With a text by Ad Petersen in Dutch and English.
SM Cat. No 671.
Designed by Wim Crouwel.
*Please note this publication is secondhand and has some traces of previous ownership.
With a text by Ad Petersen in Dutch and English.
SM Cat. No 671.
Designed by Wim Crouwel.
*Please note this publication is secondhand and has some traces of previous ownership.
Jochen Gerz is a German conceptual artist who lived in France from 1966 to 2007. His work involves the relationship between art and life, history and memory, and deals with concepts such as culture, society, public space, participation and public authorship. After beginning his career in the literary field, Gerz has in the meantime explored various artistic disciplines and diverse media.
Produced on the occasion of the exhibition The New Japanese Painting and Sculpture at The Museum Of Modern Art, New York, 19 October–2 January 2, 1967. Including artists Natsuyuki Nakanishi, Tomio Miki, Atsuko Tanaka, Kumi Sugai, Nobuya Abe.
Intro – 4 Bars
Chorus 1 – 2 Bars
pity the nation… pity the nation
pity the nation… pity the nation
Pause – 2 Bars
Verse 1 – 8 Bars
pity the nation that is full of empty faith
pity the nation that wears cloth it does not weave
eats gluttony breads it does not harvest
drinks wine that flows not from its wine press
pity the nation that acclaims the bully as hero
hails and deems the glittering conquerer bountiful
pity a nation that despises passion
only in its dreams submits to awakening
Images & Text by Khaled Sabsabi. Typography by Ruud Ruttens.
‘By the fig, by the olive, by Mount Sinai and by this city of refuge’
وَٱلتِّينِ وَٱلزَّيْتُونِ
وَطُورِ سِينِينَ
وَهَٰذَا ٱلْبَلَدِ ٱلْأَمِينِ
Quran: Chapter 95. At-Tin
Continuing with these ideas: Alif, Meem, أم, Arabic letters laid out in this path spell out the mother and or source of origin, leading the way by perspicuous examples that makes the oppressed heart clear.
And if Meem, Alif, ما, order is reversed it spells the name for water and the unexplained parallels of the possibilities of the unseen in which there is no doubt or guide. The wisdom of the living and eternal symbols of whatever makes honest.
Free from Fear and Reward.
Images & Text by Khaled Sabsabi. Typography by Ruud Ruttens.
By the secret and the intimate, I am not trying to hint at seductive innerwear. I am trying, instead, to think about things as banal as, say, the linings of pockets, collars, jackets and bags. This is where skin meets stuff in order to create for us the experience, rather than the appearance, of what we choose to wear. And this is not, or not just, about comfort and convenience, but about a quality that has nothing to do with how we want to be looked at by others. It is what makes us who we are, purely to ourselves, when we put something on, be it a shirt, a shawl or a perfume. For those who wear clothes as well as for those who make them, the invisible is what lies closest to the person, and hence to personhood.
Edited by Tom Melick. Photocopies by Simryn Gill. Typography by Ruud Ruttens.