Book, 13.1 x 19.4 cm, 117 p, language: English (UK), publisher: Book Works, ISBN: 978 1 906012 22 9.
©image: M HKA
Collection: Collection M HKA, Antwerp (Inv. no. B 2024/842).
Literary synopsis
The Dark Object exploits sculpture’s awkward relationship with conceptualism through the pseudo-conceptual ideology of a fictional institution. The Rector’s paranoid ideology has prohibited the making of objects, one student remains. Increasingly isolated in The School of Sculpture Without Objects and battling with institutional directives and solitary confinement, Addison Cole exercises the prohibition on making things by writing stories, in which the protagonists only meet through the creation of fantasy scenarios. These narrate a series of explicit encounters with texts, objects and artists. Authorial figures are reduced to their pornographic effect: Slavoj Žižek becomes an impotent sexual metaphor, Hegel a skeletal spectre, the anonymous ‘Jay’, Žižek’s lactating Oedipal fantasy, the Rector a scrofulous, paranoid leech.
Relation of the novel to the artist’s practice
Whilst studying for her PhD in Sculpture at the Royal College of Art, Katrina submitted samples of her writing to Book Works open submission series, Semina, commissioned by Stewart Home. When this submission was accepted the text was drawn into two separate formulations: The Dark Object , and then the thesis. As a consequence, certain sections of The Dark Object appear, in an abstracted form, in the thesis. Part of the rationale of The Dark Object , is that it operates in the everyday as a novel in bookshops and on invigilation desks, but it is also research, and an artwork, so in this sense, like a found object, it should move between appearing as art and disappearing as an ordinary thing in the everyday.
Authorship: Fictional Author.
Creative Strategy: Novel Art Object, Reading Performance.
Genre: Plain Fiction.
Publishing: Art Books Publishing House.
Theme: Art World.
>Cover 'The Dark Object', 2010
>at the RCA Research Show London 2010
>Festival of Art Writing, Whitechapel Gallery, London 2009
>RCA 2008-2010, mixed media
> Katrina Palmer.
> Exhibition: WHAT HAPPENS WHEN THE ARTWORK BECOMES A NOVEL?. M HKA, Antwerp, 07 December 2012 - 21 April 2013.
> Exhibition: Book Lovers 4.0 (Pop-up Bookstore). De Appel Arts Centre, Amsterdam, 28 January 2014 - 02 February 2014.
> Exhibition: THE BOOK LOVERS - A Project about Artist Novels. The Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts, New York, 25 January 2013 - 09 March 2013.
> Exhibition: The Preparation of the Novel (Book Lovers 5.0). Fabra i Coats - Centre d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona, Barcelona, 18 July 2014 - 05 September 2014.
> Ensemble: The Artist's Novel.