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.


Artzines #12 Provo Special
Bacon le Cannibale - Perrine Le Querrec
Hobo Nickel - Damien Sauvage
La tour Tatline - Georgi Stanishev
Imagos - Noémie Lothe
Optical Sound 2
akaBB - tribute to Roni horn
Donne des racines au loup-garou & fais courir l'arbre la nuit - Pauline Barzilaï
Inframince et hyperlié - Philippe Lipcare
Halogénure #04
Goodbye - Hsia-Fei Chang, Sofia Eliza Bouratsis, Medhi Brit, Enrico Lunghi
Manifeste d'intérieurs ; penser dans les médias élargis - Javier Fernández Contreras
movement in squares - Stefanie Leinhos
Strates & Archipels - Pierre Merle
Dernier royaume - Quentin Derouet
Gnose & Gnose & Gnose - Aymeric Vergnon-d'Alençon
In The Navy - Julien Kedryna
Migrant Mother, Migrant Gender - Sally Stein
Sans titre - Benjamin Hartmann 









