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Un Coup de Dés Jamais N'abolira le Hasard

Item date(s): 1969

Marcel Broodthaers  - (book artist)
Stéphane Mallarmé


Pages: unpaged
Size: 325mm


Place publication: Antwerpen, Holland and Köln
Publisher: Galerie Wide White Space and Galerie Michael Werner
Cat. 017 - MPM3
Exhibition 2017

Additional notes:
Le 25 novembre 1969 à Anvers, il a été tiré de cette image. 10 exemplaires sur aluminium anodisé numérotés de I à X et exemplaires et 90 exemplaires ur papier mécanographique transparent numérotés 1 à 90. Le tout constituant une édition originale.

[On November 25, 1969 in Antwerp, this image was pulled. 10 copies on anodised aluminum numbered I to X, and 90 copies on mechanographical transparent paper numbered 1 to 90. The whole constituting a original edition.]

Le modele de cette image approximative est l'edition originale du poème "Un coup de dés jamais n'abolira le hasard" de Stéphane Mallarmé, publié en 1914 par la librairie Gallimard.

[The model for this approximate image is the original edition of the poem "A Throw of the Dice will Never Abolish Chance" by Stephane Mallarmé, published on 1914 by the Librairie Gallimard.]

This work is a homage to the 1887 modernist poem Un Coup de dés jamais n’abolira le hasard (A throw of the dice will never abolish chance), by French poet Stéphane Mallarmé, of which Broodthaers wrote: "Mallarmé is at the source of modern art. . . . He unwittingly invented modern space." Mallarmé’s poem proposed to liberate language from conventions of space and typography by stretching sentences across spreads and using multiple typefaces to abstract both form and content. In designing his edition, Brood

thaers blocked out the lines of the original work with solid black bars of varying width, dependent on the original type size, turning the original text into an abstract image of the poem (Broodthaers also replaced the word Poème, on the title page, with Image). Mallarmé's poem was published in three different editions with varying paper types; Broodthaers copied this approach, and all three of his variations are represented in MoMA's collection: one with translucent paper, one with standard paper, and one on individual aluminum plates.

Illustrated on p129-131 of A Bit of Matter and a Little Bit More - Daled Collection.

See: Unshelfmarked - Reconceiving the artists' book by Michael Hampton. P41

Exhibition notes:
Item 017 - MPM3 on Booknesses: Artists' books from the Jack Ginsberg Collection.

UJ Art Gallery, University of Johannesburg

25 March to 5 May 2017



Ref: GB/14563











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