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....the real avant-garde is in the head.

JOHN BOCK, Meech elasticity, 2004

JOHN BOCK, Meech elasticity, 2004
21 x 15 cm
artist’s book with pop up in center, 92 pp.
edition unknown, 30 copies signed, numbered
published by CCA, Kitakyushu, Japan
Collection Kees van Gelder, Amsterdam

History of prices, and offered by:
Buchhandlung Wien/Lukatsch, Berlin, Germany € 75,-

A collage of a pictorial diary with reproduced handwritten statements in Germanish English with collages of personal as well as found photos and printed matter. The cover “Bänsch – Kauferverhalten – 4. Auflage” is such an example of found printed matter. Colophon in English and Japanese.

KENDELL GEERS, Point Blank, 2004 [artist’s book]

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KENDELL GEERS, Point Blank, 2004
21 x 15 x 0,8 cm
artist’s book. offset, bullet holes, gun powder sooth; comes in cellophane bag
edition 30
signed, numbered
published by Imschoot, Uitgevers, Ghent, Belgium
€ 1.400,- plus € 18,- Track & Trace registered mail
inv.KGee 000-pr

Seven bullet holes are randomly shot into the blank pages of this artist book. The cover has residue of gun powder. The publisher suggests that Kendell Geers’ exile from his homeland of South Africa and its violence during Apartheid inspired him to make this multiple with gun shots. The sooth of gunpowder is spread over the front of the cover and the cellophane bag has created several hardly visible hair thin scratches in the layer of sooth.

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History of prices:
Saint Martin Bookshop, Brussels, Belgium November 2023 € 500,- unsigned
Saint Martin Bookshop, Brussels, Belgium November 2023 € 350,- unsigned

GERHARD RICHTER, War Cut, 2004

GERHARD RICHTER, War Cut, 2004
25 x 21 cm
hard cover, 340 pp.
edition 2000; nrs 1-200 signed with felt-tip pen on penultimate page, numbered
2,000 copies, numbered with stamp on the penultimate page, of these a few copies are also signed, dated and marked h.c. in felt-tip pen on the penultimate page,
150 copies, signed, dated and numbered in blue ballpoint on penultimate page
published by Walther Koenig, Cologne, 2004
here unsigned
inv.GR 000-pr

In May 2002, Gerhard Richter photographed 216 details of his “Abstraktes Bild Nr 648-2”, 1987. Working over a period of several weeks, Richter combined these 10 x 15 cm details with 165 texts on the Iraq war, published in the German FAZ newspaper on March 20 and 21. ‘War Cut’ follows an ever denser rhythm in which texts and gaps take up the same amount of space as the pictures, creating a strictly composed work of open and closed layouts and their mirror images. A conceptual artist’s book about the war in Iraq and one may say war in general communicated through newspapers.

Extra information:

In 2012 a second edition in English was published with a different book cover:

 

 

History of prices – signed version edition 200
Bengtsson Fine Arts, Landskrona, Sweden $ 2700.-  November 2010

ELSWORTH KELLY, Wild Grape Leaves II, 2004

ELSWORTH KELLY, Wild Grape Leaves II, 2004
58,4 x 78,7 cm
1 colour lithograph
edition 60
here a RTP/Read to Print
not available

This print in the final edition of 60 was vertically signed as issued.

History of price:
William Doyle, New York, USA € 10.699,- 30 April 2019 (hammer price)

ALEX KATZ, The Sailor Hat, 2003

ALEX KATZ, The Sailor Hat, 2003
19.5 x 17.25 inches
edition 60
produced by BAM / Brooklyn Arts for Music, New York, USA
not available       

Reducing a woman’s face to its essential components for this characteristic portrayal of Americana, ‘The Sailor Hat’ demonstrates Alex Katz’s stylized and flattened approach to figuration — his artistic trademark that finds its most concentrated expression in his printmaking.

History of prices:
US$ 1,050.- December 2012

KRISTJAN GUDMUNDSSON, Seamsea, 2003

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KRISTJAN GUDMUNDSSON, Seamsea, 2003
14,8 x 21,2 x 0,4 cm; 6 parts
stiff 3 hand stitched, cards, letterpress on cardboard cover
hand numbered in pencil
edition 250
published in six languages by Silver Press Reykjavík, Iceland

Kristján Gudmundsson makes conceptual art not only related to ideas on the potentials of materials, lines, space and time, but also quite often related to nature. He makes sculptures of e.g. paper rolls combined with solid graphite and calls these drawings. Among other works he makes books with e.g. pages full of lines until he has catched the distance “Once around the sun”. In “Seamsea” the artist has made drawings of emblematic (Icelandic?) sea waves on thick cardboard pages. It comes in a set of six books with the title in six different languages: English, Icelandic, Dutch, French, Norwegian and Chinese, i.e. Seamsea, Saumasjór, Zoomzee, Mercouture, Sømsjø and [Chinese characters]. Each book contains three drawings that are made of blue yarn; machine sewn on each page. Due to the hard labour to make these hand made books no more than 100 sets have been produced until now. Very good copies.

MARLENE DUMAS, My Daughter, 2003 [DVD]

MARLENE DUMAS, My Daughter, 2003
DVD, original film, music by Ryuitchi Sakamoto, stapled booklet 16 pp.
limited edition 800
menu for both loop and single play
rare, very few copies left
€ 320,- plus € 15,- for Track & Trace registered EU mail
inv.BF-Billydvd

Each DVD of this “Loud & Clear Too” series is provided with a menu for single play and loop play. Therefore the film can also be played as a genuine piece of art on its own. The jewell box contains a booklet of 16 pages with a English text by Dirk van Weelden.

‘My Daughter’ is the very first film made by Marlene Dumas, commissioned by and specifically made for the Bifrons Foundation (director Thora K. Johansen). Well-known for her paintings and drawings about ‘Helena’ the artist has made a touching vanitas art piece about her daughter innocently sleeping while the eye of the camera moves around in the sleeping room passing a skull on a table as a momento mori suggesting an unknown future. The dramatic slurring music of Ryuitchi Sakamoto gives the work an important second layer to the apparently motherly worries. This is one of the best films in this genre I have ever seen, “comparable” to films like ‘Phat Free’ (1995-1997) of David Hammons and ‘Wave’ (2006) of Marijke van Warmerdam. KvG

This DVD is an unique combination of art and contemporary music.

‘For Marlene Dumas and Erik Kessels it was a challenge to work together with such a well-known (film) composer as Ryuichi Sakamoto. He is used to taking account of the images for his compositions, and in this case he has allowed himself to be inspired by both of them. Dumas and Kessels have been working closely since the start and have based themselves on a common concept.
For ‘My Daughter’ Dumas filmed the sleeping body of her child. It is her first video work and the slightly slowed-down shots and the blurred use of colour make it seem as though she is painting with the camera. The camera glides over her daughter’s body, zooming in onto her hand, her buttocks, her loose hair… We as viewers soon feel like voyeurs as the camera records more than a sleeping girl alone. Willingly or not, something of a Lolita effect crept into the innocent image. As both mother and artist, it seems as though Dumas is aware of this and wanted to show how the erotic slowly but surely takes possession of someone (perhaps this is why there is that one shot of a skull placed somewhere in the room).

Erik Kessels’ contribution is called ‘My sister’ and seems at first sight also an ordinary home movie. Brother and sister are playing table tennis in the garden, with the mother intervening now and then. Styled in the warm brown and orange tones of the Seventies, Kessels has adapted their movements to the whipped up, repetitive rhythms of Sakamoto’s music. Nothing seems able to disturb the idyll – only the music suggests something ominous – until suddenly we are told that Kessels’ sister was killed in an accident twenty-five years ago. This unexpected information causes a shiver to run down your spine and makes the sounds, which are like children’s voices, in Sakamoto’s composition extra cruel. Dumas’s ode to her daughter would seem to imply a sequel, while with Kessels the message is implacable. His sister only still exists by the grace of memory.’ Bifrons Foundation, Amsterdam 2003