view additional image 1
Featured in: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1GEFD4-qmus

I made this piece as a part of my cycle entitled 'Ad Libris' first presented on a solo show at the 'Belgrade' Gallery, Belgrade, Serbia. The location of the Gallery, across the now vanished National Library inspired its major theme--books.

Djordje Aralica, Ad libris

The age of electronic media has brought the book in its traditional form to the verge of extinction. Printed book, codex, rapidly vanishes from the public sphere, losing the battle with its digital versions. By underscoring the materiality of the bound and printed page, Djordje Aralica’s sculptural cycle entitled Ad libris offers a pause and provides an opportunity to gain an insight into the realities of today. Against the immateriality and elusiveness of the digital realm, Aralica’s solid sculptural forms executed in metal with visible welds convey physical presence and longevity of his sculptures–books. Aralica carefully controls every mark and physical detail. By unconventionally combining materials like rope and steel, the artist emphasizes the sensual nature of the traditional art of bookbinding. Books in Aralica's world create their own space – its constituents are themselves bound together, chained, mobile, twisted, and tactile. His sculptures offer an invitation to interact – to move them, roll them, leave fingerprints on them. They, at the same time, deny our interference – their pages do not turn. Being without text that would transfer the reader to another time and space, Aralica's books become silent witnesses of a passing era.

Ljubomir Milanović, PhD, Art Historian
The Institute for Byzantine Studies, SASA, Belgrade
Featured in: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1GEFD4-qmus

I made this piece as a part of my cycle entitled 'Ad Libris' first presented on a solo show at the 'Belgrade' Gallery, Belgrade, Serbia. The location of the Gallery, across the now vanished National Library inspired its major theme--books.

Djordje Aralica, Ad libris

The age of electronic media has brought the book in its traditional form to the verge of extinction. Printed book, codex, rapidly vanishes from the public sphere, losing the battle with its digital versions. By underscoring the materiality of the bound and printed page, Djordje Aralica’s sculptural cycle entitled Ad libris offers a pause and provides an opportunity to gain an insight into the realities of today. Against the immateriality and elusiveness of the digital realm, Aralica’s solid sculptural forms executed in metal with visible welds convey physical presence and longevity of his sculptures–books. Aralica carefully controls every mark and physical detail. By unconventionally combining materials like rope and steel, the artist emphasizes the sensual nature of the traditional art of bookbinding. Books in Aralica's world create their own space – its constituents are themselves bound together, chained, mobile, twisted, and tactile. His sculptures offer an invitation to interact – to move them, roll them, leave fingerprints on them. They, at the same time, deny our interference – their pages do not turn. Being without text that would transfer the reader to another time and space, Aralica's books become silent witnesses of a passing era.

Ljubomir Milanović, PhD, Art Historian
The Institute for Byzantine Studies, SASA, Belgrade

1144 Views

20

View In My Room

Book House Sculpture

Djordje Aralica

Serbia

Sculpture, Metal on Iron

Size: 15 W x 19.7 H x 10.2 D in

Ships in a Crate

$3,860

Shipping included

14-day satisfaction guarantee

Trustpilot Score

1144 Views

20

Artist Recognition
link - Artist featured in a collection

Artist featured in a collection

ABOUT THE ARTWORK

Featured in: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1GEFD4-qmus I made this piece as a part of my cycle entitled 'Ad Libris' first presented on a solo show at the 'Belgrade' Gallery, Belgrade, Serbia. The location of the Gallery, across the now vanished National Library inspired its major theme--books. Djordje Aralica, Ad libris The age of electronic media has brought the book in its traditional form to the verge of extinction. Printed book, codex, rapidly vanishes from the public sphere, losing the battle with its digital versions. By underscoring the materiality of the bound and printed page, Djordje Aralica’s sculptural cycle entitled Ad libris offers a pause and provides an opportunity to gain an insight into the realities of today. Against the immateriality and elusiveness of the digital realm, Aralica’s solid sculptural forms executed in metal with visible welds convey physical presence and longevity of his sculptures–books. Aralica carefully controls every mark and physical detail. By unconventionally combining materials like rope and steel, the artist emphasizes the sensual nature of the traditional art of bookbinding. Books in Aralica's world create their own space – its constituents are themselves bound together, chained, mobile, twisted, and tactile. His sculptures offer an invitation to interact – to move them, roll them, leave fingerprints on them. They, at the same time, deny our interference – their pages do not turn. Being without text that would transfer the reader to another time and space, Aralica's books become silent witnesses of a passing era. Ljubomir Milanović, PhD, Art Historian The Institute for Byzantine Studies, SASA, Belgrade

DETAILS AND DIMENSIONS
Sculpture:

Metal on Iron

Original:

One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:

15 W x 19.7 H x 10.2 D in

SHIPPING AND RETURNS
Delivery Time:

Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

Usually, the place where I live at any given moment, with its daily routines, dictates the choice of my subject matter. As a rule, I am interested in the objects of everyday life, which appear to be surprisingly uniform wherever you go. In my work, they unite collective and personal experience. I never recycle real objects in a manner of an assemblage, but rather present my own associative, monumentalized interpretation of their form. I choose medium, mode of craftsmanship, both of which suggest underlying narrative context, but also provide monumental quality of architecture. My objects are reduced to a gallery format, but I see them as large-scale urban sculptures evocative of common human activities.

Artist Recognition
Artist featured in a collection

Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection

Thousands of 5-Star Reviews

We deliver world-class customer service to all of our art buyers.

Satisfaction Guaranteed

Our 14-day satisfaction guarantee allows you to buy with confidence.

Global Selection of Emerging Art

Explore an unparalleled artwork selection by artists from around the world.

Support An Artist With Every Purchase

We pay our artists more on every sale than other galleries.