8 7/8 x 6 5/16 inches (22.5 x 16 cm)
88 pages / Unpaginated / Stitch bound / Softcover, with front and back flap
73 plates (drawings, film stills, grids, photographs, maps, Two Lines)
Offset (4 color)
Publisher: Material, Deal, Kent, commissioned by the Faversham Society, Faversham, Great Britain, concurrent with the publication of the DVD ]AND HERE
Printer: Cultura, Wetteren, Belgium
Print run: 750
ISBN: 0-9547889-2-3
CATALOGUE RAISONNÉ NUMBER: 78
This is the second book with a postcard on the cover, this time on the back. The postcard shows the first motel in France, in Le Touquet. Again Peter Downsbrough uses the grid in a structural way, at times filling the page and at times only partially on the page. For the first time he uses digital maps of Tokyo, Chicago, and Boston, along with partial maps of the Indian Ocean with parts of Indonesia and Australia, Boston, the Thames Estuary, including an aerial photograph of the latter. Among the more classic elements are words, lines, film stills, and black-and-white photographs taken in Kent.
8 7/8 x 6 5/16 inches (22.5 x 16 cm)
88 pages / Unpaginated / Stitch bound / Softcover, with front and back flap
73 plates (drawings, film stills, grids, photographs, maps, Two Lines)
Offset (4 color)
Publisher: Material, Deal, Kent, commissioned by the Faversham Society, Faversham, Great Britain, concurrent with the publication of the DVD ]AND HERE
Printer: Cultura, Wetteren, Belgium
Print run: 750
ISBN: 0-9547889-2-3
CATALOGUE RAISONNÉ NUMBER: 78
This is the second book with a postcard on the cover, this time on the back. The postcard shows the first motel in France, in Le Touquet. Again Peter Downsbrough uses the grid in a structural way, at times filling the page and at times only partially on the page. For the first time he uses digital maps of Tokyo, Chicago, and Boston, along with partial maps of the Indian Ocean with parts of Indonesia and Australia, Boston, the Thames Estuary, including an aerial photograph of the latter. Among the more classic elements are words, lines, film stills, and black-and-white photographs taken in Kent.
Peter Downsbrough developed a strongly reduced visual vocabulary, which he used to investigate the given space in a very personal and precise way. His materials consists of letters and lines. He used adhesive letters, forming conjunctions, prepositions, verbs and/or nouns and applies them to the walls, floors and/or ceilings. Lines, for which he used cloth tape, emphasize certain architectural elements. Metal pipes, in the space and sometimes on the wall, accentuate the space. Areas defined by lines or painted black sometimes play a role, and, with the lines and the words reveal the architecture of interior or exterior spaces.
This rigorous treatment of the space continues in Peter Downsbrough’s books, maquettes, photographs, videos or prints. They all reveal an extreme coherence, which some situate in the minimal and conceptual art movements. In the course of time, the spatial interventions with the parallel vertical pipes or dowels have been complemented with words, lines and planes. Conjunctions such as AS, IF, BUT, FROM, MAAR, OP, EN, ET, OU, MAIS… have a double function: they work as iconographic signs which underline and reveal the space, and they offer the viewer the possibility to go, in his/her mind, from one thought to the other. For a conjunction is a word that can’t be declined or conjugated; it establishes a connection between sentences or parts of sentences.
Peter Downsbrough: With the word, one takes part in a dialogue, a discourse on its precise meaning. The word for me is an object. It has both a precise and a vague meaning. It is a universe one is confronted with. But there is no obligatory way of reading.
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