8th January – 1st February 2019.
Opening: 7pm, 7th January 2019.
A long workflow preceded the artifacts exhibited at the show Stray Pages; I have used pages from injured or deficient books of mine. These pages are no longer part of a larger oneness because it has already loosened. No matter which part of a story, a description, a book or a publication they were originally. From this point of view, they are incomprehensible, deprived of their con(text), they only exist in themselves. Their original function was irrevocably invalid.
The pages are made up of letters, what is one of the most abstract signs I know. We associate it with a voice, form words from them which we attribute with meaning, then the words and notions became texts. I have continued to simplify this abstract signal system until I arrived to schematic page portraits. Each sheet has its own rhythm and ratio system, which is shaped by its characteristic features. The spaces, the line spacing, and the pagination result the unique character of a page.
During the reduction process, I progressed continuously word-by-word, and I kept a single word from the original text on each page. My choices were driven by moods, impressions, and subjective aspects. The visitors of the show are free to choose one word or more, but they can make a poem, a haiku, or a whole story from the pages. The mosaic-like pages in the space can be interpreted one by one or as a coherent composition, but can also be seen as unusual, unique puzzle games. The number of variations, even if not infinite, it is numerous.
/Mátyás Boros/
Mátyás Boros (fine artist) was attended to the Secondary School of Fine Arts and Applied Arts in 1998, then studied at the Ars Hungarica Secondary School. He graduated at the faculty of graphic art of the Hungarian University of Fine Arts in 2005. Border crossings between the mediums are common in his works. He is interested in the progressive, experimental directions of graphic art. Examining drawing, printmaking, and gestures he is often get to intermedial territories such as sculpture, objects, or large scale installations.
Location: ISBN könyv+galéria, 1084 Budapest, Víg utca 2.
Opening hours: Tu-Fri 12-7pm, Sat 2-6pm
Photo: Zsuzsanna Simon