The Cecil Touchon Asemic Reader is finally available for purchase at Amazon! Cecil best explains his book here:
"The current permutation of The Reader, originally envisioned as a black
and white book, expanded in size and breadth to its current full color
version to take into account the range of expression in Touchon's asemic
explorations spanning forty years of works on paper including images
from Touchon's unpublished sketchbooks.
The first section of the book
primarily contains palimpsest based asemic writing originally intended
for mail art correspondence in which Touchon overwrites texts as found
in 19th and early 20th century antique poetry books, a book of sermons,
farm journal pages, a postcard, a grade school autograph book page, a
sheet of music, a page from a vintage high school chemistry workbook and
old invoices. Using these found papers collected for possible collage
material, Touchon retains and uses the structure on the page and the
patinated paper as inspiration for these asemic works often overwritten
with india ink and quill pen. Following these are selected typographic
abstraction works from the Fusion Series, Touchon diary-like ongoing
series of collage works begun in 1983 and continuing to the present. In
these works Touchon uses a wide ranging body of materials, approaches
and techniques to produce these poetic works that explore figure and
ground relationships and a variety of compositional strategies. These
collages become studies for Touchon's paintings. In the midst of this
group are a series of asemic 'songs' on torn brown paper using colored
pens, pencil shading and white pencil highlighting that express the idea
of visual musicality. At the end of the typographic collage works there
is the image of a labyrinthian network of overlapping white lines over a
black void that seem to float on multiple levels. This opens the way to
a set of works of brush and ink from 2009 on the pages of a single
antique journal where the markings are painted onto the leaves of paper
and after a few moments the pages were held under running water in the
kitchen sink. Whatever ink had dried remained on the page leaving gray
ghost marks where the ink had been washed away. The book concludes with a
variety of works from the late 1970's examining Touchon's early mark
making based on language or visual musicality.
Taken as a whole, this
sampling of works across forty years of Touchon's oeuvre reminds one of a
quote from the 1949 'Lecture on Nothing' by John Cage: "I have nothing
to say and I am saying it..." but in Touchon's case he possibly is
saying nothing about Something; perhaps a something so transcendent that
common words cannot speak of it, something so vast that words crumble
into gibberish and collapse into an unutterable silence. Some of the
titles of previous exhibitions of Touchon's work suggest this such as:
'Beyond Words', 'Reduced to Silence' or 'The Unspoken Remains'. Yet
Touchon's works are not nihilistic in nature. They could be said to be
meaningless though clearly not purposeless. Touchon has said that his
interest is in expressing 'the underlying universal harmony of all
things'. One has the impression when studying these works that literary
meaning has been removed or obfuscated but in Touchon's view he sees his
work as liberating language from its work as bearer of meaning and by
extension liberating the reader from the work of deciphering meaning and
from the obligation of being literate when enjoying the works purely
for their aesthetic value. In a world whose population is engulfed in a
deluge of information that we must continually navigate, these works
offer a small oasis in which one might be refreshed along the seemingly
endless journey over the shifting sands of data on the horizons of which
can only be seen mirage and simulacrum."
- Paperback: 126 pages
- Publisher: Post-Asemic Press (August 22, 2019)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 1732878897
- ISBN-13: 978-1732878891
-
Product Dimensions:
6 x 0.3 x 9 inches
- Shipping Weight: 8.6 ounces
- Price: $27.00
Click here to purchase The Cecil Touchon Asemic Reader
A torrent of creative dynamism, The
Cecil Touchon Asemic Reader comes at you in three waves: asemic
overwriting of print, usually on antique pages; the elegant typographic
collages for which Touchon is best known; and layered linear screens that seem
to exist in a receding space. Through these variations, the book challenges us
to rethink in depth our conceptions of surface, a thinking accompanied by
wordless pleasure.
Touchon’s
Asemic Reader is an important and inspiring book, and it calls to all schools
of thought. The invitation here is to experience new dimensions of the present
moment. Touchon’s captivating letter play and use of asemic writing makes him a
true explorer of the invisible script.
The three
layers/styles which build this book are as different as the reader or viewer’s
reactions and observations which the layers imply & help create.
The first series of works deals with an intriguing enigmatic silhouette, a shape
and idea of time past. The calligraphic lines or typographic erasures or
deleted music notes tell us intricate stories and talk to our perception
according to the antiquity of the paper they’re written on.
The second series shows broken letters, cut ones, like in a labyrinthine
re-/de-organization of a stray alphabet of imagination. These well known and
highly appreciated works by Cecil Touchon proudly belong to a tradition one can
maybe connect to the names of Adriano Spatola and Edwin Schlossberg.
A third little series introduces the viewer
to an even wider range of codes, involving abstract movements of curls, curved
signs, naturally evolving from the previous pages, as to mark a fascinating
link between the fragmented alphabet letters and numbers, and a liquid set of
traces impossible to grasp, yet still grasping our eyes.
—Marco Giovenale,
author of GLITCHASEMICS (forthcoming from Post-Asemic Press, in Spring of 2020)
Cecil
Touchon (b. 1956) was born in Austin, Texas; grew up in Saint Louis, Missouri
and currently lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Touchon, who enjoys an
international reputation as a contemporary artist, founded the Ontological
Museum and its publishing arm: Ontological Museum Publications. Aside from his
artistic career, Touchon curates art exhibitions, writes poetry and publishes
books. Touchon's interests and associations include the Collage/Assemblage
community, Fluxus, Massurrealism, Neoism, Post-Dogmatism and the Mail Art
community.