Readophile

I love everything that has to do with books. Most of my love exhibits itself in clever sayings or aphorisms about reading and books. At incidental comics, I stumbled upon an amazing comic about adopting books. Check out Stray Books:

I makes me want to adopt books. Now, how about books as a wall. In 2005, Swiss artist Jan Reymond began constructing elaborate installations each year, made of the old, unsold books as a last hurrah for the soon-to-be discarded objects. He also made a tree out of books. That’s dedication.

Then I found a photographer Kirsty Mitchell. Following her mother’s death from a brain tumour in 2008, Kirsty channelled her grief into her passion for photography. She retreated behind the lens of her camera and created Wonderland, an ethereal fantasy world.

Below is The Storyteller: A reference to Kirsten’s English teacher mother, a model sits elegantly on a carpet of bluebells enveloped by books.

Finally, we have artist Robert The (yes, that’s his name). He takes books and then cuts them up to create new symbols. A lobster. A broom. A cake. And yes, a gun.

I still love to read books too. Now, mostly ebooks. But sometimes there’s something special about glue and paper. If the picture below doesn’t make you shiver with excitement, then real, physical books, aren’t for you.

Tim Kane

3 comments on “Readophile

  1. A.M.B. says:

    I love books, especially old ones, but I’ve grown so accustomed to ebooks that paper books feel cumbersome to me (also, my youngest is on a one-woman mission to destroy any physical book she can get her little hands on!).

    • Tim Kane says:

      Funny, even though my Kinder-girl has access to ebooks and book-apps, she really prefers the paper ones. Granted, she has hundreds in her library.

  2. Old books are still my favourite. I haven’t yet established a habit of reading e-books, although I do have a reader with a few downloaded onto it.

    Very interesting photos. It’s amazing what a creative mind can do with them. 🙂

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