konomad editions No°002
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Sayaka Maruyama:
memorandom 0 - Artistic Practice 2011-2019
International distributor: IDEA BOOKS NL
Book Design | Text | Artwork : Sayaka Maruyama
Publisher: konomad editions
ISBN 9780998620527
New York-based artist Sayaka Maruyama (b.1983) is a multi-disciplinary artist who translates her notions of beauty into photography, drawings, books, and short films. "Life as a whole is a collective box of emotional experiences. " "memorandom" records the personal practices of Sayaka Maruyama between 2011-2019, includ- ing photography, drawings, paintings, collages, objects and extracted images from her short films. The ideas and thoughts randomly passing through her mind are visualized in various forms of expres- sion, then translated into the form of a book by the artist herself. Maruyama feels it is more natural for her to in- stinctively translate her vision into images rather than into words. Rather than being completed and finished, these images retain all the beauty of the non-finito, they are still in the process of becoming and escape the trap of being categorized in a specific form. "I am simply interested in how we perceive beauty in our own perspective, react to it and make visible so that we can share with others." How each person perceives the world can not always be explained logically. Maruyama gives importance to the act of recording indefinable emotions and moments. By binding her random memorandoms, these collected images, drawings and fragments of text weave multiple layered dialogues that result in a personal, poetic and tangible portrait of the artist. "I wonder if each reader will get a different feeling and interpretation of my works while leafing through this volume and in return how my work will be influenced by them."
246 p, ills colour & bw, 16.5 x 24 cm, pb, English
www.sayakamaruyama.com
memorandom 0 - Artistic Practice 2011-2019
International distributor: IDEA BOOKS NL
Book Design | Text | Artwork : Sayaka Maruyama
Publisher: konomad editions
ISBN 9780998620527
New York-based artist Sayaka Maruyama (b.1983) is a multi-disciplinary artist who translates her notions of beauty into photography, drawings, books, and short films. "Life as a whole is a collective box of emotional experiences. " "memorandom" records the personal practices of Sayaka Maruyama between 2011-2019, includ- ing photography, drawings, paintings, collages, objects and extracted images from her short films. The ideas and thoughts randomly passing through her mind are visualized in various forms of expres- sion, then translated into the form of a book by the artist herself. Maruyama feels it is more natural for her to in- stinctively translate her vision into images rather than into words. Rather than being completed and finished, these images retain all the beauty of the non-finito, they are still in the process of becoming and escape the trap of being categorized in a specific form. "I am simply interested in how we perceive beauty in our own perspective, react to it and make visible so that we can share with others." How each person perceives the world can not always be explained logically. Maruyama gives importance to the act of recording indefinable emotions and moments. By binding her random memorandoms, these collected images, drawings and fragments of text weave multiple layered dialogues that result in a personal, poetic and tangible portrait of the artist. "I wonder if each reader will get a different feeling and interpretation of my works while leafing through this volume and in return how my work will be influenced by them."
246 p, ills colour & bw, 16.5 x 24 cm, pb, English
www.sayakamaruyama.com
Book are available:
Mcnally Jackson N4, Brooklyn (a couple of copies available)
THE PRINTED MATTER INC.(sold out)
Spoonbill & Sugertown NY (sold out)
POST Tokyo (sold out)
Tsutaya Daikanyama (few copies might be available)
On Sundays, WATARIUM MUSEUM Tokyo (few copies might be available)
Mcnally Jackson N4, Brooklyn (a couple of copies available)
THE PRINTED MATTER INC.(sold out)
Spoonbill & Sugertown NY (sold out)
POST Tokyo (sold out)
Tsutaya Daikanyama (few copies might be available)
On Sundays, WATARIUM MUSEUM Tokyo (few copies might be available)
The idea behind the word “memorandom” is very apt for our times: we collect pictures, quotes and texts on our computers, mobile devices and so on, and your format of saving your personal inspiration and works into a diary also makes me think about collecting images on digital platforms. What inspired you the idea behind “memorandom”?
We all collect fragmented images and texts – at least I do so. “memorandom” is 99% made of my own work, plus there is a 1% composed of objets trouvés, slides that I found in a market and that I wanted to include. The concept behind the book is very simple: I wanted to make my daily work, ideas, thoughts, memos, doodles, sketches, intuitive photography and inspiring quotes more substantial by compiling them in a volume. When your materials are spread all over the place, you eventually forget about them or your lose them. But collecting them in a book format means that they become a visible and tangible album of memories and stories. It is strange, but I recently felt my eyes and mind were engaged in a constant recollecting process: words, phrases and images have been incessantly keeping on coming back to my mind. I've been replaying them as if they were a mental script or film, an internal dialogue, both conscious and unconscious. I felt there was a possibility to expand and develop this personal dialogue, to give importance to these random elements and turn them into a compelling narration.
Do you feel that the book format suits better to your modus operandi, even in today's fast-paced digital world?
Nowadays when you work as a photographer most of the images you take are left as data in devices like a computer. They are not tangible, but invisible entities that exist in a hard disk that may break, making us forget those moments and those stories. It is surely handy to have your images in such formats as you can share them easily with other people, but I feel books are tangible entities that will always be with us, they can be stored on a shelf and you can always go back and leaf through them. I feel this is also a personal process that allows me to discover more about myself.
In “memorandom” you introduce an important creative concept - the possibility of dissent, mischief and disorder. Do you feel that sometimes these ideas are being forgotten in a world that constantly tries to tell us to conform?
I think that society requires us to constantly change ourselves and adapt in some ways, but life is not easy and each and every one of us has got their personality. We tend to keep ourselves busy with tasks and purposes. As a consequence, being true to ourselves becomes harder. I needed a place where I could work with no purpose or with no specific concept. “memorandom” is my personal way to stay true to myself, and put a disordered order to my random thoughts.
How would you describe “memorandom”? Is it a diary, a fragmented notebook, an insight into your working process or your personal visual Wunderkammer?
It’s everything of the above, but it is first and foremost a personal insight into my working process. Even when I call it a “random mix and match mash-up image book”, I realize I'm not carelessly putting things together. It has indeed taken me a lot of time to design it in a precise way. I would say that the process of creating and designing this book is an insightful act and a personal training for me. interview by Anna Battista, October 2018
We all collect fragmented images and texts – at least I do so. “memorandom” is 99% made of my own work, plus there is a 1% composed of objets trouvés, slides that I found in a market and that I wanted to include. The concept behind the book is very simple: I wanted to make my daily work, ideas, thoughts, memos, doodles, sketches, intuitive photography and inspiring quotes more substantial by compiling them in a volume. When your materials are spread all over the place, you eventually forget about them or your lose them. But collecting them in a book format means that they become a visible and tangible album of memories and stories. It is strange, but I recently felt my eyes and mind were engaged in a constant recollecting process: words, phrases and images have been incessantly keeping on coming back to my mind. I've been replaying them as if they were a mental script or film, an internal dialogue, both conscious and unconscious. I felt there was a possibility to expand and develop this personal dialogue, to give importance to these random elements and turn them into a compelling narration.
Do you feel that the book format suits better to your modus operandi, even in today's fast-paced digital world?
Nowadays when you work as a photographer most of the images you take are left as data in devices like a computer. They are not tangible, but invisible entities that exist in a hard disk that may break, making us forget those moments and those stories. It is surely handy to have your images in such formats as you can share them easily with other people, but I feel books are tangible entities that will always be with us, they can be stored on a shelf and you can always go back and leaf through them. I feel this is also a personal process that allows me to discover more about myself.
In “memorandom” you introduce an important creative concept - the possibility of dissent, mischief and disorder. Do you feel that sometimes these ideas are being forgotten in a world that constantly tries to tell us to conform?
I think that society requires us to constantly change ourselves and adapt in some ways, but life is not easy and each and every one of us has got their personality. We tend to keep ourselves busy with tasks and purposes. As a consequence, being true to ourselves becomes harder. I needed a place where I could work with no purpose or with no specific concept. “memorandom” is my personal way to stay true to myself, and put a disordered order to my random thoughts.
How would you describe “memorandom”? Is it a diary, a fragmented notebook, an insight into your working process or your personal visual Wunderkammer?
It’s everything of the above, but it is first and foremost a personal insight into my working process. Even when I call it a “random mix and match mash-up image book”, I realize I'm not carelessly putting things together. It has indeed taken me a lot of time to design it in a precise way. I would say that the process of creating and designing this book is an insightful act and a personal training for me. interview by Anna Battista, October 2018
Book Launch April 2017 @ OFFICE MAGAZINE NEWS STAND
Article: August 14, 2019
Fragments from an Artist's Diary: Sayaka Maruyama's "Memorandom 0"
Ideas. Memories. Emotions. Feelings. As we get older and look back upon our experiences we often find that fragmented and broken recollections form the vast puzzles of our lives. Last year poet and photographer, artist and filmmaker, painter and illustrator Sayaka Maruyama found herself at a crossroad in her life and she decided to take a deep breath and find a way to tidy up her body of work.
Born in Niigata, Japan, Maruyama grew up in Tokyo, moved to The Netherlands with her family and as a grown up worked in London and New York, building her own archive of works, thoughts and ideas. She therefore attempted to come up with a method to catalogue and memorize her best and most powerful creations.
Recollecting wasn't easy, though: Maruyama realized that, throughout the years she had generated a vast corpus comprising many and multiple visions. The only way to take stock of her artistic practice and put some order into her personal disorder or finally grant to disorder the state of art, was reaching into her unconscious and giving an eternal and timeless form to the endless visual poetry she had created. The result of this process was a book entitled memorandom 0 that is now out on Konomad Editions.
I had the privilege of interviewing the artist for memorandom 0, and to write the book Afterword. It was a process that went on for a few months as both Maruyama and I do not think that everything has got to be produced quickly and following today's "insta" rhythms. So we got to know each other, a process that allowed me to discover her poetic, ethereal, enigmatic and romantic, strange and disquieting photographs, drawings, paintings, films and illustrations. I learnt to read through her colours, lines and silhouettes, in a nutshell I learnt to decode her lexicon and to speak her artistic language. I'm glad I took the journey and I'm overjoyed the book is finally out there. Text: Anna Battista