicament of art that has become a victim of international monetary speculation
and lighter-than-air theorizing.
Throughout the 20th century, the idea of "illustrated books" became
fuzzy around the edges, in ways that encouraged wild creativity. The modernists
and their even more literary descendents, the surrealists, insisted that paintings,
watercolors, pastels and collage shared co-billing with the text of a book.
Sometimes that emphasis on the pictorial dictated the shape of the volume. Starting
in the '40s, freewheeling author-illustrators like Kenneth
Patchen began to merge categories, integrating the disciplines of writing
and drawing.
The 1960s completed the upheaval, the redefinition of what a book was supposed
to be, as detailed in Betty
Bright's forthcoming "No Longer Innocent: Book Art in America 1960-1980." Books
began to morph into inventive shapes and unpredictable sizes, made up of materials
ranging from plastics to steel. (More studies of artists who make art books
and images of the books themselves can be found here.)
One
sure sign that something is an artist's book and not a routine illustrated
edition is that there's a whisper of tension about who's going to lead the dance
-- words or pictures. The artists' book world is divided into language people
and visuals people, the two camps united by respect for talent and reverence
toward craft. This playful conflict extends to the shapes a book can take.
Thus the
question "Is this a book?" becomes more pointed as geometry
and imagery take control: the idea of sitting and reading the so-called book
seems quaint rather than practical. Perhaps, deep down, some of the book artists
who revere language suspect those who are obsessed with images are exploiting
the culture's fondness for "books." For word warriors, the soul of
a volume resides in the excellence of its traditional content -- print.
Broadly speaking, the language people and the visuals people don't even agree
on whether the word "edition" pertains to an artist's book. Understandably,
the language camp favors a print run of more than one. Economically, the trend
among book artists is toward making so-called "multiples" because
lower individual-item prices attract more buyers. But book artists who favor
visuals, especially those who create their books by hand, show an understandable
affection for the unique work. If the market wants more, they will make more,
but not until the market asks.
And ask it will. Some of the most engaging remarks
at the ABC conference came from keynote speaker Mark Dimunation, the Chief
of the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress.
He talked about how he evaluates books for the national collection. One juicy
bit: for Dimunation, the more energy a book puts into explaining what it's doing,
the less energy it has to be worthwhile.
The Private Collecting panel, however, best demonstrated how artists' books
fit right into the parade of glorious fetish objects. Sidney
Berger of Simmons College described his collector's itch as a sort of rapture
that busts the budget and overwhelms common sense. Robert Ruben sees his collection
as an act of uplifting idealism, a way of gathering and preserving valuable
bits of our culture in one place. And Duke Collier underscored that collecting
artists' books resists interpretation, though he suggested it helps create a
realm apart from the everyday grind, a sort of pleasure dome made of shelves
and pages.
Of course, not all artists' books are made up of pages or use paper and ink.
Still, if your gut tells you this thing is a book you want, Collier suggested,
go for it, though it is not always easy to know what you are looking at.
Early
in the conference, during an ABC-sponsored tour of the rare-book rooms and
special-collection corridors in the depths of the Boston Public Library, our
little group was invited into the book-restoration laboratory, where crumbling,
ancient leaves were returned to full flower. A long table contained numerous
examples of beautifully revitalized volumes, some restored to a happier state
of their original, highly unconventional appearance.
At one end sat what appeared
to be a hot plate with two burners, one covered by a plastic dish holding a
sponge attempting to disguise itself as a hamburger. More than one person stopped
and stared intently at the Hotpoint display. "What's
the concept of this book?" No BPL official responded, but soon the mystery
was figured out: this is a restoration lab, and that instrument is used to make
paste. It happened to be on the wrong table at the right time, a time when the
idea of "a book" is up for grabs. Sometimes a book is just not a hot
plate.

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