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Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas

Item date(s): 2013

Ruth Sacks


Pages: 200 x 100mm each
Collation: Book set - two
Technique: Lithography
Edition: One of 50 copies

Theme(s): Post-colonialism; Architecture; Politics

Place publication: Johannesburg
Publisher: Garamond Press
Exhibition 2014; 2017

Additional notes:
Previous work has made use of literature and popular mythology as a possible entry point into complex situations. The resulting exhibitions were a process of creating new fictions, revising, translating and adapting existing texts and images, as well as constructing new ones. The result of these investigations took different forms; not only artists' books and text pieces, but also installations and sculptures. Throughout my practice, I place emphasis on the use of typography, design and language as important interfaces.

Reference note:
One artist's book takes early translations of Jules Verne's 'Vingt mille lieues sous les mers' (1870) as a starting point and treats the process of translation as one of personal interpretation. Each book is a series of textual and visual interventions into Jules Verne's classic tale of underwater travel in a fantastical submarine. The story has been rewritten to embed Art Nouveau forms into the narrative. At the same time, colonial attitudes in the original novel are drawn out. The initial illustrations have been replaced by word drawings made from long lists of fish, plants and locations that were initially removed from English translations of Verne's book. When placed alongside each other, the covers of the artist books link together to form a sculptural installation.

The second artist's book is a response to the Medieval bestiary Der Naturen Bloeme by Jacob Van Maerlant (circa 1350). While the bestiary categorizes and describes the known natural world from that time, An Extended Alphabet, lists a variety of elements from the contemporary built environment of the city of Utrecht in the Netherlands.

My work looks at historical situations and fictional narratives that speak to the construction of colonial and postcolonial identities. At present, my research is around the moment of African independence in the late 20th century. I am working with different representations of architecture and design from different instances of independence, as a way of trying to understand the political urgencies of the time. In approaching enduring symbols and sites of independence as an aesthetic resource, the complete entanglement of local and foreign, as well as natural and synthetic, within growing environments, is a key concern.

Two artists books, boxed

Edited by Sean O'Toole.



Exhibition notes:
Book Arts: Artists' Books

Curated by Wilheim van Rensberg and Alet Vorster

AOP Gallery, 44 Stanley Ave, Johannesburg

25 October - 15 November 2014

‘Booknesses: Contemporary South African Artist's Books’.

FADA Gallery, University of Johannesburg.

Curated by David Paton and Eugene Hon.

24 March - 5 May 2017



Ref: DP/17074















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