Showing posts with label Codex Foundation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Codex Foundation. Show all posts

Sunday, February 19, 2017

Equilibrium - new artist book



While working on all my Autonomous Drying experiments this past fall, I was also working on a new artist book, which was just released this past month at the Codex Book Fair. It was funny how many artists commented at that event that Codex has become a deadline for new books.

This book is a bit more personal that anything I've worked on in a while. Titled Equilibrium, it's a tunnel book made up of some personal symbolism and story. The idea for this book came from a suggestion Enrique made to Robert while they were talking about his condition. Robert had mentioned that when he was riding his bike, his pain dissipated. Once the ride was over, it came back, and the results could not be duplicated on a stationary bike. Enrique suggested that maybe it wasn't the exercise, but the balancing.

As someone who constantly is constantly juggling work, art, home, friends, health, you name it, the idea of balance is frequently such an elusive one, and is even more complicated for those who suffer chronic pain and illness.

Interestingly enough, a gentleman came up to my table during the fair, who was coincidentally also named Robert. Without reading the colophon, he started asking me about the book, mostly regarding bike riding. As I started to explain, I came to the part where I was saying,"It's not the exercise..." in which Robert snapped his fingers and interjected before I could, "It's the balancing!"

He went on to explain that it's the same for his condition (Parkinson's), and that stationary bikes also don't have the same affect.

I'm not sure what to determine from this anecdata. The idea of balance as form of healing both literally and metaphorically is something to think about.

As for right now, I'm gearing up for the new few months. March is has some big events coming up - Book Bombs will be at the Center for Book Arts for our Keeping the Fire Alive workshop on March 4 - which, crazily enough, we proposed to do waaaay before the election. The Rhinoceros Project will be part of the 100 Days of Action and Print Public at the Kala Art Institute on March 11 from 12-4, and then traveling to the Sierra Nevada Steamroller Print Festival on April 22.

So...while all this is going on, keeping in balance is tricky, but I try.

Sunday, February 15, 2015

Codex 2015



This past week was the 2015 Codex International Book Fair and Symposium, at which Rocinante Press had a table. During my last experience at Codex, I didn't have any sales at the event itself - they came afterwards. This year, I made my table and more on the first day!

Unlike last time, I did get a chance to get away from my table and see some books, but I didn't manage to take any pictures. However, my table was against the leather and paper dealers, so I was fortunate to spend a few days just eyeballing lovely goods.


The crowd on the first day was pretty insane - here's a shot from my table - there are tables full of books that are completely obscured by people!


I managed to catch a head cold at Codex, and my voice barely survived the week. Due to this, I only attended one day of the two-day symposium, needing the second morning to catch up on rest. However, here are my notes from day one - not always in complete sentences or thoughts:

Sam Winston, Building a Walk-Through Artist Book For the Victoria and Albert Museum

1) Trying to understand writing as drawing, use of Periodic Table and memory palaces.
2) Use of sacred geometry to create objects of worthy of worship - shapes based on everyday objects to reveal how we worship objects in everyday society.
3) How to meditate through word processing
4) All forms of externalizing memory have associations with black magic.
5) Response to a fictional book set in the future, in which objects were written about as if they were forgotten and humanity was trying to explain their history - objects such as a watch, SIM card, book.
6) Exploring the line between "crafts and concept" in contemporary art
7) Physicality of the book is increasingly significant as the physical book declines.
8) How to surmise a book in a light way?

Carolee Campbell, Chasing the Ideal Book

1) Ninja Press, launched in 1984, had no specific literary agenda at the outset, but now has an abiding interest in contemporary poetry.
2) Books should embody the author's perspective, and extend the reader's world, understanding, and concept of the text.
3) Poetry does not impart information
4) Book needs to be a container to hold ineffability.
5) Talk focused on her book, The Real World of Manuel Cordova, which she felt she attained a perfect synthesis of text and form.
6) Uses Samson typeface designed by Victor Hammer. This typeface was selected because it slows the reader down and takes them out of the everyday. However, the set she used had some wear and tear, and she ended up sawing and kerning several hundred letters to get them to fit together as Hammer's did.
7) Amazon river image didn't match type, so she returned from research to the actual text. Since she'd been away from the actual text, it was like reading it anew. Since the poem did not mention actual locations, (although it was based on an actual person and their experiences in specific locations in Brazil), she could design her own map - and used the Green River of Colorado.
8) Text follows curves of river
9) Enclosure for book is based on map enclosures Campbell saw at Harvard - very wallet-like.
10) Book should conjure forth its subject and exist as a beautiful object in space.
11) Investigative bookmaking - spiral down to a clear design principle - the time it take is transformative - divided between rational and intuitive, between materiality and concept.
12) To print on kakishibu coated papers, Campbell had to put more ink on the press than what is usually necessary - had to make a really sloppy slurry sound.
13) Remember to spend deep time with poetry, and see folding paper as a way to move through states.

Robert Trujillo - The Challenge of of Collecting and Curating the Modern and Contemporary Book

1) Librarians should not just collect for their constituents, they should collect for the world.
2) Collections should be in-depth - have to collect for research, for teaching, for the future, for the world
3) Collect what is evidence of our culture - artist books are that - libraries need to collect expensive books - budgets are not reasons to not collect artist books - digital books are not reasons to not collect artist books.
4) Museums don't collect artist books like libraries do, although they should
5) Stanford stores some of its collection in state-of-the-art facilities in Liverpool, CA.
6) Important for teaching and research to collect artist's archives.
7) Regional collections should talk to each other - not all collect the same stuff - divy it up so the region is more enriched. Collections should also do this nationally.
8) Libraries should also collect archival aspects of making book - such as printing plates and digital files.
9) Libraries should collaborate with museums in lending out artist books for exhibitions
10) Libraries are caretakers, not owners, only owners in the broadest sense of the term.


Saturday, February 2, 2013

Codex 2013!



The Codex International Book Fair is right around the corner - February 10-13, at Richmond's Craneway building located at 1414 Harbour Way South. I'll have a half-table at this event showing my books, along with book artists from all over the world. Hope some of you can stop by!

Sunday, December 16, 2012

Carbon Corpus and what's coming up in 2013



The Carbon Corpus project is gearing up to launch in January as part of the exhibition Beyond... at Moore College of Art and Design. Above is the IPO letter for the project - click on it for a larger image.

In other exhibition news - I'm part of the Artists Annual at the Kala Art Gallery - the exhibition is up till February 2, and can be seen online here.

January is getting closer and closer - I will be part of the show at Moore, as well as part of a show called Proof of Some Existence at ECHO Gallery in Calistoga....and in February, I will have my own half-table at the Codex International Book Fair! 2013 is looking busy.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

PCBA Printing


In February, at the Codex fair, I had the fortune to be tabled right next to the amazing Peter and Donna Thomas. During that event, Peter invited me to collaborate with him and John Sullivan of Logos Graphics for a keepsake for the upcoming Makers' Issue of Ampersand, the journal of the Pacific Center for Book Arts. Logos Graphics is presided over by Binky, who is pictured above.

Over Skype and email, we came up with something using Peter's handmade paper and with an image by yours truly. I was a bit nervous to be part of a project by people for whom I have so much respect.

The piece was printed on John's beautiful Vandercook, pictured below.

It was also my first time using rubber ink. One of the things I appreciate most about John, besides being an amazing printer, is his ability to challenge my vocabulary. One word his introduced me to was thixotrohy. This is a word that describes how ink is thick until agitated or mixed, during which is becomes looser and easier to move. I was aware of this quality, but never the word to describe it!

Below is John placing the plate on the press bed.


John's press has a counter, which I'd never seen on a letterpress before - they are more common on offset presses. Here it is on print 199 . . .


. . . and 200! We printed more than that, but this was when I remembered to watch the numbers flip.


The prints are piling up. . .


. . . and a detail of the final result. Click on the image to see it larger.


I'm so grateful to both Peter and John for including me in this project. John mentioned that he was working on other projects for the Makers' Issue - I can't wait to see it!

Saturday, January 22, 2011

2011 so far...


The image above is a preview of one of my two newest artist books, Fossil Fuels. It is a unique artist book made up of relief prints, intaglios, collographs, digital prints, and hand embroidery. Fossil Fuels, and another artist book, Coal Burning, will be debuted at the Third Biennial Codex International Book Fair, at the Central Booking booth. I will also have an assortment of some of my older books.

In related news, I am currently part of The Book, A Contemporary View, at the Delaware Center for Contemporary Art in Wilmington, DE, and will be part of an upcoming exhibition, Battle of the Sexes, at the Delaware Art Museum, also in Wilmington.

The Book Bombs collaboration continues, with a recent print bombing of San Francisco. We are also currently part of the exhibition Social Commentaries at the Catich Gallery at Saint Ambroise University in Davenport, IO. In February, we will be releasing our newest zine, The Ethics of Wheatpaste, for the first time as both hard copy and a free, downloadable pdf, as part of the Refugee Reading Room project of Amze Emmons. More on this to come. . . .

So if you are in the Bay Area for Codex, please stop by the Central Booking booth and say hello! And if you haven't yet - check out my new website!