"Errantry" by Werner Pfeiffer: Difference between revisions
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===Artistic and Intellectual Context=== | ===Artistic and Intellectual Context=== | ||
Werner Pfeiffer can be considered to belong to a lineage of artists who have used books to respond to the atrocities of modern war and oppression. For example, Italian artist Fortunato Depero, in his 1927 "bolted book" ''Depero Futurista', evoked the violence of World War I through aggressive typography, while John Heartfield's 1934 ''Krieg und Leichen (War and Corpses)'' photomontage indicted the Nazi regime. In repurposing a real military artifact, ''Errantry'' takes this tradition a step further. <ref>https://www.italianmodernart.org/journal/articles/deperos-bolted-book-and-futurist-publishing/</ref> <ref>https://www.getty.edu/art/exhibitions/heartfield/</ref> | Werner Pfeiffer can be considered to belong to a lineage of artists who have used books to respond to the atrocities of modern war and oppression. For example, Italian artist Fortunato Depero, in his 1927 "bolted book" ''Depero Futurista', evoked the violence of World War I through aggressive typography, while John Heartfield's 1934 ''Krieg und Leichen (War and Corpses)'' photomontage indicted the Nazi regime. In repurposing a real military artifact, ''Errantry'' takes this tradition a step further. <ref>https://www.italianmodernart.org/journal/articles/deperos-bolted-book-and-futurist-publishing/</ref> <ref>https://www.getty.edu/art/exhibitions/heartfield/</ref> | ||
Beyond specific military references, Errantry reflects a late 20th-century surge of artist’s books critiquing consumer culture, mass media and the political status quo, such as Edward Ruscha's deadpan photo-books and Martha Rosler's collage novels of the 1970s. | |||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 20:11, 14 May 2024
Introduction
Errantry is an artist’s book by the German-American artist Werner Pfeiffer, published in 2008 by Pear Whistle Press. It is a 27-foot-long canvas scroll, featuring text and imagery predominantly inspired by a Tolkien poem and 16th-century woodcut prints, that is housed inside a deactivated military shell from 1943. The 12th copy in a limited edition of 52, this scroll is housed in the University of Pennsylvania's Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts [1]
Pfeiffer's provocative pairing of medium and message - using a repurposed instrument of 20th century warfare to chronicle that era's unparalleled death and destruction - epitomizes how artist’s books push the boundaries of the book form.
At the same time, the innovative format and socio-political content of this unusual work provide insight into the evolving role of artists as authors and the function of books as vehicles for creative expression and cultural critique.
Genre and Historical Context
Artist’s Books and Their History
While artists have been involved in the production of books in Europe since the early medieval period, such as the Book of Kells and the Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry, most writers on the subject cite the English visionary artist and poet William Blake (1757–1827) as the earliest direct antecedent to the modern artist's book. Books such as Songs of Innocence and of Experience were written, illustrated, printed, coloured and bound by Blake and his wife Catherine, and the merging of handwritten texts and images created intensely vivid, hermetic works without any obvious precedents. These works would set the tone for later artist's books, connecting self-publishing and self-distribution with the integration of text, image and form. All of these factors have remained key concepts in artist's books up to the present day. [2] [3]
Artist’s books are works of art that utilize the form of the book. They are artworks in book form, often created in small editions or as unique objects, that use elements of the book such as covers, bindings, typography and layout as part of their aesthetic expression. Emerging in the 20th century alongside avant-garde art movements, artist's books challenged traditional notions of the book, blurring boundaries between art object and reading material. Early examples include Stéphane Mallarmé's visual poem Un Coup de Dés (1897) and the Futurist books of Filippo Marinetti in the 1910s. The genre expanded in the 1960s-70s as Conceptual artists experimented with the democratic multiple, while others explored handcrafted volumes. The range of formats has continued to grow, from altered texts to sculptural bookworks to digital forms.
Artist’s Background
Werner Pfeiffer, a distinguished book artist, made Errantry. He emigrated to the US from Germany in 1961 and joined the art faculty at Pratt Institute in New York in 1969. He lives in Red Hook, NY, where he works as a sculptor, printmaker and painter. Pfeiffer’s work is typically characterized by strong political undertones and innovative formats. add photo of pfeiffer
Artistic and Intellectual Context
Werner Pfeiffer can be considered to belong to a lineage of artists who have used books to respond to the atrocities of modern war and oppression. For example, Italian artist Fortunato Depero, in his 1927 "bolted book" Depero Futurista', evoked the violence of World War I through aggressive typography, while John Heartfield's 1934 Krieg und Leichen (War and Corpses) photomontage indicted the Nazi regime. In repurposing a real military artifact, Errantry takes this tradition a step further. [4] [5] Beyond specific military references, Errantry reflects a late 20th-century surge of artist’s books critiquing consumer culture, mass media and the political status quo, such as Edward Ruscha's deadpan photo-books and Martha Rosler's collage novels of the 1970s.
References
- ↑ https://franklin.library.upenn.edu/catalog/FRANKLIN_9945797473503681
- ↑ Drucker, Johanna (2004). The Century of Artists' Books. Granary Books. p. 8.
- ↑ https://rdc.reed.edu/c/artbooks/home/marinetti
- ↑ https://www.italianmodernart.org/journal/articles/deperos-bolted-book-and-futurist-publishing/
- ↑ https://www.getty.edu/art/exhibitions/heartfield/