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Carrie Mae Weems (1953)

Weems received training in both dance and photography prior to enrolling at the University of California, Berkeley, in the mid-1980s to study folklore. It was during this time that she developed an interest in the observation methods used in the social sciences. In the early 1990s, Weems began incorporating her own persona into her photographic compositions in an intentional effort to evoke a sense of both being within and viewing from outside the work. She has since referred to this recurring figure as an “alter-ego,” a “muse,” and a “witness to history,” representing both the artist and the audience. “As a Black woman, it is crucial that she is engaged with the world around her,” Weems explained, “engaged with history, with seeing, with existing. She is a guide into rarely seen circumstances.”

Using her own image, Weems explores a wide range of topics in her 1990 Kitchen Table Series, which consists of 20 gelatin silver prints and 14 texts on silkscreen panels. She comments on “woman’s subjectivity, woman’s ability to celebrate her body, and the woman’s construction of herself and her own image.” Throughout the series, Weems, or rather her protagonist, is depicted in the same intimate domestic interior. The photographs feature a wooden table illuminated by an overhead light, and include scenes such as Untitled (Man smoking) and Untitled (Woman and Daughter with Makeup), in which the protagonist interacts with a variety of characters (friends, children, lovers) and objects (posters, books, playing cards, and a birdcage). In Untitled (Woman and Daughter with Makeup), for example, the woman and a young girl sit at the table, gazing into mirrors as they apply lipstick in parallel motions. The photograph highlights the notion that gender is a learned behavior, while also centering its Black female subjects with tenderness.

www.ftn-books.com has currently several titles on Weems available en highly recommend her Basel exhibition which is currently on show.

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Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis (1875-1911)

Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis was a Lithuanian virtuoso painter and composer. The inhabitants of Lithuania hold him in high esteem as their greatest musical prodigy, despite his absence during the resurgence of Lithuania as an independent state. In Čiurlionis’ era, Lithuania was a constituent of the Tsardom of Russia.

During his brief existence, Čiurlionis composed approximately 300 musical compositions, and crafted just as many paintings. The planetary body 2420 Čiurlionis was christened in his honor. Similarly, a mountain in the Pamir region and a rock formation in Franz Josef Land in the Arctic Ocean bear his illustrious name.

In the year 1997, the renowned Rijksmuseum expanded its collection to include additional photographs from Cary Markerink and Theo Baart in their series “The Highway,” offering a glimpse into the asphalt-covered landscape of the Netherlands. www.ftn-books.com has a reprint of a small sketch book now available.

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Cary Markerink ( 1951)

Spent the initial dozen years of life traversing Indonesia, the Netherlands, and Germany before eventually settling in the Netherlands.

Nurtured a passion for painting, writing, film, and photography since an early age.

Enrolled in art school in the late 1970s with the intention of pursuing a career as a painter, but ultimately discovered a love for photography and changed course.

Initially gained recognition for the project Stadsstillevens (City-stills), which showcased candid street scenes of Amsterdam in a realistic style, defying the prevalent trend of social photography at the time in the Netherlands.

Co-founded Fragment Publishers with a group of friends, with the aim of reviving the dying tradition of high-quality photo-books in the Netherlands. Notable publications include works by Ed van der Elsken, Cas Oorthuys, Johan van der Keuken, Hans Aarsman, Henze Boekhout, Willem Diepraam, and Wout Berger, carefully collaborating with top-notch designers, writers, and printing companies of the era.

Frequently journeyed to the Caribbean between the years of 1976 and 1981, getting involved in the struggle for land rights of the native Arawak and Carib peoples of Surinam.

Studied at St. Joost Academy in Breda and at Rietveld Academy in Amsterdam. As a photojournalist, he works for a large number of daily and weekly newspapers, creating various reports in Suriname.

For architects Lucien Lafour and Theo Bosch, he photographs various projects. He is the founder of publishing company Fragment and was an editor for the photography magazine ‘Plaatwerk’.

As an architectural photographer, Markerink is disappointed by the lack of interest in a building in action. Every moment of the day (cold or warm, day or night, rain or sun) shows a different use of architecture, also demonstrating whether the architect has thought about these things carefully.

In 1997, the Rijksmuseum acquired extra photos from Cary Markerink and Theo Baart from the series ‘The Highway’, a look at asphalted Netherlands.

www.ftn-books.com has the Slewe publication which was designed by Irma Boom now available.

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Eva Lansink (1980)

Eva Lansink, a young contemporary artist based in Leiden, Netherlands. Specializing in sculpting, graphic art, and photography, her graduate project, DRIFT, consisted of a series of sculptures and etchings, as well as an art book. This collection tells the story of an anthropomorphic world of rabbits who unabashedly live out their fantasies, inviting and confronting the reader and viewer.

Her recent photography project, RAW, explores raw love: love guided purely by intuition and impulse. It presents us with beings who are one with nature; perverse yet exhibitionist.

Eva Lansink aims to expose the animalistic side of humanity that we often suppress in order to conform to societal norms. Through her work, Lansink allows us to briefly inhabit a world that is unlike our own, where we can anonymously fulfill our needs and desires.
www.ftn-books.com has the DRIFT book now available from a signed numbered edition of 100 copies.

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AFRO ( Basaldella) (1912-1976)

For his career the year 1950 was quintessential.

n the year 1950, the collaboration with Italian-American gallery Catherine Viviano in New York was initiated. In 1952, he joined the Gruppo degli Otto, which also included Renato Birolli, Antonio Corpora, Mattia Moreni, Armando Pizzinatoi, Giuseppe Santomaso, Giulio Turcato, Ennio Morlotti, and Emilio Vedova. This group participated in documenta 1 in 1955 and documenta 2 in 1959 in Kassel, Germany.

Along with these artists, Afro participated in the 26th Biennale of Venice, where he was awarded a prize for his work, Villa Fleurent (1952). He also participated again in 1954 and 1956. In 1956, he won the award for the best Italian painter. In 1960, he won the Guggenheim Prize in New York with his work, L’isola del Giglio. Throughout this entire period, until his passing, Afro continued to exhibit his work, especially in Italy, the United States, and France.

www.ftn-books.com has the AFRO BURRI FONTANA book nowe available.

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Lotti van der Gaag (continued)

Thre is a growing appreciation and admiration for Lotti van der Gaag during the last couple of years. The Stedelijk Museum Schiedam presentation paved the way for this growing interest and now ia can contribute alittle bit too. A colleague made some 20 original small drawings available for me which are now for sale at www.ftn-books.com

All were executed on materials that were at hand just before and during her hospitalization in 1998. Making these small work of art the last ones she made during her life.

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Wolfgang Ellenrieder (1959)

Wolfgang Ellenrieder, hailing from Munich, has mastered the art of camouflage and deception in his work. He skillfully lures the viewer astray, drawing upon a plethora of sources such as stock photography archives, the internet, brochures on model-making, and his own photographs, drawings, and watercolours. Through these varied mediums, he offers glimpses into our reality. However, this reality is intertwined and transformed into something entirely new, a game of interconnected media. With calculated closeness to our experiences and visual knowledge, Ellenrieder challenges the perceived security of our observation of images. Moreover, his paintings and photographs exemplify the power of the image in our modern age. This seductive art conceals the mechanisms and structures of our media-driven existence, while also provocatively questioning the role of images in politics, society, and culture in a subtle yet ironic tone.

www.ftn-books.com has currently the Kerber published PARALLEL book available.

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Jan Eric Visser (1962)

Jan Eric Visser (born 1962), a sculptor based in Rotterdam, is renowned for his meticulous creation of abstract sculptures, using inorganic household waste from his personal life. For over three decades, he has been exploring an ecologically-conscious aesthetic, honoring the resources of the earth and the cycle of nature and life. His works strive for a harmonious fusion of concept, material, and activism, challenging our contemporary understanding of existence and matter. The presence of his alluring pieces – in terms of texture, color, size, and form – is closely intertwined with the ethical principles of their production. His artistic practice can be viewed as a unique personal signature, evoking ideas of completion and impermanence, mystery and urgency, and the interconnection of art and life. In a world where haste and distractions abound, his captivating sculptures provide a sanctuary for contemplation and introspection.

Methodology

Visser’s sculptures are the outcome of a simple yet effective technique: he assembles waste materials and covers them with paper pulp made from waste paper. After saturating them with wax, often leftover from votive candles, and gently polishing them, the objects acquire a new identity. Although the forms are rarely predicted, this approach encourages an abundance of formal diversity. The discarded items from his own bin or randomly collected outside serve as the main source of inspiration, as the artwork seems to emerge from the waste, revealing itself to the artist. Visser humorously refers to this method as “Form Follows Garbage.” Constantly trying to keep pace with the rate at which his bin fills up, he views his sculptures as a continuous process, each one representing a unique “stage” along the way.

www.ftn-books.com has the 2007 Gorcums Museum catalog now available.

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Vali Myers (continued)

I have been on the look out for Vali Myers items since a long time and i did not even know the above poster existed. But yes….it exists and was publishewd on the occasion of a Myers exhibition by the Pter Stuyvesant Foundation and held at their Turmac venue. So this was practically an in-house exhibition and very few people must have known about it. Poster design by TOTAL DESIGN makes this a beautiful and highly collectable poster for the Vali Myers collector. Not cheap….only 1 available, but extremely scarce and in the best possible condition…..MINT

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Johan Meijerink (1948-2011)

The passing of Johan Meijerink in September 2011 left behind a body of work that is both beautiful and insular. The book “Johan Meijerink,” edited by Willie Stehouwer with design by Rick Vermeulen, presents the artist’s development in almost chronological order. The 159-page book contains numerous photos and three written contributions. The foreword, written by Olphaert den Otter, a fellow artist who worked in the same studio building as Johan, provides insight into the man. Art historian Jan van Adrichem explains the acquisition of three works for the Boijmans Van Beuningen Museum during his time as city curator. Art critic Frits de Coninck closely analyzes the entire body of work and draws connections to potential influences.

Johan was a man of few words, a trait also evident in his work where balance was achieved through omission rather than addition. The majority of his sculptures, made of lead or bronze, hover between abstract and figurative. One might describe the works as contemplative, while the often humorous titles establish a connection to the world we live in.

Many of the photos in the book were taken by Johan himself. Pictures of artworks are interwoven with photos from his travels. They seem to serve as references to sources of inspiration, such as photos from Indonesia – the country where Johan was born and lived for ten years – or from Rome, where he spent a year.

Clearly, the book shows that Johan Meijerink sought the ideal of beauty in his autonomous works with their own identity. The sculptures speak for themselves; their silence can only be enhanced by the image.

www.ftn-books.com has several important publications on Meijerink now available.