Showing posts with label Library of Loss. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Library of Loss. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Meriç Algün Ringborg - "The Library of Unborrowed Books"

For years, I have wanted to visit libraries across the land and find the book that has not been checked out for the longest time to claim as my own for two weeks to photograph. Why? I want to embrace the rejected, loving it for a moment before returning it to obscurity on a random shelf. I think about this often but am usually engrossed in five other projects and continue to put it off, waiting for another time.

I instantly fell in love with Meriç Algün Ringborg's The Library of Unborrowed Books not because the artist did it before me, but because she did it so well. I still plan on completing it someday - it needs to be included in The Library of Loss Part 3 focusing on the book as conceptual art.







[All images above are Meriç Algün Ringborg's from The Library of Unborrowed Books]

From Ringborg's website:

"The Library of Unborrowed Books bases itself on the concept of the library as an institution manifesting language and knowledge, of the passing of awareness and the openness to all types of people and literature. This work, however, comprises all the books from a selected library that have never been borrowed. The framework in this instance hints at what has been disregarded, knowledge essentially unconsumed, and puts on display what has eluded us."

"Why these books aren’t ‘chosen,’ why they are overlooked, will never be clear but whatever each book contains, en masse they become representative of the gaps and cracks of history, or the bureaucratic cataloging of the world and the ambivalent relationship between absence and presence. In this library their existence is validated simply by being borrowed, underlining their being as well as their content and form by putting them on display in an autonomous library dedicated to the books yet to have been revealed. The first section of The Library of Unborrowed Books have opened Stockholm with 600 books that are unborrowed from Stockholms Stadsbiblioteket (Stockholm Public Library) for a period of three-weeks."

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Vincennes University Installation

Morgan Ford Willingham gave me this disk of installation images from The Object Transformed at Vincennes University. I was very happy with the exhibition despite the awkwardness of having three different series seen at once (awkward as in I never thought of that way but it made perfect sense once viewing in person). Thank you for the opportunity to show my work, Morgan!


















Friday, August 17, 2012

"The Object Transformed" Press Release

The exhibition opens on Monday, August 20 and will be on exhibit through Thursday, September 13 in the Shircliff Gallery of Art.
 

Closing Reception will be held in the gallery from 11am - 12pm on Thursday, September 13, with an Artist Lecture from 2pm - 3pm that day in the Shircliff Auditorium, E101 in the Humanities Building.

Jacinda Russell is a photographer of objects - the object transformed into a self-portrait, a representation of place, a distant memory, or a symbol of fixation. Important influences in Russell’s work include found photographs, maps, 16th century cabinets of curiosity, worn and dilapidated objects, obsessive behavior in collecting, repetition, and storytelling. Currently, she is an Assistant Professor of Art at Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana. Russell received her MFA in photography from the University of Arizona and her BFA from Boise State University.  Her mixed media installations and photographs have been exhibited nationally and her work is represented in the collections of the Center for Creative Photography, Tucson, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and Reed College, Portland, Oregon.


The Shircliff Gallery of Art is located in the Shircliff Humanities Building on the corner of 2nd and Harrison streets. Gallery Hours are Monday - Thursday 8am - 10pm, Friday 8am - 5pm, and Sunday 12 - 3pm. The Gallery will be closed on Labor Day Weekend, September 2-3.

 

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Library Book Scans

One thing I know: I will not cease collecting photographs of how books deteriorate.




Monday, November 14, 2011

There's Something Wrong with This Photograph


A less involved version of There are nine mistakes in this photograph. Can you find them? by Duane Michals: