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Michael Ryan (1953)

A native New Yorker living and working for many years in the silvery light and rich artistic heritage of the Netherlands. In 2002 he was granted residency status based on my importance to the culture of The Netherlands. In 2021 he became a Dutch citizen. Here are some quotes by Michael Ryan:

My working day begins early with yoga and a long walking meditation.

With my mind and body united and focussed in the moment I’m prepared to express myself creatively back in the studio.

Emails, news, internet is for later, after I’ve painted all morning.

My subjects are found at home and close to home as well as in my travels.

In my connection with the world before me.

There is beauty everywhere when the mind is still and the senses fully open.

www.ftn-books.com has the BORZO gallery catalogue available.

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Marian Breedveld (1959)

Marian Breedveld (1959, the Netherlands) has found her own way in abstract painting. In her paintings, the process, the result, the matter and the unimaginative representation are all equally important. Her goal is to make the boundaries of time and space tangible through matter. Breedveld plays in her work with the possibility that the spectator disappears in that spaciousness, but is always recalled by the presence of the paint as a substance.

Breedveld was artis in residence at De Ateliers’63 in Haarlem. Her work has been exhibited frequently, including at FRAC Auvergne, FRAC Haute Normandie and MUba Eugène-Leroy in France, and Stedelijk Museum Schiedam and Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam. Her work has been included in various public and private collections, including those of Centraal Museum Utrecht and Gemeentemuseum Den Haag.

www.ftn-books.com has the important Breedveld publication published by Thieme Art now available.

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Piet Dirkx (continued)

I thought i had all publications on Piet Dirkx, but surprise surprise …….. last week I found a publication on artists with their origins in de Mierden-Reusel. For all those that followed my blogs on Piet Dirkx this is my latest addition:

for more publications on Piet Dirkx find these at www.ftn-books.com

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Willem Sandberg and the Stedelijk Museum

Just a short anouncement today that i have added 5 important early Stedelijk Museum catalogs to my inventory. All designed by Willem Sandberg.

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Willem Sandberg additions

Willem Sandberg was truly one of the best duthc graphic designers from the last century. I always have been focussing on all Stedelijk Museum material that was published in the last century and now I can add to my inventory some great designs by Willem Sandberg of which 2 are signed. All items are now available at www.ftn-books.com

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Gerco de Ruijter ( 1961 )

Gerco de Ruijter is a Rotterdam-based visual artist working in the field of photography and film. In the late 1980s he started using kites, balloons and fishing poles to create images of situations far removed from our own vantage point. Since 2012 he has been mining Google Earth as a source, resulting in films like CROPS (2012) and Playground (2014). His art explores how far presentation of the landscape can be reduced and yet still remain recognisable.

De Ruijter studied at the Academy for Visual Arts in Rotterdam, graduating with honours in 1993. Since then he has had numerous solo and group exhibitions both in the Netherlands and elsewhere, including at the Stedelijk Museum Schiedam, Museum Boijmans van Beuningen, Rotterdam, The Hirshhorn Museum, Washington DC, and The Harnett Museum of Art in Richmond. His work features in several important private and public collections.

www.ftn-books.com has the ALMOST NATURE now available .

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Laurie Simmons (1949)

Simmons’s understanding of American consumerism was shaped by the suburbs—full of mass-produced appliances, automobiles, and furniture—that sprung up after World War II. Born in 1949, Simmons’s formative years were spent on Long Island, surrounded by homes much like the one pictured in Walking House. This period saw economic expansion that ushered in unprecedented material prosperity for the middle class, but it also enforced a potent impulse to conformity. Imagine a familiar scene from any suburban tract house: a kitchen full of anodyne, impersonal surfaces. The woman of the house peers into an open refrigerator; behind her is a table laden with food. The scene has a nostalgic beauty, but its appeal is wholly simulated: the woman is a doll and the room around her a carefully constructed miniature environment. This is just one of many “interiors” that Simmons staged and shot in the late 1970s, only a few years after she graduated from the Tyler School of Art and settled in New York City. This body of work, which brought Simmons to public attention, reveals the uncanny superficiality of suburban life by using photography to deceive rather than accurately report the facts.

Simmons’s early work treats the domestic environment as a distinctly female space, but one where artificiality casts doubt on the reliability of conventional gender roles. A decade later, Simmons’s “Walking Objects,” with their elegant, bare or stocking-clad legs, similarly take aim at omnipresent media images of women transformed into sexualized objects. Her recent series titled How We See is no less incisive. Here, Simmons photographed fashion models that have been made up and attired to resemble dolls—in a particularly disquieting touch, the oversized, luminous eyes of these women are painted onto their closed eyelids. Simmons’s attention to male identity is equally sensitive to questions of convention and superficiality. One image from 1985 is barely legible as a person—using a microscope, Simmons and Allan McCollum photographed a tiny figurine used to populate model trains—but a shirt and tie, the most generic attire of an urban working man, is clearly visible.

Ultimately, however, Simmons is drawn to a different kind of artificial male figure: the ventriloquist’s dummy. In the mid 1980s and 1990s, she produced several series of photographs that use these articulated dolls to explore masculine experience and self-presentation. Years later, a film Simmons directed in 2006 would prominently feature the same dummies alongside a lead performance by Meryl Streep. Like the domestic interior, the motif of ventriloquism speaks to Simmons’s suburban childhood: “I kept returning to the image of an early, almost pre-memory Christmas present given to my older sister. It was a ventriloquist doll…. I feel as though we spent the better part of our childhood trying to talk without moving our lips.” This autobiographical subtext came to the fore in 1993, when Simmons commissioned a ventriloquist’s dummy in her own likeness. In photographs that depict this doll, the confusion of object and person, as well as reality and illusion, reaches new heights, suggesting that even Simmons’s artistic self-fashioning cannot fully escape the culture of artificiality and pretense we inhabit.

www.ftn-books.com has the , until this date, most important Simmons publication ” BIG CAMERA LITTLE CAMERA ” now available.

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Dokter Faustus, project by W139

A novel of great complexity, Doctor Faustus is also a treatise on how art and, with it, the artist, has become autonomous. How it broke away from religious and collective bounds to become a domain accessible only to the isolated individual and how, in this state of permanent self-reflection, erodes the artist’s creative powers.

Various strands of my curatorship and artistic practice converge in this plan: the wish to paint W139 from head to toe at least once; the wish to be instrumental in a collaboration between different artists who transcend the obligatory reference to a shared theme and the endeavour to vanquish the wondrous fear of illustration that has held the visual arts captive for over a century.

No catalog was published. butDE GROENE AMSTERDAMMER published a special exhibition magazine for this exceptional project which is available at www.ftn-books.com

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Joost Swarte (continued)

Twice a year i am visiting Haarlem for the auctions being held over there and in the near future I will Haarlem even more frequently since my son is moving to Haarlem. My favorite spit for a quick and satisfying lunch is the FRIETHOES for arguably the best french fries in the Netherlands. The link with Swarte?…. Joost Swearte designed and developed the packaging for Friethoes, which even makes it more worthwhile to visit Friethoes. The label and the triangle paper bag are now available at www.ftn-books.com

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Permeke (Continued)

The reason for another blog on Permeke is that i recently encountered the PERMEKE catalog designed by Benno Wissing. An excellent example of the great quality designs the dutch designers from that period managed to maintain. This is a simple but effective museum catalog design and in quality equals the best by Willem Sandberg.

For this and more Wissing designs visit www.ftn-books.com