Sunday, March 29, 2026

Fiona Banner | Table Stops












Fiona Banner
Table Stops
London, UK: The Multiples Store, 2000
30 x 30 x 16cm
Edition of 100


Fiona Banner followed the ‘wordscapes’ for which she initially became known - sprawling objective texts describing films ranging from Lawrence of Arabia to Point Break to pornography and, in her book The Nam, films about the Viet Nam War - with works using only punctuation, and no words. The ‘full stop’ (or ‘period’ in American English) became the subject of “the world’s smallest neon” [see previous post], a series of graphite drawings and sculptural works made out of styrofoam, concrete and as inflatables. [see below].

Table Stops is a collection of seven glazed ceramic full stops, housed in a compartmentalized wooden box. Each full stop presents a different font reimagined as a three-dimensional object: Avant Garde, Courier, Formata, Klang, Nuptial, Optical and Slipstream. They are enlarged to the same scale, though vary considerably in size and shape.


"Table Stops are abstract points of focus. Like tableware, or executive toys, they are to be handled and moved around. The act of arranging and rearranging them enacts a silent conversation.”
- Fiona Banner











Saturday, March 28, 2026

Fiona Banner | Full Stop







Fiona Banner
Full Stop
London, UK: Frith Street Gallery, 1997
19 x 5 cm.
Edition of 3 signed copies


Characterized by the artist as “the smallest neon in the world”, this full stop (or period) by Fiona Banner followed the artist’s bookwork, THE NAM [below], in which she recounted the entire plots of five films about the Viet Nam War, to create an “unreadable novel”. 

The neon and lead on plastic mount work comes housed in a wooden box and is accompanied by a signed certificate. 

The potential of the punctuation mark would continue to inspire Banners work in the decades to come (see next post). 


“It is just a little bit of neon glass that I blew. I liked it because it is a breath encapsulated in glass, as a full stop is a breath in some ways. It represented a gap for me in terms of ideas. I wasn’t sure what to do next as an artist. After a while I tried looking at that awkwardness physically, in terms of making something of it, instead of it being an abstract pain. Also there are no neon full stops out there."
- Fiona Banner








Kara Walker | (Untitled] Pitcher












Kara Walker
(Untitled] Pitcher
New York City, USA: Artware Editions, 2014
8.25 x 7.6 x 5.75"
Edition of 1000 numbered copies


A white porcelain pitcher by Kara Walker featuring two of her signature black silhouettes. The artist's signature is stamped on the bottom and each pitcher is individually numbered. A signed and numbered certificate of authenticity issued by the manufacturer Bernardaud (Limoges, France) accompanies each example.




Friday, March 27, 2026

Ian Hamilton Finlay











Ian Hamilton Finlay died on this day twenty years ago, at the age of eighty. 





Daniel Spoerri

















Daniel Spoerri was born on this day in 1930. 




Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Rachel Whiteread | Pallet









Rachel Whiteread
Pallet 
Margate, UK: Counter Editions, 2016
46 x 33 x 3 cm (18 x 13 x 1 inches)
Edition of 40 signed and numbered copies


A patinated bronze work available from the publisher, here, for $14,000.



Sunday, March 22, 2026

International Sackville Cube Day Book Launch








The small town of Sackville has little in the way of a skyline - the only thing that can be seen from a distance is a fourteen storey, windowless building affectionately known as The Cube. The structure serves as a silo for frozen cranberries and blueberries. A few years ago we* hosted a screening projected onto the building (which is taller than any drive-in cinema in North America) and I was hopeful that I would gain access to the space in the process, to poke around a little. I learned that there was no access to the building, to anyone. It’s a fully automated refrigerator that requires no staff. 

To launch his newest graphic novel Jon Claytor invited local artists, poets, musicians to present work on the subject of the cube, or cubes in general. Billed as a ‘variety show’ the evening will include readings, a slide-show, musical performances and more. Paintings, drawings, sculptures and photographs are presented in the multi-room space. I contributed an ephemeral envelope take-away piece (see next post).

Claytor’s Nowhere is a zombie story set in a nondescript town where a giant cube appears on the edge of town. Recently relocated twelve year old Joel and his friend Charlie witness the slow disappearance of the citizens in the area, and are forced to reckon with their new reality. 

The launch event takes place at Living Things (a recent co-operative store where artists sell ceramics, clothing, cards, calendars, patches, prints, vinyl records and other creations) tomorrow at 7pm. 25 Lorne Street. 


*Struts Gallery (which were were the directors of, at the time), the Owens Art Gallery, and Sappyfest presented a selection of video works by artists, followed by a projected performance by Lido Pimienta. See below.