Sunday, July 23, 2023

in combination, group exhibit

All too often, mark-making conjures up images created using paint, ink, charcoal or graphite. Gaspereau Valley-based printmaker Julie Rosvall challenges our mark-making perceptions with her exhibit Contexture on display as part of the group show in combination at The Craig Gallery, tucked away on the Dartmouth waterfront at Alderney Landing.

ContextureIn addition to being a seasoned printmaker, Rosvall is an accomplished textile artist. Her practice combines these two disciplines to produce subtle yet provocative work that challenge our artistic perceptions.

In collaboration with letterpress printmaker and designer Tina Arsenault of Arquoise Press, Rosvall's prints are impressions of textile relief prints. Arsenault's letterpress prints are of knitting charts and pattern text. Some impressions are of the knitting itself, and other prints are text reproductions of knitting patterns with rudimentary illustrations. Generous borders centre these open, clean and sparse images, which are printed on blotter-thick paper.

ContextureThe individual prints are displayed on a Craig gallery wall and are assembled in a limited-edition book.

Visual artist and bookbinder Ellen Timbre of Mule Mother Books, has assembled Rosvall's and Arsenault's single sheet, monochromatic prints (10" x 15") in a high-end limited-edition hand bound book, entitled Contexture, whose open spine, screw-post format (11" x 15") is commercially familiar to many for its ubiquitous use in commercial photo albums and scrapbooks. This popular format allows for easy handling and closer examination of their prints.

Nested within Contexture, and protected on both sides by a blank sheet, are thin, vellum-like clear plastic sheets, which are blind-embossed with the impression – without the use of ink, paints or dye – of Rosvall's knitted work.

Contexture

The effect is subtle and forces the viewer to closer examine these textured impressions, which resemble alligator skin with its tactile ridges, bumps and indentations. Even though the marks are invisible, the textures created are indelible, inviting touch and exploration, made possible for the viewer by handling a display copy of Contexture. The display copy engages the viewer physically and enables the viewer to tactically experience Rosvall's work.

During the first pandemic lock-down, film maker and artist Andrea Dorfman committed herself to documenting her experiences by producing one mini-book each week.

Dorfman combines simple, accessible images and text set in a typewriter-style font to produce bright, multi-coloured mini-books. The mini-book format, which uses no adhesives or bindings, is achieved through folding, pinching and making a simple incision on a single rectangular piece of paper.

The resulting 8-panel mini-book, (folded size: 2.5" x 4"; flat size: 8" x 10"), is small enough to easily compile weekly content, but big enough to tell a visually-impactful, text-based short story/journal entry.

Andrea Dorfman

The Craig Gallery wall features 40 of Dorfman's mini-books displayed open and flat. This display results in half of the books' visuals and text appearing upside down (because the sheets are flat, not folded).

Andrea Dorfman

Far more accessible, are the variety of mini-books Dorfman has made available, (displayed atop a plinth), for visitors to read, handle and familiarize themselves with her work. When they do, they discover entertaining, reflective and sometimes self-deprecating first-person journal entries. The entire project can be viewed on Instagram at www.instagram.com/dorfmanorama.

AglenncoAlso of interest to book and paper artists, is work by "Aglennco... a queer, multimedia artist who fabricates futures using printmaking, textiles and illustrations."

One of their creations is a sheet of rectangular white felt (portrait format), that they have transformed to resemble a lined sheet of note paper through careful stitching of red thread (for the vertical margins) and blue thread (for the horizontal lines). A clever, simple and impactful rendering.

Rosvall, Dorfman and Aglennco are part of 8 artists whose work appears in the exhibit in combination at The Craig Gallery. in combination is part of Visual Arts Nova Scotia (VANS) 2022-23 mentorship program where established artists are successfully paired with emerging artists. in combination runs until July 30th, 2023.

Review by Charles Salmon


Saturday, July 15, 2023

Pages Turning, group exhibit

Pages Turning, at NSCAD's Anna Leonowens Gallery, is a gutsy group exhibition that forces the viewer to question what our concept of a book is, and what a book is supposed to look like. Curated by graduating student Neil Kehler, a photography major with an obvious interest in the book form. This exhibition captures the zeitgeist of how new millennial art and design students conceptualize books.

These super-sized, in-your-face, works of art are 'one of a kind' editions. Unlike most "hands off" exhibitions, here viewers are encouraged "please handle the work... do so with tenderness and care."

Metal Frame as Book

Crisp, clean paper sheets are attached at each end to two vertical metal screw posts that stand about 2.5 feet tall. The square metal rod base is about a foot wide. Each sheet of paper is separated from the other by evenly-spaced hexagon metal nuts. The 36 alternating sheets cover both sides of the posts, gently overlapping and progressively covering each other, like tree branches. When lifted, each page reveals an imprinted single line of text that stands alone, yet connects to the preceding page and the page that follows. Symmetrical, graceful and precise is the overall effect of this pushing-the-boundary book.

Canvas as Book

A singular rectangular gessoed canvas sheet with frayed sides and edges hangs like a medieval banner on the gallery wall.

This quiet, simple and subtle book commands our attention by its imposing size (19.5" wide by 36" long) which is contrasted by its faintly painted and difficult to read black text, making the viewer stop, linger and investigate.

Collage as Book

Instead of being elevated on a pedestal, this collage book's enormous open size (65" wide by 52" tall) demands that it be displayed on the gallery floor. Five double-page spreads of bold collage pages (using paint, paper and photocopies) comprise this multi-layered, rough texture book.

"The book as sovereign," forces the reader to acknowledge this reverse power play by either bending over or kneeling down to engage with its huge 32.5" by 52" pages. The physical effort is worth the visceral and visual reward.

Quilt as Book

Traditional quilts play with pattern and colour. This quilt plays with letters and words. The medium is the metaphor - fragments of fabric comprise fragments of text. This imposing (48" wide by 64.5" long) 12-panel quilt features white fabric block letters appliquéd to a bold red fabric background. The resulting text message wraps around the quilt border and circles inward. Sometimes the words appear in black fabric, calling out for our attention, like bold face text. Curiously, sometimes the letters are not appliquéd, but pinned to the fabric.

Each quilt block (14" wide by 15.5" long) is held together, not by tightly stitched thread, but at its corners with safety pins. As a result, when hung, the quilt does not lay flat, but sags with huge gaps that look like pouches. Upon closer examination, this optical illusion disappears. Is the subtext that the weight of the message is too great for the fabric to bear?

Almost all book structures require the reader to hold the book close in order to read and comprehend the text. However, in this case the opposite holds true. The reader needs to distance themselves from the book (i.e., quilt) in order to read and comprehend the text. Traditional bookbinding studies primarily focus on structure. The Pages Turning exhibition books integrate content with structure in unexpected and innovative ways.

Kehler's curatorial statement offers: "As time rolls on books may take on new purposes and forms of which we cannot conceive, and it is conceivable also that our relationship to them will change."

The Anna Leonowens Gallery is located on the cobblestoned Granville Street pedestrian mall of the Fountain Campus of NSCAD University in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Pages Turning is on display from July 11 to 15, 2023.

Review by Charles Salmon


Wednesday, July 5, 2023

Collective Directions Exhibit

Collective Directions features a selection of works from the Halifax-based Manual Training Collective, at the Chester Art Centre in Chester, Nova Scotia. Of particular interest to book and paper artists are two tunnel books, created by film and video artist James MacSwain. MacSwain, who studied theatre arts, (U of A), describes his creations as follows: "Accordion books, or tunnel books or theatre books, are three dimensional objects... consisting of five accordion segments and a front 'proscenium' arch."

James MacSwain - tunnel books
"The fifth segment is an image on acetate so that the accordion book becomes a light box that glows when a light shines on it... The inner segments contain the various characters and objects that give the accordion book its meaning."

MacSwain’s tunnel books have no covers, sleeves or slipcases, and are open and exposed for continual viewing.

James MacSwain - CelebrationCelebration, (created in 2018), features six Victorian characters framed by a "proscenium arch" of salmon-coloured marbled paper. We the viewer are exposed to a playful scene from a doll's house of static paper dolls that are frozen in movement as they dance in a foyer, to music from a pianist and a minstrel. The outdoors beckon through garden gates in the background which frame a mottled blue sky.

MacSwain's other work, Viewing Platform for the Planet Saturn, (created in 2013), is an exterior night setting featuring the luminous planet Saturn encircled by its famous ring, filling the star-filled night sky.

James MacSwain - Viewing PlatformTwo biblical figures in the mid-ground are as equally captivated by this celestial sight, as the crowd of 1930s fedora-topped men and women wrapped in turbans and furs in the foreground. Like the viewers in the tunnel book, our gaze is directed to the focal point of this creation - the legendary planet Saturn.

Both tunnel books are the same landscape format size: H 9" x W 10" x D 6". Paper, matt board, acetate and glue are listed as the materials used for both books, which make extensive use of photo prints. The effect is a more refined look than tunnel books crafted from hand-cut papers of various colours and textures.

Collective Directions is on display at the Chester Art Centre until July 16, 2023.

Review by Charles Salmon