Gutter words
Jo Hamill (Author), Craig Douglas Dworkin, Emma Hamill (Editor), James Joyce, Yorkshire Sculpture International (Publisher), Leeds Beckett University, Information as Material (Firm)
Working with an edition of James Joyce's Ulysses, Hamill systematically obliterated the words of Joyce but carefully retained those words positioned closest to the gutter - the technical term used to describe the central margin of a bound page. The retained fragments form two extended columns that continue for 933 pages. Notable here is how design and typographic terminology is so entrenched in bodily references. Header, footer, body-copy, the arm of a "K", the crotch of a "Y", the foot of a "T", the ear of a "G", the shoulder of an "R" and so on. As is the architectural scaffolding of Joyce's schema which underpins the structure of Ulysses, kidney, genitals, heart, lungs, oesophagus, Brain, Blood, Ear. etc. Lawrence Weiner refers to language as material for construction, the act of deletion in Gutter Words exposes the architectural scaffolding that holds words in place. Voids are physical spaces to be read and words become unanchored, set adrift in an uncertain space. The architectural qualities of this physical space will be exposed, Gutter Words will be devoid of the accoutrements associated with a "book" such as cover, boards, end papers, dust jacket and will retain only the innards, an unprotected text block.--Publisher's website
Print Book, English, 2019
Yorkshire Sculpture International in partnership with Leeds Beckett University and Information Material, [Leeds?], 2019