RECEIVED: Documentation for PTRIZIA TIC TAC's Chapter T in the 26 Mail-Art Collaborative Book Project (Starnberg, Germany)

Mail-art book chapter by IUOMA member PTRZIA TIC TAC (Starnberg, Germany)

 

"the archaeology of a thought (through the relativity of time)"

- Note from TIC TAC accompanying Chapter T

 

February 18, 2011 - PTRZIA TIC TAC is a conceptual artist in Germany, although I believe she is originally from Latin America. Among other things, she creates beautiful and distinctive books. So I have been very much looking forward to receiving her Chapter T contribution for the 26 collaborative mail-art book project conceived by Cheryl Penn (South Africa) and coordinated here at the IUOMA. The beginning of TIC TAC's chapter (above) uses a T descending into a page perforation/collage, which moves us into the pages and connects them:

On the left (above) is the perforation bringing in the T and a newspaper text collage. TIC TAC is very skilled at using altered text to create narratives and poems. I believe she is incorporating that technique here as well as a concept based on images. On the right is a rectangular piece of plastic with torn paper glued to it. TIC TAC's books are made of all sorts of interesting materials, and she seems to favor plastic. You also see one of her fish stamps. TIC TAC has a whole symbol system working with her unique stamps. They are one element that gives Chapter T coherence:

Above is my personal favorite two-page spread in T that also stands at the center of the chapter. See-through plastic with linear bands is on the left. A ripped partial page with whimsical T variations is on the right. There are clearly plays on the T shape throughout and all sorts of possibilities for breaking down traditional notions of page boundaries and compartments:

You can see the deconstructed page idea working on the left. I love the image on the right with the octopus. TIC TAC uses many images like this of women holding various opposing forces together with ropes, pins, etc. In mail-art, you have to expect the use of stamps; and I think she does it very well here.  The final page is cardboard with some documentation. I never tire of TIC TAC's stamps. The fish is a nod to surrealism? Some people would read it that way.

Her envelopes, of course, are superb:

And reverse. The T symbol is fantastic:

TIC TAC clearly doesn't sign on for any project unless she knows she can give it 100%+ thought and care. Chapter T is worth a close look because there is A LOT going on. Thank you, TIC TAC. It's been too long!


TIC TAC has many blogs and blog projects. For instance, she is involved with an online journal called "Discharge" that is VERY interesting and headquartered somewhere in Europe. So you can access TIC TAC blogs via:

http://www.blogger.com/profile/11823303807599994639

 

TIC TAC blog outtake. Upside down first chapter page with original string knots:

 

MAIL-ART PSYCHIC

Emotions will flare up if you don't get your way. You will attract someone with special outfits. Pond denizen. A kind of committee. Hiccups, so to speak. The most direct approach isn't always the best: Lucky numbers: 11, 19, 20, 39, 40, 55. One box

 

Mail-art color of the day: burnt sienna

 

Mail-art typo of the day: psychick

 

Mail-art quote for the day:

 

"who threw potato salad at CCNY lecturers on Dadaism and subsequently presented themselves on the granite steps of the madhouse with shaven heads and harlequin speech of suicide, demanding instantaneous lobotomy...

 

"who jumped off the Brooklyn Bridge this actually happened and walked away unknown and forgotten into the ghostly daze of Chinatown soup alleyways and firetrucks, not even one free beer."

 

- Allen Ginsberg, from "Howl"

Views: 84

Tags: Sloan, concept-art

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Comment by De Villo Sloan on February 19, 2011 at 4:35pm
david stafford 4 mail-art psychick 4ever. gb crashed and burned on this. lift the marie wintzer ban 2
Comment by cheryl penn on February 19, 2011 at 2:56pm
Great blog for a fantastic contribution to Project 26. TICTAC said about this work  that she believed "time is relative,  not absolute, a limited man-made invention compared to life's greatness....to be explained with just the one life we live or the weakened memory of the past. all happening while we are also being our own mysterious artifact." Are we our own time-made mysterious artifacts? Yes I would say so.

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