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Their back pages

'Book As Post Modern Medium (The Book Show)' at 5 Traverse
By GREG COOK  |  June 2, 2009

back pages main
DARK Schaff's Monday Morning, Going to Work.

An often overlooked factor of Providence's underground art scene that flourished in the decade bookending the start of the millennium was the central place of the zine. The artists of Fort Thunder, the Hive Archive, Dirt Place, and other local crazy collectives may now be best known for their screenprinted posters and their rock and roll, but their self-produced books — mostly photocopied collections of comics, drawings, or collages plus screenprinted covers — were one of the first ways (along with the music) that word of the glorious stuff going on here got out.

So "Book As Post Modern Medium (The Book Show)" at 5 Traverse gallery (5 Traverse Street, Providence, through June 27) is a welcome sampling of the wealth of arty books being made locally, with cameos by some of these underground collective folks as just one example. 5 Traverse's Jesse Smith and Maya Allison spotlight five artists in the front room, then create a library of some 30 more in a second room (including picks by Brent Legault of Ada Books).

William Schaff collects three picture stories — drawn in his signature precise obsessive black-and-white linework — in Monday Morning, Going to Work, a limited-edition book published by the gallery. In one tale, a couple is all lovey-dovey couple until hands with knives sprout from their mouths and they stab each other. It's all deliciously, relentlessly gloomy, so seeing a lot of Schaff's stuff at once numbs its effect. But if you don't exceed recommended doses, Schaff is convincing as a punk Hieronymus Bosch, complete with dark Christian angst.

Jessica Deane Rosner's The Diary Project, also published by 5 Traverse, takes off from a diary she lost in 1986 and was miraculously returned to her in 2000. She photocopied pages and then drew over them. Unfortunately, the results aren't as amazing as the backstory — the diary writing is mundane (brief jottings on awkward encounters with friends, lists of things to do) and the drawings (cat-head people, butterflies, Celtic-ish patterning) feel fussy.

Lately Jacqueline Ott has been making terrific drawings of kaleidoscoping patterns of pinwheel shapes. She fills two books here with similar motifs (one per page), but the images are less complex and correspondingly less dazzling. Jonathan Bonner (Ott's husband) contributes an amusingly goofy photographic flip book of a long tongue rolling out of a trunk. Allison Paschke draws gold faux cuneiform on sheets of tissue pinned to a porcelain rectangle hung on the wall. It's really a precious sculpture, not a book at all.

Which raises the question: Why make art books? Except for Schaff (who has made comics) and Bonner (who dabbled in books in his recent concrete poetry pieces), these artists are not known for books. Their tomes feel like larks for the show.

The second room features artists for whom bookmaking has been more vital to their output, and the books feel correspondingly more . . . well, necessary. Christopher Paul Kelley's Russian Find Book is a one-of-a-kind book packed with quick drawings and collages that radiate an unstoppable need to create. Michael Bizon obsessively blacks out all the text in a teenybopper magazine and covers faces in designs resembling strange masks. It's mysterious, funny, and a bit creepy.

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Related: The moving pictures, Stop the presses, The digerarti, More more >
  Topics: Museum And Gallery , Hieronymus Bosch, Brian Chippendale, Brian Chippendale,  More more >
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ARTICLES BY GREG COOK
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  •   WIZARDS AND MASTERPIECES  |  November 06, 2009
    At “Harry Potter: The Exhibition” at the Museum of Science, when a robed attendant places the sorting hat on a visitor’s head and soon after a door whooshes open to reveal the Hogwarts Express, you find yourself filled with the kind of giddy expectation you feel when getting your hands on a Potter book the day it’s released.
  •   GANG OF FOUR  |  November 03, 2009
    The elegantly simple shapes of Providence artist Lisa Perez’s shallow wooden wall sculptures at 5 Traverse Gallery take on charming, wobbly, bubbly forms with uneven edges, as if they were worn away by rivers.
  •   HARVARD ‘ACT UP’ SHOW GETS RISE FROM RIGHT-WINGERS  |  November 02, 2009
    Taking a detour from directly bashing President Obama, right-wingers are now hot and bothered by a Harvard art exhibit. And they have an Obama administration foil toward whom they can channel their bile.
  •   IN FOCUS  |  October 29, 2009
    Photography has been New England’s greatest contribution to art of the past century.
  •   CASTING SPELLS  |  October 21, 2009
    In 1915, Harvard University and Museum of Fine Arts archæologists digging in a rocky cliff at Deir el-Bersha unearthed the 4000-year-old tomb of the Djehutynakhts, an ancient Egyptian governor and his wife.

 See all articles by: GREG COOK

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