de Vries, Herman, 1931-
Person
Nationality
Dutch
Found in 5 Collections and/or Records:
Argumentstellen / De Vries, Herman., 2003
Item
Identifier: CC-55021-998878
Scope and Contents
Internet: Argumentstellen was conceived just one year after Wit weiss (a new version of the White book) and Permutierbarer text (but was published in 2003). It is a direct result of his recent reading of Tractatus. This large format book wherein a minuscule black dot always appears in a different location on the vast blank space of the page, does not treat language as such, but the way in which situation in the space (which is an attribute of all existing things, natural or human) implies a unique point of view each time, a never identical relation to the connection between the things that make up the world. indirectly, however, language is involved to the extent that it is powerless to say that which is never the same. This book visually translates (and illustrates) one of Wittgenstein's propositions (2.0131), quoted on the last page: "a spatial object must be situated in infinite space. (a spatial point is an argument-place)." It foreshadows the series of works on the experience...
Dates:
2003
chance-fields; chance-felder / De Vries, Herman ; Wezel W., 1973
Item
Identifier: CC-15307-15630
Scope and Contents
The book includes a minimalist poem by Wolf Wezel about de Vries' work. The pages depict intersecting rectangles based upon mathematical operations. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Dates:
1973
Eschenau Sutra / De Vries, Herman., 2002
Item
Identifier: CC-40108-42077
Scope and Contents
With the exception of a page with collaged dried leaves, the other pages of this book depict black on white or colored, calligraphic, concrete poetic drawings. The book was meant to accompanyve vries' exhibition, "herman de vries different & identical." -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Dates:
2002
Random Objectivations, 1972
Item
Identifier: CC-15314-15638
Wit Weiss, 1967
Item
Identifier: CC-15309-15632
Scope and Contents
This is de Vries' first published artist book. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Dates:
1967