Don’t Rest Narrate

09.2020

A book about art, publishing and collaboration
Eds. Nicholas John Jones, Rachel Withers

Historically, publishing has been an essential platform for artists to disseminate their works, concepts and aims. It is also – as Norwegian artist Guttorm Guttormsgaard powerfully argued – a paradigmatic model for any form of collective, distributed, discursive production. The publication Don’t rest, narrate addresses the interrelationship of art, publishing and collectivity. It was evolved from research carried out during PRAKSIS’s seventh residency, For a rainy day – Publishing as a site of collectivisation, held in autumn 2017 in collaboration with the publisher Torpedo and designers Eller med a.

Edited by PRAKSIS founders Nicholas John Jones and Rachel Withers, Don’t rest, narrate constitutes both a resource and an art object. Containing commissioned artworks and new texts, brief studies of key experiments in art and radical publishing, reprints of texts on subjects ranging from collective production to licensing and archiving and a bibliography giving pointers for further reading, the book is designed to inform and to stimulate further discussion and study. Its unusual, non-linear three-section format renders visible and tangible the performative dimension of our interactions with books. Its contributors include Maria Lind, Iz Öztat, Ellef Prestsæter and Eva Weinmayr, and its inspirations include Guttormsgaard himself and his remarkable archive of printed and other materials.

Designed by residency collaborator, Eller med a, the book is bound in an unusual three section format that breaks a linear reading and both challenges the expectation of the book format, and includes the reader in the performative process of navigating it.

Project description project description can be longer too

 
Publication_web_1 copy.jpg
 

Project description project description can be longer too

 

Project description project description can be longer too

 
Praksis_publication_landscapesmall copy.jpg

Project description project description can be longer too

 

This Can Be a Quote, For Example, or anything else really, whatever we want to feature in a text form, large, doesn't have to be red, but better to try this first

Project description project description can be longer too

 

© 2015-2021 PRAKSIS / Registered Organisation 915 733 417



Partially funded by: