עגלת קניות |
||||
|
For the Love of Books |
||||
Books as Works of Art ; Book Artist Ido Agassi and Even Hoshen Press | ||||
By Renee Ghert-Zand | March 9, 2011 The blending of sculpture, graphic design and bookbinding has been part of the 34-year-old Israeli artist’s personal landscape since 1994, when his father, Uzi Agassi, founded Even Hoshen, the family’s letterpress and intaglio publishing house in Ra’anana. An autodidact, the younger Agassi is a jack-of-all-trades when it comes to handcrafting books, boxes and slipcases. Over the years, he has studied bookbinding, restoration, box making, letterpress printing, typesetting, typography, calligraphy, gold finishing, printing and carpentry.
Most striking are the poem “Mein Blaus Klavier” (“My Blue Piano”) by Else Lasker-Schuler, imprinted on the paper keys of a book-sized blue cloth grand piano, and the biblical story of David and Goliath, bound by a leather sling shot. Also impressive are a set of miniature books as small as one inch by one inch with tiny illustrations displayed in a doll house-like window box. Agassi’s books have been exhibited in As the world races into the digital future, Agassi’s work reminds us to slow down and consider becoming bibliophiles, in the literal sense of the word. “I really feel I am doing something the way they made it centuries ago. I can do it by candlelight or go outside if it is daytime,” Agassi told In an age when a book will likely soon be paperless, Agassi’s art challenges us to think about what we stand to lose by no longer being able to hold or behold a three-dimensional, physical interpretation of an author’s ideas. We may no longer be in danger of judging a book by its cover when there is no cover left to judge — but will that be a good thing? Permalink | Comments (2) | Share | Email | Filed under: Ronny Someck, Uzi Agassi, Renee Ghert-Zand, Palo Alto, Nili Dagan, Ido Agassi, Exhibits, Even Hoshen, Books, Else Lasker-Schuler |
||||
|
||||