Highlighting the significance of the landscape in Dutch culture, José’s project is not only observatory by nature, but also investigatory. He notes how the Dutch landscape was “built by people in an artificial way,” as man-made interventions connected ground to sea more easily. “Hence it is understood that the golden age of landscape painting was not a representation of the landscape, but the representation of an illusion.”
The book is built from two landscapes, that of Suriname’s – an old Dutch colony – and the Netherland’s. “Each landscape is drawn over and over again,” says José of the 20 page, Risograph-printed volume , “building a series of ten drawings each. In each drawing, the rules of the game have been progressively altered so that each drawing of the same landscape is always different.” Interestingly, the rules used in landscape A are the same rules applied in landscape B but inverted. And in this way, “A and B only make sense when they are connected within the temporary space format of the book.” As a result, the concept of the publication, drawn from geometric patterns of circles that grow in each drawing, in turn, also becomes the narrative of the work.
20 pages.


Critique d'art n°56
Après la révolution – numéro 1
Tools #04 – Couper / To Cut
Saint Julien l'hospitalier Tome 2 - Claire Pedot
Hmm ! - C. de Trogoff
An Egyptian Story - Thibaut Kinder
Una Silla Plegada ( A Folded Chair) - José Quintanar
Fournitures - Julien Gobled
Une généalogie des grandes oreilles - Lauren Tortil
IRL - In real life n°1 - Coll.
Feminist Art Activisms and Artivisms - Katy Deepwell (ed.)
Blanche Endive - Grégoire Motte & Gabriel Mattei
The Book Fight - Chihoi
Birds - Damien Poulain
La Couleur du Geste - Héloïse Bariol
Tropism - Nhu Xuan Hua
America - Ayline Olukman, Hélène Gaudy
Le chateau enchanté - Atelier Mclane
Délié - Baptiste Oberson
La vallée - la brèche - Tania Maria Elisa
Photographic Fields - Joël Van Audenhaege
Lavori in corso - Florence Cats & Joseph Charroy
Oasis - Stéphane Ruchaud, Christophe Honoré
Good Company - Paul Van der Eerden 









