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Book Review
From Publisher's
Weekly
Collage of paper ephemera-photographs, postcards, ads,
newspapers, stamps, money, packaging materials, invoices,
books and sheet music-is an artistic technique at least as old
as modernism, with Picasso and Braque incorporating various
scraps of Parisian paper into their early cubist works.
Bantock, whose six Griffin & Sabine books imagine an
epistolary love and include the "actual" letters and cards it
is conducted through, offers a plethora of techniques for
bringing past and present together by collecting aging paper,
and transforming its original communicative use or
transactional value through one's own choices in
juxtaposition, placement and additive drawing. He offers
beautiful, full-color examples of his own work in short
chapters devoted to the various pulp forms above, with five or
six paragraphs explaining what he likes or how he uses each
... followed by examples of works he's done with short
captions. The printing and layout are as lush as Griffin &
Sabine fans would expect, and Bantock offers a judicious mix
of his own practice and advice for one's own.
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