The Book AsMain MenuA Repository of InformationA PerformanceA JourneyJessie CarterA Conceptual Playground for Choice(sagesolar, 2014, “The king of hearts”)A Medium for Universal LanguageA Phenomenal ReadingA Relationship Between Recto and VersoA Vision of the FutureA Repository of LanguageKate Aberman74d96e55dd29b74bef0e0a20c2d79e879fab26ccEmmie Banksd3c00922e17d33400599c8143d1d353f7d36ea7aJessie Cartera6f04f02805133baaf416ab9fcd9a4a2b857b080Deanna Fayed2f0ded76fb9215a15ea7a11b638a892a604843bfGabby Huberta3f266b029aa2bada1c10fd4a31317d37a1bec9dKatherine King6125a92332113f4973e618b8e428aac70a6ed790Carol Leea596a4440954bb8282b044cb431f3d2b8a9a8e75Sarah Richmanbeb66f0b62cd0c55d75ac46cfcf447f52ffe6aa8Matthew Winz5800f51dc1a62f1d2397973f41e4b16a521351b3whitney trettienf2bbb7126b60dc1bee07050dccbd9d30f12d7b2b
Sumo Geisha Sashimi
12016-12-06T06:23:40-08:00Deanna Fayed2f0ded76fb9215a15ea7a11b638a892a604843bf135562Sumo Geisha Sashimi by Brad Freeman (2013)plain2016-12-06T20:56:46-08:00Deanna Fayed2f0ded76fb9215a15ea7a11b638a892a604843bf
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12016-12-06T09:57:10-08:00Sumo Geisha Sashimi11gallery2016-12-06T20:54:04-08:00For this exploration of a book quality, it makes sense to begin with the traditional codex form.
This book takes the form of the codex bound by a traditional Japanese stab-binding technique (which, as it happens, reflects the work’s content – one instance of a bookish practice of relating form to function). The content of the work plays on the juxtaposition of recto and verso on a page spread of an open codex. On the left side of the page, the author/artist displays an image of a sumo wrestling match. As the reader progresses through the book, this same image is continuously zoomed in to reveal a geisha sitting in the audience, and then continues zooming until the picture is nothing but pixels on a page. On the right side of the page, the image is part of a photo series that progresses throughout the book of a butcher preparing sashimi.
In his artist statement on the work, Freeman elaborates on his use of the recto/verso system:
Concisely, Freeman says [on this work] in the Journal of Artists' Books (2014):
“The intention was to take advantage of the book’s verso/recto form and create a correspondence among the images across the gutter that would not have been possible if each sequence was presented alone.”
With the clarity of Freeman’s statements, one can understand the affordance of juxtaposition through recto/verso form.