Brian Dettmer Book Sculpture Exhibits through January 5th, 2019 at Albany Museum of Art

Staff Report From Albany CEO

Wednesday, November 28th, 2018

Books find new life as sculpture at the hands of Brooklyn artist Brian Dettmer. An exhibition of his work, Brian Dettmer: Selective Collective Memories, which opened Thursday, Oct 25, 2018 in the East Gallery of the Albany Museum of Art. It continues through Jan 5, 2019.
 
“We are pleased to be able to bring this unique work to Southwest Georgia,” Albany Museum of Art Executive Director Paula Williams said. “Brian’s work is amazing as he takes books and gives them new meaning and relevance with his intricate and beautiful work. It truly is fascinating and revealing.”
 
Selective Collective Memories is one of three fall exhibitions at the AMA. Home Tour: Artists Investigating Interiors, Domesticity and Identity continues through Feb 2, 2019 in the Haley Gallery, and the Georgia Artists Guild of Albany 25th annual Juried Competition continues through Nov 24, 2018 in the West Gallery.
 
Dettmer is a leading artist working with the object of the book. His work has been featured in The New York Times, The Guardian, The Telegraph, the Chicago Tribune, Art News, Modern Painters, Wired, The Village Voice and Harper’s, and on National Public Radio.
 
“Reference books are records of our collective memories; agreed truths about the past and the facts of our world,” Dettmer said. “As the role of the book in contemporary society is waning and being replaced by digital information, we are losing these unchallenged records of truth. Our collective memories are now vulnerable to distortion and manipulation through selective memories often used for personal or political control.”
 
“The printed book is a fixed, linear format, perfect for a singular narrative disconnected from outside distractions but inadequate to fully reflect and report on a changing world with multiple voices and perspectives. At the same time, it is important to have records of history and absolute truths that cannot be easily manipulated and changed.”
 
Dettmer has exhibited internationally at institutions including the Museum of Arts and Design in New York; The Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.; the High Museum and the Museum of Contemporary Art, both in Atlanta; the Chicago Cultural Center, the Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art. In 2014, he was the subject of a 10-year retrospective at the Hermann Geiger Foundation in Cecina, Italy. Dettmer is represented by P.P.O.W in New York.
 
“This show reflects the focus of my work with books as a cultural material and sculptural object,” Dettmer said. “I seek to honor the book’s role and its past, while illustrating both the exciting and troubling potentials of an intangible future.”
 
“Reference books are transformed, reconnected into new forms and excavated to expose a mass of fragmented and disjointed associations. Encyclopedia sets merge and disperse into new patterns that connect cross-cultural references of past symbols and artifacts. Books become sculpture, text becomes image and words become objects. Century old political books on our founding fathers are edited and repurposed to question once assumed truths, expose the slipperiness of language, and present anxieties on the present instability of truth. The narrative is broken into bytes and bits. Images become representations of themselves, broken from context, untied from their assignments. Alternate histories and newfangled fictions prevail."