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[POLISH NEO-AVANT-GARDE - CONCEPTUAL BOOK OBJECT] Deka-log

[POLISH NEO-AVANT-GARDE - CONCEPTUAL BOOK OBJECT] Deka-log

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[POLISH NEO-AVANT-GARDE - CONCEPTUAL BOOK OBJECT] Deka-log

by Kozłowski, Jarosław

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Berlin, Germany
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About This Item

Rare artist book by Kozłowski, a master of Polish conceptualism and co-founder of the anti-institutional NET initiative. Born 1945, Kozłowski studied painting at the University of Fine Arts in Poznań. His creative output includes drawings, artist books, performances, installations, and experimental institutional structures. In 1971, defying the tight control of national borders - and of art by institutions - Kozłowski and art historian Andrzej Kostolowski (born 1940) formulated and mailed the NET manifesto to 350 international artists. It proposed the free circulation of artistic ideas, in "opposition to institutions dominated by the market in the West and bureaucratic ideology in the East." The manifesto was a phenomenal success and Kozłowski soon began to receive artworks, manuscripts, slides, letters, handbills, books, and films from around the world. The first group of NET materials was shown in May 1972 in the artist's apartment, with art objects from Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, France, Germany, Italy, Canada, USA, Brazil, and Israel. The exhibition was shut down that evening by the Polish secret police (Służba Bezpieczeństwa, or Security Service). Accused of anarchist anti-state activities, the participants were interrogated and all materials confiscated. Kozłowski was removed from his teaching post at the Poznań Academy of Fine Arts, "demoted to working at the University library," and barred from leaving Poland for six years. Nevertheless, he would go on to found Akumulatory 2 Gallery by the end of the year, which hosted further NET events, including a Fluxus festival in 1977.

Kozłowski's artist books are also grounded in conceptualism and in his aim to break international barriers by means of art. Piotr Rypson describes the period that led to the emergence of the Polish artist book as one of artistic optimism: "Widespread interest in the language of art; exploring the links between art and science; serious reduction of extra-conceptual elements, and fascination with new means of expression [...] served to strengthen faith in art as a lingua franca in which cultural dialogue could be held" (Rypson 2000, p. 104). Rypson also identifies Kozłowski as one of the first to make artist books, a form that "broke through the state monopoly, often avoiding censorship and the official publishing machinery," and ultimately "stretching the limits of freedom." Moving beyond the self-published concrete poetry of artists such as Andrzej Partum, Kozłowski's artist books play with logic and reduce language to its most basic elements.

Dispensing with language altogether, this book proposes a different game of meaning. The pages contain numbers from one to ten, with each number multiplied according to its numerical value, arranged as objects in a children's elementary arithmetic book. "The abstract/symbolic value of digits is confronted with their concrete dimension - graphic, visual. The multiplication of signs, symmetrical in relation to their values, causes a paradox: only one corresponds to the real, graphically specific value one. In other cases, we have two numbers graphically presented in front of us, but their values ;;add up to four. The artist therefore proposes a game between the abstract numerical value and its visual dimension, between the materialization of an idea and the idea, between the signifier and the signified" (Nader 2005, p. 189). Originally, the book seems to have been exhibited along with drawings of numbers arranged on the walls, with the book presenting an alternative to a mounted exhibition. One of 200 copies printed.

As of March 2024, KVK, OCLC show one copy in Europe and one in North America. Rare artist book by Kozłowski, a master of Polish conceptualism and co-founder of the anti-institutional NET initiative. Born 1945, Kozłowski studied painting at the University of Fine Arts in Poznań. His creative output includes drawings, artist books, performances, installations, and experimental institutional structures. In 1971, defying the tight control of national borders - and of art by institutions - Kozłowski and art historian Andrzej Kostolowski (born 1940) formulated and mailed the NET manifesto to 350 international artists. It proposed the free circulation of artistic ideas, in "opposition to institutions dominated by the market in the West and bureaucratic ideology in the East." The manifesto was a phenomenal success and Kozłowski soon began to receive artworks, manuscripts, slides, letters, handbills, books, and films from around the world. The first group of NET materials was shown in May 1972 in the artist's apartment, with art objects from Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, France, Germany, Italy, Canada, USA, Brazil, and Israel. The exhibition was shut down that evening by the Polish secret police (Służba Bezpieczeństwa, or Security Service). Accused of anarchist anti-state activities, the participants were interrogated and all materials confiscated. Kozłowski was removed from his teaching post at the Poznań Academy of Fine Arts, "demoted to working at the University library," and barred from leaving Poland for six years. Nevertheless, he would go on to found Akumulatory 2 Gallery by the end of the year, which hosted further NET events, including a Fluxus festival in 1977.

Kozłowski's artist books are also grounded in conceptualism and in his aim to break international barriers by means of art. Piotr Rypson describes the period that led to the emergence of the Polish artist book as one of artistic optimism: "Widespread interest in the language of art; exploring the links between art and science; serious reduction of extra-conceptual elements, and fascination with new means of expression [...] served to strengthen faith in art as a lingua franca in which cultural dialogue could be held" (Rypson 2000, p. 104). Rypson also identifies Kozłowski as one of the first to make artist books, a form that "broke through the state monopoly, often avoiding censorship and the official publishing machinery," and ultimately "stretching the limits of freedom." Moving beyond the self-published concrete poetry of artists such as Andrzej Partum, Kozłowski's artist books play with logic and reduce language to its most basic elements.

Dispensing with language altogether, this book proposes a different game of meaning. The pages contain numbers from one to ten, with each number multiplied according to its numerical value, arranged as objects in a children's elementary arithmetic book. "The abstract/symbolic value of digits is confronted with their concrete dimension - graphic, visual. The multiplication of signs, symmetrical in relation to their values, causes a paradox: only one corresponds to the real, graphically specific value one. In other cases, we have two numbers graphically presented in front of us, but their values ;;add up to four. The artist therefore proposes a game between the abstract numerical value and its visual dimension, between the materialization of an idea and the idea, between the signifier and the signified" (Nader 2005, p. 189). Originally, the book seems to have been exhibited along with drawings of numbers arranged on the walls, with the book presenting an alternative to a mounted exhibition. One of 200 copies printed.

As of March 2024, KVK, OCLC show one copy in Europe and one in North America.

Details

Bookseller
Penka Rare Books and Archives DE (DE)
Bookseller's Inventory #
53019
Title
[POLISH NEO-AVANT-GARDE - CONCEPTUAL BOOK OBJECT] Deka-log
Author
Kozłowski, Jarosław
Book Condition
Used
Quantity Available
2
Keywords
poland, polish, art, exhibition, gallery, galerie, Akumulatory, fluxus, avantgarde, avant-garde, neo-avantgarde, NET

Terms of Sale

Penka Rare Books and Archives

Orders are processed in the order of receipt and all items are offered subject to prior sale. Our books are carefully described, with minor flaws not always explicitly stated, but always reflected in our prices. All prices are in EURO. Any item is returnable within thirty days for any reason. We kindly ask that you notify us before returning your purchase by email or phone. Returns must be carefully packaged and shipped by registered mail only. If a returned item is received in significantly worse condition, the customer is liable for compensation. Invoices are to be paid within fourteen days, without further discount. Place of delivery and exclusive place of jurisdiction for both parties for any disputes is Berlin, Germany.

About the Seller

Penka Rare Books and Archives

Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Biblio member since 2014
Berlin

About Penka Rare Books and Archives

We specialize in rare books, manuscripts, and ephemera related to Russia and Eastern Europe. Members of VDA (Verband Deutscher Antiquare) and ILAB (International League of Antiquarian Booksellers). For more information, please visit www.penkararebooks.com or contact us at info@penkararebooks.com.

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