Saturday 4 February 2012

Sally Anne Roberts. 26th Jan – 2nd Feb 2012

I interacted with the book, attempting to turn the pages, looking, feeling, holding and exploring previous interventions, attempting to guess who had intervened with which element of the book. I found this exploration engaging and pleasurable, the deconstruction of formality within the book was liberating. I viewed the blog to establish the books progression and then went back to the book to reflect. I found the images within the book dull, as they were black and white. What is the book is about?Studies in the art of the Renaissance.’ The Renaissance was influence by the rediscovery of classical art and culture, the irony being that Greek and Roman sculpture used to be painted. This knowledge established the starting point for my intervention with the context of the book.

Reconstructions of how these sculptures originally appeared
                 Angustus of Primaporta ca. 20BC

The context of objects and images change when they are without colour, my first thought was to paint the images in the book, as in ‘colorization’. I wonder if classical sculpture had still been painted when it was discovered, what impact would it have on Western art today.

Instead I stole from the internet, printed and clumsily stuck together images of Raphael and John Ruskin. I collected audio, cut and transformed it in to a recording from Tate modern website.


Audio:
‘Pre-Raphaelite
Inspired by theories of John Ruskin who urged artists to 'go to nature'.
The name referred to their opposition to Royal Academy’s promotion of Renaissance master Raphael as ideal artist.’
TATE Glossary, Pre-Raphaelite
   



   
I crudely married together eclectic imagery of Raphael, John Ruskin and audio that I edited, verbalized and recorded from the Tate modern website, embedding sound within the book. My intervention attempts to lower the cultural status of the book, through pilfering the design format from pop culture. I put the gloves in an envelope, making them unusable, as I think the feel of the book is an important part of exploring. The envelope is with the book and can be opened….
I hope you have fun with my intervention, battery permitting!  :)






Friday 27 January 2012

Intervention "Remix the text" by Katrin Lübs, November 2011

I got the book quite at the beginning. For me a book always was something valuable and I could not imagine damaging it in any way. But the destruction had already begun and that made it easier for me.

I liked the pictures at the end but the content seamed complex and difficult to read. It was a lot of small text about anything. I wanted to get an extract of information. That is how our fast world works like, to hurry and catch a quick information or impression.  


I started carefully to cut some of the pages. Thereby I felt a bit guilty to destroy somebody´s work. I did it in some parts of the book´s text. 

Now a fluent reading was no longer possible. You could get only a short idea what it is telling. That means you can think about how it could go on or you decide and everything becomes possible. You can remix the text or you also can try hard to find the ongoing part, it is up to you.

 

Monday 16 January 2012

12-17th Jan, Qiuyuan Fu (Sherry)

I got the book after the New Year, it was already approaching Chinese Spring Festival, so I added some traditional elements to this book. Firstly, I put a Chinese knot on the cover page. In our culture, Chinese knot could bring happiness and blessing to people. Then I cut a flower and a butterfly on one page with a small scissors, because people in China paste the paper-cut to the windows to celebrate festivals. Finally, I made a tiny tea bag and stitched it to the last page. The tea leaves inside were from JiangSu Province, China, my hometown.

Wednesday 11 January 2012

11.01.12 Sue Taylor


I had custody of the book over the Christmas holidays, and my first idea was to take the book on holiday with me, as I was going away for New Year.  I was going to take it on a journey, and photograph the book in different locations, as a sort of diary.  The more I thought about this the more reasons for not doing it became apparent.  Basically it seemed quite a boring idea, and also there was the danger that I would lose the book, or leave it in a field somewhere in Staffordshire.  As I looked at the book its increasing fragility was very noticeable, and I began to treat it as a ‘rare’ object, so much so that I felt I ought to be wearing white gloves to turn its pages.  So that is my intervention – to supply a pair of white gloves, which attach to the book with a cord, so that the reader can choose or not to wear them.  I found out later a couple of interesting things about white gloves – there is a website for items of clothing for masons, and white gloves are advertised for this, and white gloves are worn by magicians, which I had forgotten about.  Finally I enclose information from the British Library, which no longer recommends the use of white gloves when handling precious books! The choice is yours.

The use of white cotton gloves for handling collection items
Written by Jane Pimlott, Preservation Coordinator
General practice at the British Library
The British Library takes appropriate use and handling of collection items seriously and
we provide guidance to staff, visitors and readers on how they should handle different
types of material.
Above: Letters of different sizes can be difficult to handle
when wearing gloves
In general we do not use or provide white gloves for use with collection items. Clean dry hands, free from
creams and lotions, are preferable in the majority of circumstances. Wearing cotton gloves when handling
books, manuscripts or fragile paper items reduces manual dexterity and the sense of touch, increasing the
tendency to 'grab' at items. The cotton fibres may lift or dislodge pigments and inks from the surface of pages
and the textile can snag on page edges making them difficult to turn. All these factors increase the risk of damage to collection items.
We have reinforced the importance of having clean dry hands to readers by developing
an icon which is displayed in reading rooms and in leaflets. A series of
the British Library website also demonstrates how various types and format of collection
items are used. Included in this series is a video called ‘Using Gloves with Collection
Items’.
short videos on
When should gloves be worn?
Staff will advise readers if they need to wear gloves when handling a particular collection
item. Gloves are used when handling certain materials, for example, lead seals or when
touching the surface of a globe. In someinstitutions it is common practice to use gloves
when viewing photographs to protect the surface of the image, but in the British Library
these items are generally issued in protective sleeves or mounts making this unnecessary.
Above: The surface of a globe being examined while
wearing white gloves
Research
Research into the use of white gloves by Dr. Cathleen A. Baker and Randy Silverman is
published in the article
of International Preservation News. They discuss that ‘
gloves provide no guarantee of protection from perspiration and dirt. Further, they
increase the likelihood of physical damage occurring to paper-based collection material
by blunting the sense of touch ..…implementing an institutionally monitored, handcleaning
policy is a reasonable and effective alternative to protecting artefacts from
damage while promoting the essential humanistic experience of touch
looks at the history of wearing white gloves; a relatively recent phenomenon.
‘Misperceptions about white gloves’ in the December 2005 issuecontrary to popular opinion,’. The article also
Items on television
When collection items are seen on television, for the same reasons given above, gloves
are not usually worn. Any handling during filming is, however, always closely supervised.
In normal circumstances access to extremely rare and valuable items is highly restricted.
With some rare and valuable items, filming may be one of the few occasions when we
permit access, to allow a wider audience to see and appreciate a restricted item.

Wednesday 28 December 2011

Intervention' From Right to Left'. Nastaran Samii. 9th -18th December 2011






I have converted the book to be opened from right side of the book instead of left side, as this is the way we open books in my culture.Consequently the reader must read from the right-page to the left-page ( first the page right and then the page left), however the text is in the left to right format.

Friday 16 December 2011

De-construction in progress... Helen Frank

The box (nor the words written inside it) can not protect the book, rather the box has invited it's own destruction by becoming part of the book and fit for intervention.

The box was shredded and turned into paper.

The mass of the box has made one thick page which has been drawn on. This new page mimics one of the inside pages

The new page is currently seperated from the book.

Tuesday 13 December 2011

Intervention 'Red Thread Through the Book', Silvia Champion, 1st - 8th Dec. 2011

I was interested in using the book and its words as material rather than working with the content. My original idea before I had the book was to change the shape of it by cutting into it in such a way that I can knit/knot the paper together and let a new shape grow out of the inside of the book. The interactions the book had already received prevented this.



Once I looked through the book I decided to interact directly with somebody else's interaction; communicating with it. I felt that because of all the interruptions and cuts already made, the book needed something to reconnect it. So I put a red thread through the book, connecting all the pages together. I like the connotations I found regarding the word 'thread' and how they relate to what I did with the book. For example:


the thread of an argument/ideas - connection linking them together
threads of something - various parts of it
to thread through it - to move through it
life/survival/success can hang by a thread - a delicate situation


Starting at the beginning, I put the thread through Madeleine's punched holes always using the closest  one on the opposite page to the one the thread across the book and at other times it is a short straight line depending where the next punch hole was. I stuck the thread down so when you turn the page a few more pages automatically stand up ready to flip over. This determines the way you urn the page and gives movement to a normally static object. In addition I chose a red thread that would give the paleness of the book a splash of colour.