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"Michelangelo
is said to have spent months in the quarries of Carrara, unable to tear himself away
from the sight of all the marble blocks in which he saw the shapes of works without
number waiting to be liberated. The scholar's quarries are libraries. His form of
indulgence is the reading of catalogues of second-hand books which, to his mind,
conjure up visions of curious lore and possible clues to the riddles of the past.
But there is at least one thing in common between art and scholarship: both may appear
to be utterly useless--as useless in fact, as are all dreams and memories1."
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| During a period
of teaching at Tsukuba University in Japan, we found the art library there full of
Japanese texts that we could not begin to read, sitting on the shelves next to books
in English and other European languages. It was a peculiar combination of the strange
and the familiar. In this foreign library we felt like tourists searching for the
exotic sights. We were scholars, of a new language and culture, looking for points
of contact and struggling to understand new forms. |
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"Bibliography"
(rear) and "Scroll" (front)
installation at the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, 1992
54 holograms of books, and
two large-format laser prints
in acrylic display cabinets
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"The
arts of the past are an important strand in the memories of mankind, and long may
they remain so. Shrines, monuments, and images remain in front of everybody's eyes
when books are forgotten and documents buried in archives2. "
In the United
States, a National Research and Education Network proposal exists to build a three-billion-bits-per-second
communication network over high speed fiber optic cables, with computers that can
transmit the entire Encyclopedia Britannica in a second. This project should be completed
in 1995 and will connect major universities and research institutions.
"Language
is not an organization of natural stimuli, like a beam of photons; it is an organization
of stimuli realized by man, and as such, an artifact, like any other art form3."
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Bibliography,
Wenyon & Gamble, Art Tower Mito, Mito, Japan (1992)
54 holograms of books, selected from the Art Library of the
University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, Japan
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Technology
promises access to information without the need to see or handle a book: yellowing
books and documents can have their contents scanned in digital form onto optical
discs. Perhaps the need for a printed page as the original form of any text will
ultimately disappear. The book itself may change, take on a new form, perhaps losing
the aesthetic character we now know. An old and fading book has a sentimental quality,
having passed through many hands -- surviving not only time but constant changes
in the pattern of ideas. Accessing information through networks will remove the physical
contact with text and language as an object.
"We are
coming to the end of the culture of the book. Books are still produced and read in
prodigious numbers, and they will continue to be as far into the future as one can
imagine. However, they do not command the center of the cultural stage. Modern culture
is taking shapes that are far more various and more complicated than the book-centered
culture it is succeeding4."
This seemed
an appropriate moment to consider the role of the book as a vulnerable artifact in
late twentieth century culture. We decided to extend our cultural exploration of
the library to the making of our art. The library at Tsukuba University would define
a convenient boundary to our enquiries, its holdings of books providing the context
to consider our own position as students of Japanese culture.
We were interested
in recording books as three-dimensional objects in holograms. The idea of a holographic
recording of a book seemed mysterious in itself, throwing up questions we were keen
to explore and resolve. During 1991 and 1992, we produced 127 separate holograms,
each depicting a single book.We used a straightforward documentary form of hologram
to record individual books. The technique was developed in the former Soviet Union
solely for the documentation of objects, and used in museums there to record and
display valuable items that might otherwise not be shown. It is called the Denisyuk
hologram after the scientist who invented it.
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Bibliography
(detail), Wenyon & Gamble, Art Tower Mito, Mito, Japan (1992)
54 holograms of books, selected from the Art Library,
University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, Japan
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The Denisyuk
hologram records an object placed directly in front of a photographic film or glass
plate. The object may even touch the emulsion at one point. The emulsion is clear,
or as clear as the manufacturer can make it, so that the object can be illuminated
from behind the film or plate by light transmitted through it. The resulting image
can be very beautiful, exploiting the hologram's potential to record details and
texture at high resolution as well as the 'play of light' that animates a real object
as a viewer moves past it.
The subjects
of the books in 'Bibliography', the final work, vary from old Japanese texts on astronomy
to contemporary art criticism. Their selection was not random, but followed certain
definite -- though varied -- principles. Although we could not read titles in Japanese
Kanji characters, we chose Japanese books with as much care as those in the English
language.
"The
scholar is the guardian of memories5."
Although the
contents of the books in 'Bibliography' are known to us, from now on they can only
be seen; in their present form, none of the books are readable. There is a strange,
perhaps private, pleasure in knowing that within our holographic book images lie
so many inaccessible two-dimensional representations of the three-dimensional world.
Wenyon &
Gamble
London, 1993
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References
1.
E.H. Gombrich, 'Meditations on a Hobby Horse, Art and Scholarship', Phaidon, London,
1963, p106
2.
E.H. Gombrich, ibid, p108
3.
Umberto Eco, 'The Open Work', Hutchinson Radius, London, 1989, p28
4.
O. B. Hardison Jnr, 'Disappearing through the Skylight: Culture and Technology in
the Twentieth Century', Penguin Books USA, 1989, p264
5.
E. H. Gombrich, ibid, p107
©Wenyon
& Gamble, 1991, 1992, 1994
text
from the catalogue to the exhibition "Volumes"
published by The Photographers' Gallery, London, 1993
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