Susan Kae Grant - Radioactive Substances and The Fettered Lettered: Difference between pages

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== Introduction ==
[[File:chain.jpeg|thumb|left|350px|Chains made from binder rings which connect to the book with a magnet. According to the author, the paperclips symbolize government bureaucracy.]]


Created in 1994-1995 for the exhibition "Science and the artist's book" held at the Smithsonian Institution and the Washington Project for the Arts in 1995, Susan Kae Grant's '''''Radio-active Substances''''' is like no other [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artist%27s_book artists' book] I've ever seen before. Housed at the University of Pennsylvania's [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Pennsylvania] [https://www.library.upenn.edu/kislak Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts], the book appears to be something you would find in a chemistry laboratory as opposed to a library. Encased in a small lead box are 5 glass tubes and a 10 x 15 cm spiral note book consisting of 28 pages and various illustrations that all honor the legacy of Maria Sklodowska Curie [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie_Curie]. Renowned as the first scientist to win the Nobel Prize twice, in 1903 and 1911, Curie accomplished more than what most women could even dream of at the time. Described as Grant's "evocative interpretation of Curie's 1903 dissertation presented at the Sorbonne in Paris" [https://www.susankaegrant.com/radio_active-book-arts], '''''Radio-active Substances''''' portrays Curie's biggest life challenge: the struggle to balance her duties as a wife and mother with her unwavering pursuit of scientific knowledge in an era that disproved of the latter. In addition, the book illustrates the physical and emotional burden that accompanied Curie's radioactive endeavors.


== Historical Context ==
==Introduction==
=== Artists' Books ===


Defined by Art historian Stephen Bury as "books or book-like objects over the final appearance of which an artist has had a high degree of control; where the book is intended as a work of art in itself", artists' books challenge the current idea of what constitutes a ''book''. Although artists' books with the traditional codex format can certainly be found, the genre's increased popularity stems from the flexibility and variation that exists between works. Utilizing both their artistic capabilities and authorial expertise, artists have created non-traditional books out of a wide range of substrates, techniques, forms, and mediums for years; a prime example of this phenomenon is William Blake's [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Songs_of_Innocence_and_of_Experience '''Songs of Innocence and of Experience'''], an early precedent for emphasizes the book as an artistic production. Consisting of two poetic collections combined, '''Songs of Innocence and of Experience''' features 49 original poems, each accompanied with an elaborate illustration engraved, hand-printed, and colored by Blake and his wife. Much like the artists' books of today, artistic expression, here in the form of illustrations, accompany text in order to present the reader with a narrative. Overall, Blake's '''Songs of Innocence and of Experience''' serves as an early predecessor for modern day artists' books, combining self-publishing and self-distribution with the integration of art, text, and form.  
The Fettered Lettered, created in Bologna, Italy by Angela Lorenz in 2007, represents incarcerated authors and works written while in confinement — including prison, jail, exile, mental institutions, and other places of confinement. This book was sold to Penn Libraries by [https://booklyn.org/ Booklyn] in 2022 with support from the [https://www.library.upenn.edu/giving/support-collections/supporters-collections/ruth-and-marvin-sackner-fund Ruth and Marvin Sackner Fund for the Arts of the Contemporary Book]. Part of the University of Pennsylvania's Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts, this artists’ book is one of many in the collection. Like many other artists' books, the Fettered Lettered is a highly limited edition, with only 19 copies.  


A rough draft of this book was exhibited at the Addison Gallery of American Art from September to December of 2007 in Andover, Massachusetts. This exhibition provided the opportunity for the public to anonymously contribute suggestions of additional incarcerated authors or works written while in confinement.


These works would set the tone for later artists' books, connecting self-publishing and self-distribution with the integration of text, image and form. All of these factors have remained key concepts in artists' books up to the present day.
[[File:List_of_names.jpeg|thumb|right|350px|The first three white panels represent authors who were incarcerated for political reasons.]]


exemplify certain featur es which later find vari ed expression in artists' books,
==Genre of the Artists' Book & Significance==


The rise of the 20th-century genre of the artists’ book has muddled the very meaning of a book, “resist[ing] definition, taking multiple forms and pursuing multifarious themes.”<ref name="Miline">Milne, Jo. “Artists’ Books as Resistant Transmitters.” ''Arts'', vol. 8, no. 4, 9 Oct. 2019, pp. 1–10, https://doi.org/10.3390/arts8040129.</ref> Many scholars and artists have argued that there is no apt definition of this genre without flattening the diversity of these books (too vague) or being inherently exclusionary (too specific).<ref name="Drucker">Drucker, Johanna. ''The Century of Artists’ Books''. Granary Books, 2004.</ref> Artists’ books vary extensively in form, aesthetic, production, circulation, materiality, etc. As Johanna Drucker writes in The Century of Artists’ Books: <blockquote>“[a]rtists' books take every possible form, participate in every possible convention of book making; every possible ‘ism’ of mainstream art and literature, every possible mode of production, every shape, every degree of ephemerality or archival durability.”<ref name= "Drucker"/></blockquote>


This unique art helps tell the story of each poem, and was part of Blake's original vision for how each poem should be understood
Artists’ books are typically published through independent publishers, which helps to illuminate the history in which the artists’ book is situated — a history of wanting  “to make a voice heard, or a vision available…”<ref name= "Drucker"/> The genre of the artist’s book is intimately linked to what Drucker refers to as the “activist artist” or the leveraging of art to inspire political or social consciousness and change.<ref name= "Drucker"/> Because books can be circulated widely and freely; are low maintenance, long-lasting objects; and formally offer a means to communicate “beyond the limits of an individual life or contacts,” their formal and material aspects have a significant relationship to the typical content.<ref name= "Drucker"/>
old maxim“a picture is worth a thousand words”rings false


Many artists’ books are either a unique work; a limited edition; or an inconsistent edition, making them “rare” and/or “auratic” objects.<ref name= "Drucker"/> Not only are many artists’ books literally rare, many might seem to have an “auratic” character, producing an unexplainable level of interest or fascination. As Drucker explains, “[t]his is not the same as respect, interest, or other forms of engagement. It has to do with tapping into a certain level of the fantasmatic…”<ref name= "Drucker"/>


As Bury notes, women artists were often shut outof the gallery system and so turned to the medium of the book to take control ofthe presentation and distribution of their work
The genre of the artist's book is unique in a time in which books are becoming more digitized and art is relying more and more on technology, at times lessening the physical engagement with the text or object. As Miline explores in "Artists' Books as Resistant Transmitters," artists' books dependence on the physical engagement of the reader or viewer "do not surrender happily to passive display, as their ideal habitat is in the hand rather than a glass cabinet."<ref name= "Miline"/>


[[File:Pennyy.jpeg|thumb|left|300px|The pennies represent debtors and thieves.]]


[[File:Binding_Large.jpeg|thumb|right|300px|Dental floss binding.]]


The increased popularity of
==Material Analysis of the Fettered Lettered==
artists' books can probably be.attributed to the flexibility and variation of
the book form, rather than to any single-aesthetic or material factor.


Hecites the silence of Max Ernst’s collage novels as inspiration for works where images rather than texts provide the narrative.
The primary substrate of the Fettered Lettered is striped, pH neutral, dark blue and white cardstock produced by Cartiere Fedrigoni.<ref name="57.">“57. The Fettered Lettered.” ''Angelonium: Angela Lorenz Collected Works and Websites'', 27 Aug. 2018, https://angelonium.com/57-the-fettered-lettered/</ref> On the center of each piece of cardstock, there is a clear acetate square with printed names of incarcerated authors and/or works written while incarcerated. On the white pieces of cardstock, the text is printed horizontally, while on the dark blue pieces of cardstock, the text is printed vertically. The alternating horizontal and vertical text creates a grid-like design when the book is folded up, reminiscent of prison bars or a cage.


=== Marie Curie ===
The Fettered Lettered has an accordion, sculptural format. Each sheet of cardstock is sewn together on both side margins with Tom's brand of dental floss. As described in the paratextual material, "[s]ome prisoners in the U.S. wove an 8-ply of floss and used it to escape. Distressingly, it has been used to steal precious maps and manuscripts by thieves, wetting it in their mouths so they can silently tear valuable images out of books. The brand of floss 'Tom’s' could represent Thomas Paine, Thomas More and Tommaso Campanella.”<ref name= "57."/> Many sheets of the cardstock have paper clips (attached by magnets), pennies (attached by magnets), or small circular magnets. The box that the Fettered Lettered is stored in has metal loose-leaf binder rings forming a chain. This chain attaches to the magnets on the first page of the book.


[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie_Curie Maria Salomea Skłodowska], commonly known as Marie Curie, was born in Warsaw on November 7th, 1867 as the fifth and youngest child of well-known educators Bronisława and Władysław Skłodowski. Born during a time of political unrest, specifically due to national uprisings aimed at restoring Poland's independence, Curie's childhood was marred with poverty and illness. After losing both her mother and older sister in a short span of time, Curie fell into depression and moved to the countryside with her paternal relatives. While in the countryside, Curie offered tutoring services to many students until she saved enough money to fund her higher education. In 1891, Curie moved from Poland to France and enrolled in the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Paris University of Paris] where she continued her studies in physics, chemistry, and mathematics. After earning two degrees by 1894, Curie chose to remain in Paris and begun her scientific career with an investigation of the magnetic properties of various steels. A few months later, Curie met [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Curie Pierre Curie], an instructor at [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ESPCI_Paris The City of Paris Industrial Physics and Chemistry Higher Educational Institution] and her soon to be future husband. In summer of 1895, the two got married and began their long journey of scientific exploration. After countless years of arduous labor and publications, the couple were finally able to announce the newfound existence of two elements, polonium and radium; they were also the first to coin the term "radioactivity". Unfortunately, unaware of the deleterious effects associate with radiation exposure, in 1934, Curie succumbed to aplastic anemia at the age of 66  due to her long-term, unprotected investigation of radioactive substances; she left behind two daughters and a long lasting legacy as the first woman to win a Nobel Prize, the first person to win a Nobel Prize twice, and the only person to win a Nobel Prize in two scientific fields.
Since the book has an accordion structure, the reader can both slip through the sheets (like one would with a codex) and the reader can also unfold the entirety of the book into a singular line. Although there are no page numbers, table of contents, or other mechanisms to aid navigation of the book, the ability to see each page of the book at once when it is unfolded is a unique aspect of its structure.


== Material Analysis ==
==Content Analysis==
'''''Radioactive Substances''''' consists of three individual objects that together form the entirety of Grant's artist book: a small box, a 10 cm x 15 cm spiral notebook, and a set of 5 glass test tubes.


=== Substrate ===
The works included in this book range from Adolf Hitler's ''Mein Kampf'' to Martin Luther King Jr.'s ''Letter From Birmingham Jail'' (which are listed consecutively in this work). Included in this work are some of the most famous anti-fascist, anti-imperialist, Marxist thinkers of the 20th century, including Antonio Gramsci and Rosa Luxemburg, who were imprisoned for political reasons. Other authors included in The Fettered Lettered, such as John Bunyan, who was sentenced to to prison in the 17th century for unauthorized preaching, and Charlotte Turner who was imprisoned for the crime of larceny. 


'''''Box''''': The book and test tubes are both protected in a mauve stained box measuring 5 in x 6 in x 2 in. Upon first glance the box appears to have been poorly handled in the past, featuring many indentations, rough edges, and a sunken lid. However, once picked up, the reader is surprised to find out that the box is actually constructed of a soft metal material, specifically lead. Despite its rigid appearance, the box is malleable and its shape can be manipulated, contributing to its imperfection. In addition, although a majority of the box is constructed out of lead, steel nails, banding clips, wires, and hinges are used to provide support and uphold the box's rectangular shape. Once opened, a lead rack bolted to the lid of the box can be found. The rack features a ledge and a bended strip of metal used to create a resting place for the 5 glass test tubes. The inside is otherwise left empty with just enough space to house the accompanying notebook.  
The Fettered Letter includes a wide range of "crimes" across a wide-ranging time period — the earliest work from AD 8. Although the paratextual material (author's statement) does not articulate a certain politic or critique of imprisonment or the U.S. carceral state, there is a quite obvious lack of works or authors writing from the site of the U.S. prison in the modern-day, from which there has been a significant amount of literature produced.  


'''''Notebook''''': The notebook encased in the box consists of 14 one-pound sheets made entirely of lead. Apart from its 15 pound weight, which comes as a surprise to many readers due to its small size, another interesting feature of the notebook is the flexibility of the pages. Although also constructed out of lead, similar to the box, the individual sheets that make up the notebook are so thin that they bend as the pages are turned. To help make the reading experience a bit easier, the spiral binding that holds all the pages together is made out of solid steel, allowing the reader to flip through the artists' book without the spine collapsing under the weight of the page. Once opened, the notebook features juxtaposing images and text. The images, collected from a variety of historical sources depict sketches, blueprints, and writing from Curie's personal journal, as well as images of the female scientist and her husband. The images are printed in black ink directly unto the grey lead pages and differ greatly in terms of ambiguity, contrast, and lighting. The text is also directly printed onto the lead pages in a legible font. Apart from the Thesis on the first page and the colophon on the last pages, the text featured are quotes taken directly from Curie's 1903 thesis titled ''"Researches on Radioactive Substances"''
Although I do not believe art and literature always have or must have a pedagogical function, it is a purposeful choice to not include works or authors writing from within the most aggressive carceral system in the world — in both absolute terms and as a percentage of its population.  


'''''Test Tubes''''': The artists' book also consists of 5 glass lead-lined test tubes that each contain a vellum scroll of text. The test tubes are synonymous to the one typically found in a laboratory and each house a clear, glass rod. Once removed, the glass rods are revealed to be dowels attached to long strips grey vellum paper. Each scroll features a different title and text sourced from a biography written Curie's daughter; all five scrolls aim to articulate Curie's personal life journey as a wife, mother, and researcher. Although the scrolls are not super fragile, if mishandled, they can tear. Thus, two hands are necessary to properly analyze this part of the artists' book. Interestingly, once placed in the dark, the lead that lines the inside of the test tubes begins to glow, imparting an aura to the artists' book that is simultaneously fascinating and dangerous.  
The Fettered Lettered represents a variety of "crimes" that lead to incarceration, including political reasons, sexual crimes, religious reasons, etc. with no differentiation. In many ways, these different "crimes" could be understood as the same by the reader, even though works and authors are categorized by the "crime" they committed (i.e., white panels represent authors who were incarcerated for political reasons). Certainly, the incarceration of Antonio Gramsci or Martin Luther King Jr. is quite distinct from the incarceration of Ovid which led to his ''Poems of Exile''. These distinct material realities are not articulated through the Fettered Lettered, at least in part because of the confines of the form. It becomes the readers' responsibility to resist flattening history, recognizing that the logics of carcerality are articulated through unique particularities.  


=== Fortmat/Structure ===
[[File:Accordion_Large.jpeg|thumb|left|200px|While unfolded, the book is eleven panels long.]]


 
==Notes==
=== Illustrations ===
<references />
 
 
talk about printing technique here
 
== Content/Textual Analysis ==
=== Book ===
 
=== Scrolls ===
 
== Significance ==
=== Physical Significance ===
 
Because of their levels of radioactive contamination, her papers from the 1890s are considered too dangerous to handle.[80] Even her cookbooks are highly radioactive.[81] Her papers are kept in lead-lined boxes, and those who wish to consult them must wear protective clothing.[81] In her last year, she worked on a book, Radioactivity, which was published posthumously in 1935.[74]
 
She had carried test tubes containing radioactive isotopes in her pocket,[76] and she stored them in her desk drawer, remarking on the faint light that the substances gave off in the dark.[77]
 
=== Contextual Significance ===
=== Symbolic Significance ===
 
== References ==

Revision as of 22:33, 29 April 2024

Chains made from binder rings which connect to the book with a magnet. According to the author, the paperclips symbolize government bureaucracy.


Introduction

The Fettered Lettered, created in Bologna, Italy by Angela Lorenz in 2007, represents incarcerated authors and works written while in confinement — including prison, jail, exile, mental institutions, and other places of confinement. This book was sold to Penn Libraries by Booklyn in 2022 with support from the Ruth and Marvin Sackner Fund for the Arts of the Contemporary Book. Part of the University of Pennsylvania's Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts, this artists’ book is one of many in the collection. Like many other artists' books, the Fettered Lettered is a highly limited edition, with only 19 copies.

A rough draft of this book was exhibited at the Addison Gallery of American Art from September to December of 2007 in Andover, Massachusetts. This exhibition provided the opportunity for the public to anonymously contribute suggestions of additional incarcerated authors or works written while in confinement.

The first three white panels represent authors who were incarcerated for political reasons.

Genre of the Artists' Book & Significance

The rise of the 20th-century genre of the artists’ book has muddled the very meaning of a book, “resist[ing] definition, taking multiple forms and pursuing multifarious themes.”[1] Many scholars and artists have argued that there is no apt definition of this genre without flattening the diversity of these books (too vague) or being inherently exclusionary (too specific).[2] Artists’ books vary extensively in form, aesthetic, production, circulation, materiality, etc. As Johanna Drucker writes in The Century of Artists’ Books:

“[a]rtists' books take every possible form, participate in every possible convention of book making; every possible ‘ism’ of mainstream art and literature, every possible mode of production, every shape, every degree of ephemerality or archival durability.”[2]

Artists’ books are typically published through independent publishers, which helps to illuminate the history in which the artists’ book is situated — a history of wanting “to make a voice heard, or a vision available…”[2] The genre of the artist’s book is intimately linked to what Drucker refers to as the “activist artist” or the leveraging of art to inspire political or social consciousness and change.[2] Because books can be circulated widely and freely; are low maintenance, long-lasting objects; and formally offer a means to communicate “beyond the limits of an individual life or contacts,” their formal and material aspects have a significant relationship to the typical content.[2]

Many artists’ books are either a unique work; a limited edition; or an inconsistent edition, making them “rare” and/or “auratic” objects.[2] Not only are many artists’ books literally rare, many might seem to have an “auratic” character, producing an unexplainable level of interest or fascination. As Drucker explains, “[t]his is not the same as respect, interest, or other forms of engagement. It has to do with tapping into a certain level of the fantasmatic…”[2]

The genre of the artist's book is unique in a time in which books are becoming more digitized and art is relying more and more on technology, at times lessening the physical engagement with the text or object. As Miline explores in "Artists' Books as Resistant Transmitters," artists' books dependence on the physical engagement of the reader or viewer "do not surrender happily to passive display, as their ideal habitat is in the hand rather than a glass cabinet."[1]

The pennies represent debtors and thieves.
Dental floss binding.

Material Analysis of the Fettered Lettered

The primary substrate of the Fettered Lettered is striped, pH neutral, dark blue and white cardstock produced by Cartiere Fedrigoni.[3] On the center of each piece of cardstock, there is a clear acetate square with printed names of incarcerated authors and/or works written while incarcerated. On the white pieces of cardstock, the text is printed horizontally, while on the dark blue pieces of cardstock, the text is printed vertically. The alternating horizontal and vertical text creates a grid-like design when the book is folded up, reminiscent of prison bars or a cage.

The Fettered Lettered has an accordion, sculptural format. Each sheet of cardstock is sewn together on both side margins with Tom's brand of dental floss. As described in the paratextual material, "[s]ome prisoners in the U.S. wove an 8-ply of floss and used it to escape. Distressingly, it has been used to steal precious maps and manuscripts by thieves, wetting it in their mouths so they can silently tear valuable images out of books. The brand of floss 'Tom’s' could represent Thomas Paine, Thomas More and Tommaso Campanella.”[3] Many sheets of the cardstock have paper clips (attached by magnets), pennies (attached by magnets), or small circular magnets. The box that the Fettered Lettered is stored in has metal loose-leaf binder rings forming a chain. This chain attaches to the magnets on the first page of the book.

Since the book has an accordion structure, the reader can both slip through the sheets (like one would with a codex) and the reader can also unfold the entirety of the book into a singular line. Although there are no page numbers, table of contents, or other mechanisms to aid navigation of the book, the ability to see each page of the book at once when it is unfolded is a unique aspect of its structure.

Content Analysis

The works included in this book range from Adolf Hitler's Mein Kampf to Martin Luther King Jr.'s Letter From Birmingham Jail (which are listed consecutively in this work). Included in this work are some of the most famous anti-fascist, anti-imperialist, Marxist thinkers of the 20th century, including Antonio Gramsci and Rosa Luxemburg, who were imprisoned for political reasons. Other authors included in The Fettered Lettered, such as John Bunyan, who was sentenced to to prison in the 17th century for unauthorized preaching, and Charlotte Turner who was imprisoned for the crime of larceny.

The Fettered Letter includes a wide range of "crimes" across a wide-ranging time period — the earliest work from AD 8. Although the paratextual material (author's statement) does not articulate a certain politic or critique of imprisonment or the U.S. carceral state, there is a quite obvious lack of works or authors writing from the site of the U.S. prison in the modern-day, from which there has been a significant amount of literature produced.

Although I do not believe art and literature always have or must have a pedagogical function, it is a purposeful choice to not include works or authors writing from within the most aggressive carceral system in the world — in both absolute terms and as a percentage of its population.

The Fettered Lettered represents a variety of "crimes" that lead to incarceration, including political reasons, sexual crimes, religious reasons, etc. with no differentiation. In many ways, these different "crimes" could be understood as the same by the reader, even though works and authors are categorized by the "crime" they committed (i.e., white panels represent authors who were incarcerated for political reasons). Certainly, the incarceration of Antonio Gramsci or Martin Luther King Jr. is quite distinct from the incarceration of Ovid which led to his Poems of Exile. These distinct material realities are not articulated through the Fettered Lettered, at least in part because of the confines of the form. It becomes the readers' responsibility to resist flattening history, recognizing that the logics of carcerality are articulated through unique particularities.

While unfolded, the book is eleven panels long.

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Milne, Jo. “Artists’ Books as Resistant Transmitters.” Arts, vol. 8, no. 4, 9 Oct. 2019, pp. 1–10, https://doi.org/10.3390/arts8040129.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 Drucker, Johanna. The Century of Artists’ Books. Granary Books, 2004.
  3. 3.0 3.1 “57. The Fettered Lettered.” Angelonium: Angela Lorenz Collected Works and Websites, 27 Aug. 2018, https://angelonium.com/57-the-fettered-lettered/