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Niek Kemps (1952)

Layering is a recurring theme in Kemps’ oeuvre. On one hand, he frequently employs semi-transparent and reflective materials in his work. On the other hand, his sculptures often contain multiple layers – photographic prints are “trapped” in glass, and multiple layers of imagery are overlaid. Additionally, Kemps adds a new layer of meaning through the titles he bestows upon his work.

Through his art, Kemps explores various forms and ideas of space. What is presupposed in displaying art? What is presupposed in having access to it? How does a viewer experience art in physical space? And in the realm of conceptual art, how does a viewer experience space in the idea of a museum?

In the 1980s, Kemps experimented with the concept of a hidden museum, which he virtually constructed using a 3D drawing program. He turns things inside out and reverses the order and fixed patterns. What happens if you hang a print of a virtual space on the virtual wall within the virtual space? Typically, a work that is hung on the wall occupies physical space, but what if the suggestion is made that one can also enter it? In that case, the thing that takes up space suddenly provides space: a play between virtual, physical, and mental space.

In his more recent work, exemplified by Dissolved and Flawlessly Tingled (2015), Kemps combines the classical idea of a sculpture with prints of virtual installations. Dissolved and Flawlessly Tingled consists of fifteen polyester walls, against which five prints are placed. These prints depict virtual museum rooms containing virtual works that are found throughout the space – on the ceiling, lying flat on the ground, and standing at an angle. The virtual works depicted on the physical prints also show spaces where similar prints are displayed. This leads to questions such as, what is the work, what is the work within the work, and what is reflection? In other words, what do you see, what can you see, and what do you think you can (or cannot) see?

www.ftn-books.com has several titles on Kemps now available.

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Ardy Strüwer (1939 – 2023))

Ardy Struwer, also known as Eduard Arnaud Strüwer, is a Swedish-Indonesian-Dutch artist who grew up in the former Dutch East Indies and in the Netherlands. He received his education at the Royal Academy in The Hague and as a guest student at the printmaking department of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Stockholm. He has spent extended periods of time working in cities such as New York and Paris, where he currently resides. Strüwer’s art, including both paintings and lithographs, is characterized by a vibrant expressiveness, often with a touch of surrealism, with the recurring theme of the female form. Strüwer himself has described his style as “sensual surrealism” and “postmodern flower power”. His work is featured in various private and museum collections, such as the Peter Stuyvesant collection, the Moderna Museet in Stockholm, and the Gemeente Museum in The Hague.

www.ftn-books.com has currently some prints by Struwer from the Any Art collection available.

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A.N. Godefroy (1822- 1899)

Godefroy came into this world in 1822, bearing the name Abraham Nikolaas Smit. However, in 1840, he changed his last name to Godefroy.[1] His career began in 1838, when he joined the Department of Urban Works in Amsterdam. In the same year of its establishment (1842), he became a member of the Society for the Promotion of Architecture, and he even served as its president from 1862 to 1867. From 1845 to 1850, he worked at the architectural firm of Isaäc Warnsinck. In 1851, he started his own architectural practice in Amsterdam.

www.ftn-books.com has the Nai / Arlette Brouwers designed publication now available.

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Johan Thorn-Prikker (1868-1932)

Johan Thorn Prikker assumed the role of Professor for Painting at Kölner Werkschule (predecessor of KISD) from 1926 to 1932. Despite the time frame of his work predating the current century, Prikker’s life and artistic output still present us with profound insights into the intricate connections between art and craftsmanship, art and society, and art and spirituality. Drawing upon the wisdom of Aristotle, Giambattista Vico, and Friedrich von Schiller – intellectuals whose discourse features prominently in my KISD seminar, “The Eye Is Part Of The Mind” – I contend that Prikker’s comprehensive perspective offers a thought-provoking lens through which to view the realms of art and politics, particularly in light of contemporary reinventions of the therapeutic potential of art. Indeed, Prikker’s seemingly ornamental paintings and designs were never intended to simply serve as aesthetically pleasing decorations. Prikker’s vast artistic repertoire, coupled with his endeavors as an educator, curator, and designer, stem from his (romantic) conviction that art has the power to liberate the human imagination, ignite euphoric states and chaos, and that these experiences are crucial for true emancipation of creativity!

www.ftn-books.com has several Thorn Prikker pulbications available.

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Peter Gentenaar (1947)

Peter Gentenaar (1946) embarked on his artistic career as a graphic artist, but his encounter with the material on which he works, paper, led him down a different path. He now creates paper pulp in his self-designed paper machine and transforms it into large, cloud-like sculptures. As the initiator of the Holland Paper Biennial, he compiles a stunning book every two years.

www.ftn-books.com has now an early lithograph from 1975 available.

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Lou Kreymborg (1894-1974)

In 1947, Lou Kreymborg (1919-1993) established the agency firm bearing his name. His travels to Denmark resulted in acquiring the latest furniture from Poul Kjaerholm and Arne Jacobsen. He personally met with them and arranged for distribution in the Netherlands. In 1954, he made contact with the Borsani brothers of Tecno in Italy, from whom he imported revolutionary furniture until his passing. He also brought fabrics from Storck and Eggert (Tulipan), furniture from Bonacina (Franco Albini and Franca Helg), lamps from Martinelli (Gae Aulenti and Achille Castiglione), furniture from Dieter Rams (Vitsoe), and fabrics from Jack Lenor Larsen to the Netherlands. His association with Bruno and Jacqueline Danese, publishers of a progressive collection of home accessories, including works from Enzo Mari and Bruno Munari, was also significant. With an early keen eye for quality, an intense personal dedication, and an unwavering belief in his innovative contemporaries, Lou Kreymborg contributed to the Netherlands’ design emancipation. With enthusiasm bordering on missionary fervor, he showcased their work in leading home stores such as Metz, Pander, and Bas van Pelt, as well as in projects by (interior) architects such as Kho Liang Ie, Hein Salomonson, and Wim Quist.

www.ftn-books.com has the ZICHT OP DESIGN boek now available.

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Bram van Velde (continued)

A special blog on a special artist on a very special publication.

Bram van Velde made this publication together with Pierre Hébey for one of the best publishers in the art world. This publication LE MOT “BUVETTE” was published by Yves Riviere and acquired by a longtime collector of his work at the publisher in 1975. Since it has been in his collection and now he made a request to me to sell this. Thre is only 1 other copy at this moment available and it will be a long time before this will appear on the market at a reasonable price. This 32 page publication comes in its original slipcase with the 2 sets of 4 signed and numbered lithographs. In Total 8 lithographs all signed and numbered 80/90. One set of 4 is printed on Arches paper , the other set of 4 is printed on Japon paper. Last month i photographed the set and was blown away with its quality. This is for me one of the best and most appealing sets from the 70’s i have ever encountered. The set is now available at www.ftn-books.com

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Jouke Kleerebezem (1953)

With the touch screen as an interface and computer programs that translate and manipulate a simple pen stroke into a digital code, Kleerebezem rediscovered the primary expressive power of line, shape, and color. The frictionless digital liberation of his artistic handwriting proved to be the ultimate condition for the unrestrained lyricism and hybrid media use in his recent works, where he blends digital and analog methods together. Throughout the summer months, the artist works on new drawings, paintings, and (photo-)graphic works in the exhibition space. Through Instagram and his project’s own website, he reflects on the creative process and the context of the media used.

Digital formats also offer the work different modes of distribution and reception, such as through Instagram and self-publishing on the web. While under the title “Notes, Quotes, Provocations and Other Fair Use” between 1998 and 2005, he published his entire production on the internet without fail, in what was one of the first Dutch weblogs, analog and digital processes intersect in his recent work.

Kleerebezem’s imagination freely draws from both a direct and highly mediated experience of reality. The ways in which the world and reality are perceived, captured, “measured,” and represented in increasingly computerized media, shape our worldview and self-image. In Jouke Kleerebezem’s work, perception continuously falls apart only to be reassembled through improvisation, intertwining once again.

www.ftn-books.com has now several books on Kleerebezem available.

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Henri Jacobs (1957)

Since 2003, Henri Jacobs has dedicated himself to a continuous series of drawings that have become known as the Journal Drawings. Initially a project for his students, where they were instructed to draw whatever caught their eye or impressed them on a particular day, it has now become a method for his own artistic expression. The result is an ongoing collection of drawings, each one delving into new motives and forms before abandoning them to make way for new ideas and experimentation.

Jacobs’s drawings are a masterpiece of virtuosity, with a precise yet playful technique. The images range from abstract geometric and calligraphic shapes and patterns to stylized portraits, landscapes, and architectural forms. Often, there are references to art history and renowned artists such as Matisse and Jasper Johns, highlighting Jacobs’s deep understanding and appreciation for the art world. Ultimately, the Journal Drawings represent a continual process of creation, as Jacobs continually challenges himself to redefine and reinvent his craft through each drawing.

www.ftn-books.com has the van Abbemuseum catalog now available.

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Rodney Graham (1949)

For half a century, Rodney Graham meticulously weaved together the strands of cultural and intellectual history through the mediums of photography, film, music, performance, and painting. With a keen eye for wordplay and a penchant for allusions to literature and philosophy – be it the works of Lewis Carroll, Sigmund Freud, or Kurt Cobain – Graham spun cyclical stories that were peppered with his sardonic sense of humor, a nod to his roots in Vancouver’s post-punk scene of the late 1970s. In his nine-minute long piece, Vexation Island (1997), the artist assumes the role of a 17th-century sailor, discovered unconscious under a coconut tree with a visible bruise on his head. After eight and a half minutes, he awakens and shakes the tree, causing a coconut to fall and render him unconscious once again, triggering the repetition of the sequence. Graham reappears as a cowboy in How I Became a Ramblin’ Man (1999) and as both a city dandy and a country bumpkin in City Self/Country Self (2001) – fictitious characters perpetually trapped in an unending loop of actions. Drawing from his previous series of photographs featuring inverted oak trees, Graham’s fascination with dreamlike states and the ramblings of the unconscious are evident. As he puts it, “Inversion has a logic: you do not have to dig deep into modern physics to understand that the scientific perspective insists that the world is not truly what it seems. The eye sees a tree upside down before the brain rights it, just like how it appears to the glass back of my large format field camera.”

www.ftn-books.com has several scarce Graham publications available. Among them the 1989 van Abbemuseum catalog designed by Arlette Brouwers.