February 24th, 2010 / 5:12 pm
I Like __ A Lot

Brian Dettmer’s Altered Books

Brian Dettmer, "Key Monuments #4," Altered Book (2009)

I really enjoy Brian Dettmer‘s altered books, in which cut-out negative spaces inside books are layered together in their original binding to create, or more accurately, excavate, hidden visual and physical worlds. Gladly, the postmodern reflex of facetious appropriation is not the fancy here, but rather, a austere “classical” sense of intricate sculptural negation which brings to mind Michelangelo’s La Pietà or David, whose manifestation were through an aggregate of chronic and gentle subtractive layers. This idea of god or man buried under marble is similar to the newly discovered compositions buried, incidentally or arbitrarily, between the pages of encyclopedias and historical books. Put simply, the truth is in there. To see more, visit his flickr or website.

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10 Comments

  1. alec niedenthal

      This is cool. What do you mean, though, by “the postmodern reflex of facetious appropriation”?

  2. alec niedenthal

      This is cool. What do you mean, though, by “the postmodern reflex of facetious appropriation”?

  3. Jimmy Chen
  4. Jimmy Chen
  5. Kevin

      Definitely awesome awesome stuff. Glad to read posts like this on HTMLGIANT.

  6. Kevin

      Definitely awesome awesome stuff. Glad to read posts like this on HTMLGIANT.

  7. Jason
  8. Jason
  9. Michael Filippone

      This past weekend I read Calvino’s If on a winter’s night a traveler and this reminds me of the character that makes the sculptures out of books. This is almost exactly what I imagined they looked like.

  10. Michael Filippone

      This past weekend I read Calvino’s If on a winter’s night a traveler and this reminds me of the character that makes the sculptures out of books. This is almost exactly what I imagined they looked like.