Bibliotherapy is an evolving work. It existed before Liverpool Biennial in a different form and will continue to develop and change in the future.

Artist Rémy Markowitsch has consistently employed books as the point of departure for an art practice that analyses the language of the publishing process (mechanical reproduction) in order to make artworks that give an account of the complexities of reading and looking. Bibliotherapy s the vehicle he uses to construct a strategy that enables him to express ideas about literature and its logical and natural connection with visual art. Bibliotherapy is an evolving work. It existed before Liverpool Biennial in a different form and will continue to develop and change in the future.

In International 2002, Rémy Markowitsch and Michael Ming Hong Lin collaborated and created a three part installation. The first was the reading of Robinson Crusoe. Markowitsch selected Daniel Defoe’s novel for Liverpool because ‘it is deeply rooted in English culture and society. It is not only a timeless adventure story, but also one of the most significant representations of Utopia in world literature’. Markowitsch presented Robinson Crusoe in Liverpool as a series of readings. Shot on video, the complete reading lasted for about fourteen hours during which the entire length of the book was read in short snippets by many different people from across the UK to reflect the diversity of contemporary British society.

Standing on Michael Lin’s painted floor is the second element of Bibliotherapy: Bonsai Potato. This illuminated monumental sculpture, which borrowed the form of a European standard potato, was a ‘humorous, pseudo-scientific, quasi-therapeutic exeriment, in which ideas of light, energy and nutrition meet, interlock and undergo revision’. It stood upon a table at which visitors could sit to read, illuminated by its light. This ‘food’ illuminated the spiritual food of the books on the table. Its bonsai nature – i.e. its potential as a source of reflection – conjoined with Lin’s floor (the third element) and created a pastiche of orientalism and the exoticising of domestic interiors. In the theatre of social exchange that Markowitsch and Lin worked together to create, everything was a copy.


Bibliotherapy meets Robinson Crusoe, 2002
Installation
Commissioned by Henry Moore Foundation Contemporary Projects
Exhibited at Pleasant Street Board School

 

SUPPORTED BY

Pro Helvetica
Arts Council of Switzerland
Visiting Arts