Herbert Pfostl
Thursday, November 19th, 2009 at 7:01 amVia Random Index, press for All Sorts of Remedies, a show by Herbert Pfostl at Observatory, an exhibition/classroom/event space in New York:
“Small paintings as parables of plants and animals and old stories of black robbers and white stags. Fragments on death like mirrors from a black sleep in the forests of fairy tales. All stories from the dust of the dead in fragments and footnotes like melodies of heartbreak and north and night and exploration–breakdowns. About saints with no promise of heaven and lost sailors forgotten and the terribly lonely bears. The unknown, the ugly – and the odd. Collected grand mistakes, noble errors from many sources. Sinking signals – conscious or not – sonatas and last letters and great insults. The impossible tears in landscapes of ocean or stranded whales. A going far back to coals and cruelties and sobbing like songs in whiskey and blood. Of soldiers’ last letters and all seven seas. With pirates and wars and prayers in holes in the ground. Of fallen women and orphaned children and drowned slaves and burned saints.”
I rather wish I could just pop over to New York and see this. Pfostl is the publisher of Blind Pony Books and displays his drawings and paintings online at his other website, Paper Graveyard. He is also a collector of wonderful quotes, and is one of the collaborators on To Die No More, an artist’s book of quotations “designed to pay homage to the fairytale forest of death”.
November 20th, 2009 at 5:09 am
That sounds very interesting.
I don’t know if you are a fan of things like this, but xkcd.com published a book and the book looks very good.
November 20th, 2009 at 7:54 am
I know xkcd, but only read it occasionally. Which reminds me that I probably don’t read enough funny stuff in general. Another new year’s resolution: read more webcomics!
November 23rd, 2009 at 1:27 pm
I just checked out blind pony books. I’m not an illusive e(silent l)mo, but the combination of images and text has struck my muse with a wonderful serotonin. I feel like doing something creative now or at least pretend to do something creative
November 24th, 2009 at 7:01 am
They are muse-ticklers, aren’t they? Quite magical…