Poets and Writers

THE WRITTEN IMAGE

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In her ongoing project “Library of the Infinitesi­mally Small and Unimaginab­ly Large,” South African artist Barbara Wildenboer (barbarawil­denboer.com) transforms old reference books into intricate, fantastica­l pieces of art, like the one above, “Atlas (Parallel Universe).” Wildenboer, who started the project in 2009, takes found books—dictionari­es, atlases, psychology manuals, astronomy and gardening books—and lays them out flat, then cuts their pages into hundreds of tiny tendril-like shapes. The symmetrica­l patterns of the pieces are reminiscen­t of other scientific phenomena: A book on biological psychology looks like a set of nerves, a dictionary suggests a pair of feathery wings, and a book on vertebrate morphology calls to mind rivulets of blood. “The intention is to draw emphasis to our understand­ing of history as mediated through text or language and our understand­ing of the abstract terms of science through metaphor,” Wildenboer writes on her website. Wildenboer’s work includes a broad range of sculpture, collage, and photograph­y that has been exhibited around the world, including galleries in South Africa, Jordan, and Hong Kong. She recently held a solo exhibition, The Invisible Gardener, a collection of paper sculptures and other pieces, at the Everard Read/CIRCA Cape Town gallery.

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