The art of Kevin Blythe Sampson

THE ART OF
KEVIN BLYTHE SAMPSON

5/20/09

Cavin-Morris Gallery Presents ARTISTS’ BOOKS THROUGH TIME : Volume 1 April 30 – June 13, 2008

 

 

Cavin-Morris Gallery
210 Eleventh Avenue, Suite 201
New York, NY 10001
t 212 226 3768
f 212 226 0155
www.cavinmorris.com
info@cavinmorris.com

 

image

 

Mongolia, Bone Setting Manuscript, 8 double sided pages, 19th Century, pigment, ink on paper 4.25 x 14 inches(10.8 x 35.6 cm)

The concept of the communicative mark is a basic one, when the marks are strung together a series of thoughts are linked together.  In most instances, they communicate with each other and out to the reader or viewer. 
When that series of marks are bound between covers it gives a specific direction for the marks to travel.  This mode of travel becomes a book.  Artists’ Books Through Time, Vol. I (April 30-June13, 2009) will bring into fruition an idea we have wanted to follow for a long time, a viewing of the book form that has come through a meeting of image and text by the artists’ hands.
We have removed the historic narrative in this introductory exhibition in favor of an eclectic sampling of hand-made books, which cover a wide area of Time and Place.  There are inner themes both deliberate and accidental to connect, for example, the 15th and16th Century Tibetan, Sino-Tibetan, and Mongolian books that resonate with the Yi tribal Chinese magical scrolls on leather, which link to more contemporary forms of the Tibetan inspired works by Lidia Syroka, or young Tibetan artist, Gade.
We will feature book pages from Mongolia, Tibet and India, Japanese Shima-cho, Japanese erotic shunga, works by Art Brut artists like Zdenek Kosek’s weather maps, Melvin Edward Nelson’s space dust drawings, New York mediums Helen Butler Wells and Norma Oliver, collages by Jerry Wagner, and Native American ledger drawings.  Contemporary works by Vichai Chinalai, Howard Smith, Tim Wehrle and actual books fired in a kiln by conceptual artist Yohei Nishimura will also be on display.
We expect this to be our first of an annual series exploring the past, present and future potential of the artists’ handmade book form.
For further information please contact Shari Cavin, Mariko Tanaka, or Randall Morris at

tel 212 226- 3768, e-mail:  blugriot@aol.com.

www.cavinmorris.com

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