Shop > Artists' Books

Out of Stock
#12365

Ornament Stadt

Artist
Herbert Stattler
Date
2015
Publisher
Spector Books
Format
Artists' Books
Size
27.2 × 34 cm
Length
32 pgs
Genre
Drawing
Description

In his book Ornament Stadt [Ornament City], the Austrian artist Herbert Stattler transferred 16 designs of ideal cities into precise pencil drawings. Urban utopias from the Renaissance to the 20th century are reproduced by Stattler again and again, until the ideal city is multiplied into an ornament: fans and concentric circles, repeating bubbles and dispersing stars. In the detail however, in the movement of the pencil that repeats the original, there is a liveliness that counteracts the “big plan” in a congenial way. The design of the book draws on portfolios used by urban planners and draftsmen. The pages are folded in a way that the drawings appear in their original size. Only at closer inspection does it become apparent that they are drawn in pencil. The line is not always perfect, and in consequence the drawing departs from the utopias of those architects who believed in perfect ideals of the city. Ornament Stadt is published on the occasion of the solo exhibition at the Österreichisches Kulturforum in Berlin.

Folded softcover, block stitching with wrapper, separate booklet, b&w.

  1. ornament stadt
 

Related Items

  1. Vasarely Go Home
  2. Oliver Hartung: Syria Al-Assad
  3. James Langdon: A School for Design Fiction
  4. Finding Oneself Outside: Uncomfortable Objects
  5. Alejandra and Aeron: Monotonous Ornament
  6. Spector: Cut + Paste #1-4
  7. Das Wunder des Lebens
  8. Je n’ai rien à dire. Seulement à montrer. / Ich habe nichts zu sagen. Nur zu zeigen. / I have nothing to say. Only to show. Natalie Czech. Spector Books.
  9. Losk: An Assembly of Shifting Spaces
  10. Christian Hoffelner: A Zine
  11. Double Bound Economies
  12. Masanao Hirayama: PYRAMID QUIZ (5153) Special edition
  13. Davide Cascio: David Cascio: E.N.
  14. Michaela Melian: Ruckspiegel
  15. Waldemar Cordeiro and Franz Mon: Waldemar Cordeiro & Franz Mon
  16. Maya Schweizer: The Same Story Elsewhere: : continued, spread, fragmented, daily, backwards and all over again
  17. Nina Koennemann: Free Mumia
  18. Ulrike Grosswarth: Ulrike Grossarth: Fabrics from Lublin
  19. Arthur Zalewski: Somebody’s Got to Do It
  20. Olaf Nicolai: Faites le Travail Qu’accomplit le Soleil
  21. Francis Hunger: History Has Left the Building
  22. Józef Robakowski
  23. Peter Hauenschild : Montagne Sainte-Victoire
  24. Bernhard Cella and Michael Horsky: Familienalbum
  25. Tim Lahan: Some Ways
  26. Garry Neill Kennedy: Eighteen Drawings
  27. Arisa Odawara: My Diary
  28. Zuni Halpern: Elephants
  29. Kyrill Constantinides Tank: Janus Neinus Vielleichtus
  30. Snake Book (2nd Edition)
  31. Sarah Nasby: Self Help from Typographers: Herbert Bayer
  32. Alex Cecchetti: A Society That Breathes Once a Year
  33. Keren Cytter: D.I.E. Now The True Story of John Webber and His Endless Struggle with the Table of Content
  34. Again, A Time Machine: From Distribution to Archive
  35. LIBERTIES OF THE SAVOY by Ruth Ewan
  36. PRE-ENACTMENTS
  37. The What If?... Scenario (after LG)
  38. Tobias Spichtig: Blue, Red, and Green