Punch Magazine 1846 Antiquarian Cut Book
Punch Magazine 1846 Antiquarian Cut Book
About the Piece
One of a kind piece measuring 11" tall, 9" across and 2" deep.
This antique book has been altered to tell a story, one of humorous black and white illustration of social and political figures in the early 1800's. Punch, referred to also as The London Charivari, was a weekly satirical magazine first published in 1841 which ran through 2002. The pages of this book here account for images that appeared throughout the year 1846. Most famously, the term "Cartoon" was first used in Punch in an 1843 edition to refer to its satirical political drawings. The copy pages of the book have been methodically and cleanly cut away to reveal the images as they were originally printed, still attached to the binding. The book sculpture has a hanger attached to the back and a plexiglass pane that slides in behind the book cover to protect the inside from dust and damage when on display in your environment. The fore edge of the text block has been coated with a hard lacquer so that the book remains closed. This piece is signed and dated by the artist.
About the Artist
"The use of antiquarian books makes the work at the same time an exploration and a deconstruction of nostalgia. We create our own past from fragments of reality in a process that combines the willful aspects of remembering and forgetting with the coincidental and unconscious."
Learn more about Alexander Korzer-Robinson and view the available collection at Gold Bug.