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Herman Bogman (1890-1975)

A true artist is capable of reinventing themselves, exploring paths that breathe new life into their artistic expression. Herman Bogman (1890-1975) did just that. His career can be neatly divided into two distinct parts. The young Bogman painted in oil, but around his fiftieth year, he boldly abandoned the medium. For the remaining 35 years of his life, he produced almost exclusively watercolor paintings. This is where his true mastery lies. While his oil paintings were skillfully crafted pieces that attracted eager buyers, his watercolors were on a much higher level. They were boldly painted, with a sparkling play of light, and in a subtle palette. The smaller pieces possess a great deal of intimacy, while the larger compositions are boldly composed.

Bogman frequently discussed his new beginning in interviews:

“You simply didn’t know what could be achieved with watercolor. It wasn’t until I turned fifty that I permanently closed my paint box. Watercolor can have the same ‘carrying ability’, the same depth of color as paint on canvas. But I had to work very hard for it. Why were we so attached to oil paint in the Netherlands? I believe it’s because of our thoroughness. We were completely mistaken…”

And that feeling was correct. In the last 35 years of his life, he would create the most beautiful part of his body of work using this technique.

www.ftn-books.com has currently 2 Bogman titles available.

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Douglas Gordon (1966)

Scottish artist Douglas Gordon began his career as a performance artist, but evolved into a diverse oeuvre encompassing video and film, sound works, photographic objects, and texts. Good versus bad is a recurring theme. He transforms familiar objects, such as photos of famous personalities, often with a result somewhere between humor and dismay. One of Gordon’s most famous works is 24h Psycho (1993), in which he slows down Hitchcock’s infamous film Psycho (1960) to 24 hours, removing the tension and completely changing the experience of the film.

Douglas Gordon has had numerous solo exhibitions, including at the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Musée d’Art Moderne, Paris; MOCA, Los Angeles; Kunsthaus Bregenz, Austria; Museo Tamayo, Mexico City; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg; Garage Museum of Contemporary Art, Moscow; Van Abbemuseum, and Tate Britain, London. In 1996, he received the Turner Prize. In the same year, Gordon was one of the invited artists for Skulptur Projekte Münster, and in 1997, he represented Great Britain at the Venice Biennale.

www.ftn-books.com has several titles on Douglas Gordon available.

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David Rabinowitch (1943)

Born in 1943 in Toronto, Canada, David Rabinowitch passed away in 2023. Throughout his career, he has been featured in numerous solo museum exhibitions, including renowned institutions such as Museum Wiesbaden in Germany, Museum Kunstpalast in Düsseldorf, and Haus der Kunst St. Josef in Solothurn, Switzerland. He has also displayed his work at esteemed venues like the Museum Pfalzgalerie Kaiserslautern in Germany, The Chinati Foundation in Marfa, Texas, and the Kunstmuseum Winterthur in Switzerland. In 2004, his art was showcased at both the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa and the Musée d’art Contemporain de Montréal in Quebec, which held a major retrospective of his pieces.

www.ftn-books.com has the Chemnitz book now available.

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Fahrettin Örenli (1969)

Fahrettin Örenli (1969, Turkey) is what one would call a socially conscious artist. From environmental pollution to the expansion of the EU, the Amsterdammer, originally from Turkey, is invested in current affairs and takes a critical stance in his work. His project “Shadows of Dust,” to which this piece belongs, delves into the growth and development of a city. According to Örenli, modernizing countries sometimes change so rapidly that they seem to forget their past, their history. This is often evident in the urban landscape, as all traces of the past are often erased in the process of renewal. How should he, as a contemporary artist, relate to these ever-rushing developments? Can his work still be considered contemporary? Or is it outdated at the moment of its creation? Örenli’s computer-generated drawing, Shadows of Dust off IX (Buddha) (2015), in which he created a sort of surrealistic fantasy island, explores what was and what is yet to come. Is this our future? www.ftn-books.com has the A TOURIST IN LIFE publication now available

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Toto Frima (1953)

Toto Frima rose to prominence in the 1980s with her self-portraits captured on a Polaroid camera (SX70) using a remote shutter release. These photographic pieces swiftly enchanted the entire continent of Europe with their small, often suggestive nature. One of the key factors in her success was the way her works perfectly mirrored the socio-cultural developments of the time: women were able to work without competing against men, technology was seen as subservient to the message being conveyed, and the focus was on the individual “I.”

In the early 1990s, Toto Frima once again drew public attention with her new 50×60 Polaroid works. As the larger equipment required shooting sessions to take place in a studio rather than on location, the intimacy of the previous works was lost. However, the theme remained the same. Toto portrayed herself in various ways, assuming different roles or incorporating diverse objects. Yet, in all cases, she continually referred to her own identity, which could also represent someone else. In 1990, the Rheinsische Landes Museum Bonn (Germany) dedicated a major exhibition to her, and a book of her 50×60 works was published.

This was followed by a period of silence, during which Toto completely disappeared from the public eye. For several years, she felt no specific urge to point the camera at herself. Instead, she embarked on a personal development that she did not document through photos. She distanced herself not only from her own work, but also from the entire realm of photography and the artistic environment, becoming a mere spectator. However, the desire to create eventually resurfaced, growing so strong that only new self-portraits could satisfy it. And so, Toto returned in 1988 with new SX70 photos, and in 1999, she worked in Prague with the 50×60 camera.

Her latest works reflect an evolution. They are stripped of extravagance and instead draw attention to the act of “watching” and “looking,” rather than being the object of attention. The voyeuristic elements have been deliberately eliminated.

www.ftn-books.com has 1 Frima title now available.

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Paul Robeson (1898-1976)

Paul Robeson, born in 1898 in Princeton, New Jersey, was the son of a Presbyterian minister who had escaped slavery and a mother from a distinguished Philadelphia family. He received a full scholarship to Rutgers University at the age of seventeen, and in just four years he accomplished a remarkable feat by receiving twelve major letters and being named valedictorian of his class. After graduating, he continued his education at Columbia University Law School, but faced racial struggles in his career as a lawyer that ultimately ended it. However, he soon found success in the world of public speaking and acting.

In the mid-1920s, Robeson became well-known for his lead roles in Eugene O’Neill’s plays “All God’s Chillun Got Wings” (1924) and “The Emperor Jones” (1925). Throughout the 1920s and 1930s, he garnered widespread acclaim as an actor and singer, captivating audiences with his signature song “Ol’ Man River.” He also achieved the longest-running Shakespeare play in Broadway history with his portrayal of “Othello,” which ran for nearly 300 performances and is still regarded as one of the greatest American productions of Shakespeare’s work. As his fame grew in the United States, he also gained international recognition and admiration. Speaking fifteen languages, he traveled the world to promote social justice through benefit performances. He strongly believed that public figures have a responsibility to advocate for justice and peace, making him unlike any other performer of his time.

The WEST museum devoted an exhibition to Robeson in 2023. The museum publication for visitors is now available at www.ftn-books.com

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Klaus Heider (1936-2013)

Klaus Heider, born in Göppingen in 1936, embarked on his artistic career in the mid-1960s, delving into the realm of printmaking under the tutelage of Manfred Henninger at the Staatliche Akademie für bildende Künste, Stuttgart. Subsequently, he honed his skills in Printmaking under Friedrich Stabenau at the esteemed Hochschule für Bildende Künste, Berlin, from 1960 to 1963.

In 1982, Heider was bestowed with the prestigious Villa Massimo Prize, granting him the opportunity to spend a year in Rome. The following year, he received a grant from the renowned Cité Internationale des Arts, Paris. Since 1983, Heider has held the esteemed position of Professor of Painting at the acclaimed Hochschule für Gestaltung, Wirtschaft und Technik in Pforzheim. He currently resides in Bad Boll.

Heider’s early works as a print-maker in the 1960s were defined by perspective lines and chiaroscuro, skillfully evoking a sense of three-dimensional structure. Drawing inspiration from photographs, he often incorporated elements of collage, décollage, and frottage in his creations. The use of light and transparency has remained a prominent aspect of Heider’s work throughout his career.

In the 1970s, Heider delved into the realm of sculpture, crafting mesmerizing glass spaces in the landscape. Preceded by preliminarily works done in print and drawing, these objects allowed for a new perspective on size, spatial relations, and the character of their surroundings. As the 1980s dawned, Heider began experimenting with incorporating colored linear elements into his work. Starting with painted lines, he later progressed to using neon tubes that extended beyond the boundaries of the picture and into the surrounding space.

Heider’s repertoire also features a fusion of words and images in multiple books and works on paper, each bearing a title of significant meaning.

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

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Robert Schad (1953)

Since the early 1970s, Schad has been working with raw steel as the material for his sculptures. Using solid rods of square steel, he forges and welds simple, highly minimalist, or even whimsically shaped figures and installations. By consistently incorporating proportions found in the human body and nature, his creations take on an organic form that, despite the chosen material, can seem weightless. A distinctive aspect of his work is its integration into the surrounding environment. Whether interacting with architecture or nature, it always maintains an exciting balance.

Schad lives and works in Larians-et-Munans, in the Haute-Saône department of France. In addition to his studio, Schad has had his own sculpture park since 2004. In 2010, he was awarded the Goslar Kaiser Ring and his work was exhibited at the Mönchehaus Museum Goslar in Goslar.

At this moment an important Schad exhibition is being held at the Coppejans gallery.

www.ftn-books.com has several Schad items now available,

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Jeroen van Bergen (1979)

To fully comprehend something, it is often helpful to trace its origins and tell its story. Jeroen van Bergen captures the genesis of architecture through his work. In his creation myth, the fundamental principle of architecture is the smallest room – the foundation and origin of the entire concept. He draws upon the dimensions and shape of this tiny yet habitable unit, the building block of cities and the world, from the building standards for WCs in the Netherlands. This module serves as the cornerstone of his artistic explorations. […]

In his earlier pieces, Van Bergen constructed a street, a tunnel passage, a cart, a bathing cubicle, and a shower room, all based on the “principle” of the WC module on a 1:1 scale. These works were not merely scale models, but rather simplified replicas showcasing the functionality of the smallest possible form of architecture. In recent years, Van Bergen has continued to utilize the module as a guiding principle, scaling down his creations and predominantly relying on scale models. His aim is to decipher the message conveyed by the mass reproduction and combination of the “smallest room” in the larger context of architecture. These various versions are created on both a building level, with diverse variations ranging from individual homes to blocks of houses and high-rise buildings, and a city level, featuring streets, rows of buildings, and advanced city models. On the city level, Van Bergen experiments with both horizontal and vertical stacks, resulting in captivating and diverse outcomes. The works featuring low stacks of “smallest rooms” evoke thoughts of sprawling, chaotic shantytowns that often pop up around modern mega-cities, traditional desert cities like those of M’Zab in Algeria, or even pre-Columbian settlements.

www.ftn-books.com has one Jeroen van Bergen title available.