"Amoché"

Was a book/binding/artwork of yours ever damaged or stolen while on display as part of an exhibition?

As an artist, one has to deal with exciting situations and some not so nice experiences. Lessons learned have jaded me from exhibiting. It is difficult to let go of your prized possessions for a month or more. One never knows what happens on the premises of a gallery.

Are you responsible for your books while alone in the darkness of a gallery?

I had an acrylic painting damaged back in 1984. I won my case in court and the city paid for the damages. If the gallery took serious responsibility for the artwork while dismantling an exhibition, they could save time and money for everyone involved.

I saw the inside of a courtroom for the second time when an owner of a Toronto gallery stole nine of my collages and drawings and shipped them to Korea while in his possession. I don’t know what happened to these pieces. Did he sell them? If you can’t trust the gallery owner, who can you trust? I won my case in Small Claims Court, but retrieving the money was another matter—never did, since jurisdiction did not extend to Korea!

By 2005, I picked up lots of information on how to do business—I thought—till I took part in an ARLIS conference after being invited to display a volume of City Shields in New York City. Several phone calls later and an amazing response to my inquiry, I found the reason for the un-returned book.

"The bad news is someone stole your volume of City Shields from the exhibition hall.
What was the good news, I asked?
It was loved enough to steal."
What the... is this for real?
The organization felt it was a great compliment!!! WOW! For me, it was a financial loss!

Not too long ago on the BookListServ, I read about similar experiences other artists have gone through. I communicated with them to find out their account. Some stories were positive and others were costly. Lucky or sensible?

Preparing for a show demands you ask many questions and more questions!
Who's responsible for the insurance costs?
Are galleries responsible for the art work displayed in the space?
Who should pay for damages during the show?...


Mary Kritz is an artist in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. Exhibiting her books were positive experiences until showing a book in a private gallery. This disappointing situation happened when her book was damaged during the exhibit set-up. At the vernissage, the owner, (while in front of the crowd), embarrassed Mary by informing her that the book had “fallen apart”. As if Mary exhibited a book with an already damaged page with a detached corner. Mary mentioned she would repair the book the next day. At her return to the gallery, Mary learned the owner himself repaired the book without permission. Was he a binder? Did he use the proper materials? What right did he have to touch this artists’ book?


“I think the situation has happened to all of us artists at one point or other,” says Cathryn Miller from Saskatchewan.

It took two hours to repair her piece In Winter after being damaged in a touring exhibition. Cathryn was paid for the repair by the Saskatchewan Craft Council who insure all work while in their possession. The work is still salable which is great!

© 2017, Cathryn Miller, In Winter

© 2017, Cathryn Miller, In Winter

© 2017, Cathryn Miller, In Winter damaged during exhibition

© 2017, Cathryn Miller, In Winter damaged during exhibition

© 2017, Cathryn Miller, In Winter with smudge marks

© 2017, Cathryn Miller, In Winter with smudge marks

The Saskatchewan Craft Council ships touring exhibitions by commercial transport, the Council recommends that all works be packed so that the container can be dropped upside-down from a height of six feet without damaging the contents. What a risk factor!

Cathryn insisted on being paid for books damaged when a commercial gallery returned books with non-removable price stickers that adhered to the back. Who thought of that one, I wonder?

“I have exhibited at galleries who do not provide insurance but in those cases, I exhibit work I can afford to lose, comments Cathryn”.
“Very few galleries cover stolen work, so one has to think about what security measures are provided (vitrines, staffing, location, etc.) and we need to make a case-by-case decision.”

Cathryn writes long and descriptive directions for unpacking and re-packing art work for shipping. How difficult can it be to re-pack a book with its original box and filling? But, wait can they find the same box? What is the gallery’s best practices for keeping boxes and fillers connected to the book?

© Cathryn Miller, instructions for unpacking and re-packing In Winter

© Cathryn Miller, instructions for unpacking and re-packing In Winter

© Cathryn Miller, instructions for unpacking and repacking In Winter, part 2

© Cathryn Miller, instructions for unpacking and repacking In Winter, part 2

© Cathryn Miller, instructions for unpacking and repacking In Winter, part 3.These instructions are fantastic, every artist should be this dedicated to their work!

© Cathryn Miller, instructions for unpacking and repacking In Winter, part 3.

These instructions are fantastic, every artist should be this dedicated to their work!


Alice Simpson who brings her ability of drawing and brush skills to paper talks about her experience with a damaged book. Alice’s books are hand-painted and mostly unique books, they are colourful and whimsical, and are of interest to international dance collectors.

BALLROOM, (a one-of-a-kind hand painted book Alice created in 1994), was damaged somewhere along the recent past. The gallery’s signage description had been carelessly Scotch-taped on the back cover, attached to the delicate paper used to bind the book.

When I attempted to remove the tape, it pulled the paper off. Unfortunately, I have no memory or record of where the book was damaged. It was returned a while ago, and I never opened the wrapping. If I had, I would have immediately notified the curator, and complained. What would they have offered to do? I have no idea. The book, the basis for my novel of the same name, is not for sale but now is damaged forever.


Forever is a long time! This subject matter is too important not to write more.

To be continued...

Boxed In

Feeling boxed in by the lack of sun and being in two different places at once. The distance between home and home seem further apart.

Searching the internet for inspiration, for a get-up and go, I stopped by Randi Parkhurst’s website. Randi is an artist of fine paper and book artist.

Paper—a simple medium, ubiquitous, mundane—we hardly notice it… but in the hands of Randi one embarks on an odyssey of discovery.

Explore Randi's studio in the Pacific Northwest and observe her at work. Listen as Randi describes her process, her inspiration, and her exceptional body of work at https://vimeo.com/128898915

View the artistry, the mystery, and the whimsy in Randi's meticulous, sculptural creation entitled PATIENCE: the Inception of Artist Books. Follow as some twenty self-contained handmade books, each smaller than the one before, open and reveal this exquisite piece.

Tansu Gothic, another wonderful piece took three months to draw the idea, one month to make a full-scale model, and eight months to build the final piece. Tansu Gothic features six boxes with pyramid lids and spires, eleven drawers, two compartments with piano-hinge doors. Inside these spaces are books about tansu cabinetry, a tiny abacus, stories and other tansu artifacts.

Let the rain form rainbows, journey to your studio, play with materials at hand and enjoy the week.

 

The Sound of Snow

I wonder as I wander the land. Am I in a dream? It’s difficult to live in two different homes. Being in one place, I’m always thinking of the other.

While I’m busy with my own thoughts and the weather, my good friend, and artist James Jenkins from the Chicago area is busy with a dream of his own.

Jim is the latest artist to become the Artist-in-Residence at Fermilab, in Batavia, Illinois. He is working on several pieces for a show opening next December.

As artists, we keep and collect thoughts of the past to use as the foundation for new works in the future. One of Jim’s pieces started 44 years ago in 1973 on a trip to Winnipeg, Manitoba, to visit a dear friend. It was the 5th of December as he traveled through Grand Forks, North Dakota to cross the border at Pembina, North Dakota to Emerson, Manitoba, Canada. 

I remember the landscape being flat, featureless and covered in snow. My thought was it would be interesting to stretch a wire or wires across the landscape. I even made two drawings that still exist one titled... "A North Dakota Landscape in a Word" and "The Four Directions of a North Dakota Landscape.” Both were minimal and sparse. There was lettering used in both though I've continued to play with up till today. Later on, perhaps two years later, I thought it would also be interesting to record the sound of snowflakes hitting the wire/wires. I kept the idea going and now I can execute the project. I was also missing an important feature of the project until 3 years ago..."Bone Jazz"! 

Jim’s piece entitled Ring Around the Ring is an art experiment in recording the delicate impact of a snowflake onto a wire or wires stretched across the landscape above the decommissioned ring at Fermilab. 

© 2017 Nate Strayve, Jim Jenkins working on "Ring Around the Ring"

© 2017 Nate Strayve, Jim Jenkins working on "Ring Around the Ring"

Jim speaks in more detail of Ring Around the Ring

The distance of the stretched wire/wires is based upon the function of the relationship between a Lightfoot and the Δt of a distressed fetal heart rate of homo-sapiens. 

The recording instrument and sound pickup system will provide evidence of the impact/sound/ring. The disparate materials will be combined within the extended metaphor of the art experiment: an OB/GYN fetal stethoscope, a fabricated record lathe, x-ray film, an historical reference to the Cold War smuggling of jazz music into the Soviet Union disguised as Bone Jazz and our environmental impact upon Mother Earth. Our impact upon the Earth should be as minimal as a snowflake striking a wire. It is a dream.

© 2017 Nate Strayve, Jim Jenkins working on "Ring Around the Ring"

© 2017 Nate Strayve, Jim Jenkins working on "Ring Around the Ring"

Brian O’Keefe from SoundCloud visited Jim Jenkins to learn a little more about his art, and what it means to be ‘artist in residence’ at Fermilab.

Being in his element, Jim is enthusiastic about his work. I hope his dream continues into a successful exhibition. Good luck Jim!

Somewhere it's 3 O'clock

1/2 Measure Studio is on a few weeks hiatus.

Life often impedes on art. While life is taking over, I thought I would pass on the link to a video entitled Pixel - extraits to inspire this quiet time.

A fitting video for this period, it's a show at the crossroads of arts and the crossroads of the universes of Adrien M, Claire B, and Mourad Merzouki.

Pixel - extraits, a dance with eleven dancers in a virtual and living visual environment. A work on illusion combining energy and poetry, fiction and technical achievement, hip hop, and circus. 

Tell me about your universe and what it's like these days?

See you soon!

Incessant Journey Opening Night

I can breathe now with the opening over, or can I?

I took photos for those of you who could not make it to the show.

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, a panorama of the show

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, a panorama of the show

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, the introduction to the show

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, the introduction to the show

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, Traverse and A Day Filled with Onomatopoeias

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, Traverse and A Day Filled with Onomatopoeias

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, a peep of City Shields, A Day Filled with Onomatopeias, Perception (middle), Equinox (top right), Parade (far right), and Ambivalence (bottom right)

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, a peep of City Shields, A Day Filled with Onomatopeias, Perception (middle), Equinox (top right), Parade (far right), and Ambivalence (bottom right)

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, Parade (left), Ambivalence (back), Perception (front) and City Shields (final display was different)

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, Parade (left), Ambivalence (back), Perception (front) and City Shields (final display was different)

The setting and presentation of my work made this exhibition successful. Equinox projected on the wall was effective in showing my obsession as an artist with the banality of every day for 9 years. Projected images lower to the floor made it possible for the viewer to relate to the daily archiving of my life and environment—thanks Michael for helping to set this up. 

An artists’ books exhibition in Boise created a different experience for most people. Once, a common experience was established with each book, the viewer related interesting comments on their life and the relationship with my books.

However, I had hoped to display City Shields in a more cohesive manner. A wonderful shelf built for the show was not wide enough to fit the whole project. This created a side dish display of the volumes. The volumes should have been on the same shelf or a shelf below the manhole covers to help the observer in relating to the whole project. People asked—Why weren’t the manhole cover images on the floor?

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, City Shields (not the final display)

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, City Shields (not the final display)

I enjoyed sharing my obsession with collecting and archiving the mundane in a unique, creative, and dynamic way for the viewer to experience. A great show reacquainting people with activities that link us together and introducing artists’ books to Boise.


Note received on Saturday about Incessant Journey:

I think your show looks magnificent. It is well presented and engaging. your work stimulates my interest in how your approach to your subject matter embellishes our perception of the ordinary made extraordinary. great job!

Lawrence Manning, hill street studios, Nampa, Idaho

Incessant Journey

Pedestals painted, and white felt affixed atop.

Floors swept.

Windows washed.

Most of the installation is in place.

© 2017 Louise Leergneux, Ming Studios almost ready

© 2017 Louise Leergneux, Ming Studios almost ready

City Shields is awaiting its sixteen feet floating shelf.

Vinyl lettering still to come.

Tired and antsy.

Thursday night is the big event you are all invited to my exhibition!

Please come, bring your smiles and celebrate this event with me!

Tasks...

Tasks at hand this week in my 1/2 Measure Studio... 

The gallery walls of Ming Studios are freshly painted and the pedestals are more or less prepared.

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, Ming Studio Space

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, Ming Studio Space

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, Ming Studio, pedestals being painted

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, Ming Studio, pedestals being painted

I finished the volumes of City Shields, had a couple of boo-boos, re-print time!

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, City Shields oops!

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, City Shields oops!

Spent three days in Salt Lake City for business and pleasure. Taking some time off to relax.

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, hiking in the Dimple Dell Gully Trailhead in Sandy, Utah

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, hiking in the Dimple Dell Gully Trailhead in Sandy, Utah

Received my prints from WhiteWall Photo Lab in Germany. They look great, it’s nice to see the pages of my artists' books in large format.

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, prints for the show

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, prints for the show

I cataloged my books for the exhibition and I’m anticipating the big event at Ming Studios.

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, six artists' books plus 78 volumes of City Sheilds

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, six artists' books plus 78 volumes of City Sheilds

Thinking of submitting to the MCBA Prize—an international artists’ book award. Here are the links for the submission guidelines and the Book Art Biennial. Good luck to all who submit!

Drafting text for a grant, eager for newer and better equipment.

Twittered for the first time!! 

An interesting and busy week filled with preparations.

Last, but not least, excited to finish a prototype of a recently developed artists' book. Will take photos next week.

 

Planning...

My first week of residency behind me, I’m contemplating the space, the books, the projection of images... 

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, Ming Studios in preparation for my residency

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, Ming Studios in preparation for my residency

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, Ming Studios in preparation for my residency

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, Ming Studios in preparation for my residency

There are many details and it’s not a good idea to keep details and lists only in one’s mind. Notes, many notes, are required when creating an on-going project or any edition. These instructions are important to keep around for future reference. Writing details, such as the type of paper, colours used in Photoshop, set-up of jigs, binding... because you will forget! I don’t care how young you are! I’m happy to create an edition at once, but when low on cash, printing when needed is the best way to go, and it creates less inventory.

After answering many emails and particulars for the show at Ming Studios, I took the time to finish another volume of City Shields—Illinois Vol US7 No2. 

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, City Shields—Illinois Vol US No2

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, City Shields—Illinois Vol US No2

When I started the project, each volume contained 18 manhole covers. Since 2006, I print and die-cut the manhole covers myself. With thinner paper, I added three more manhole covers to a volume. More manhole covers the better? Right. Now, I print a volume when I receive an order. It has become more complicated to print odd numbers of manhole covers. I could print three sheets of 13 x 19 inches. Voilà, two volumes printed with no math or a headache. With 21 manhole covers, I always have an odd number to keep track of printing without waste. It becomes a guessing game on what manhole covers to print. Aye! The dilemma of an artist! 

Needing a meditation moment, I cleaned my junk. Screw posts anyone? 

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, my many screw-posts

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, my many screw-posts


The National Gallery of Canada Library and Archives and the Centre Canadien d'architecture have purchased these new volumes. The volumes are in the mail today.

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, eleven new volumes of City Shields

© 2017 Louise Levergneux, eleven new volumes of City Shields

A new week begins, must get ready for more conversations and planning. Check it out