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The most striking feature of Daniel Kelm's
Neo Emblemata Nova is, without doubt, its
structure. The book comes enclosed in a cloth covered, red and black,
cube-shaped box that gives little indication to the contents, save a
cryptic, ancient-looking Latin inscription on the lid. Opening the box
reveals a tightly packed set of tile like cards which, when removed,
reveal themselves to be linked at the edges such that the form a stiff,
unwieldy Mobius strip. The tiles are printed with black and white
images, some of them accompanied by Latin text, which were taken from a
16
th century “emblem book” – a popular book form containing
cryptic imagery meant to convey religious, political, or moral messages
that had to be decoded by the reader.
Neo Emblemata Nova, like its 16
th and 17
th
century precursors, resists decryption.
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Going beyond the content –
which is as intriguing yet esoteric, if not more so, than it would have
been hundreds of years ago – the book itself is physically difficult to
read. The stiffly hinged ring of panels is difficult to lay flat, or
page, or arrange in any other recognizable position. Even once it is
spread out, there is no indication as to the beginning, end, front, or
back – and mathematically speaking, the work has none of these familiar
qualities, as the Mobius Strip is a surface with one, continuous side
that feeds back into itself infinitely. The juxtaposition of ancient
content and avant-garde binding makes it difficult even to place the
work within the continuum of history. The work feels infinite, both in
time and space. The messages conveyed by the imagery, though they can
arguably be pinned to specific religious or moral imperatives, are
largely left to the reader’s interpretation. It is a work that
challenges the reader, physically and mentally, from the moment they
open the box to the moment when (likely after much frustration) they
manage to fold it back into its original configuration. I would argue
that
Neo Emblemata Nova is a commentary on the book’s ability to teach us
more than the physical contents would suggest – that by reading,
handling, and analyzing it we can generate ideas beyond those of the
author. It is a book beholden to no time or place, without beginning or
end, that must be unpacked (both physically and mentally) by the reader.
Come play with it by asking for
Presses W538kene.
Posted for Tucker Lancaster '18