• A GUIDE THROUGH HUE - Sibylle Eimermacher
  • A GUIDE THROUGH HUE - Sibylle Eimermacher
  • A GUIDE THROUGH HUE - Sibylle Eimermacher
  • A GUIDE THROUGH HUE - Sibylle Eimermacher
  • A GUIDE THROUGH HUE - Sibylle Eimermacher
  • A GUIDE THROUGH HUE - Sibylle Eimermacher
  • A GUIDE THROUGH HUE - Sibylle Eimermacher
  • A GUIDE THROUGH HUE - Sibylle Eimermacher
  • A GUIDE THROUGH HUE - Sibylle Eimermacher
  • A GUIDE THROUGH HUE - Sibylle Eimermacher
  • A GUIDE THROUGH HUE - Sibylle Eimermacher

    A GUIDE THROUGH HUE - Sibylle Eimermacher

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    Born and raised in Germany, Sibylle Eimermacher (DE) has now lived in the Netherlands for over twenty years. Ever since childhood, she has been drawn to the rocky landscapes of Scandinavia. A few years ago, her eyes fell upon the reds, browns and purples of granite and porphyry found on sandy Dutch terrains. Researching the geological backgrounds of these glacial erratics, she was struck by two names pointing to the regions these stones originate from: the province of Dalarna in central Sweden and the Åland archipelago in Finland. Her urge to travel up north was reawakened. These stones on Dutch soil speak of the migratory routes that they followed during the glaciations. They are witnesses of faraway places, of those rocky Scandinavian landscapes.

    A Guide Through Hue leads the viewer to where the rocks are laid bare, to the open veins that pigment the landscape and guide the eye from the moment it is attuned to the hue. Reddish, pale pink, purple and brownish granite and porphyry, often bleached in various gradations through weathering; here and there accompanied by greyish and pale-coloured metamorphic rock interlaced with ornamental strands.

    Leaving behind their native Scandinavian bedrock, their presence gradually spreads, scatters and finally fades into the Dutch flatlands; ignoring national borders as well as the boundaries of nature and culture, as bits and pieces are picked up, isolated, integrated, and utilised in human civilization. What can be seen on the one hand as representatives of a migratory, homeless state of being – going along with feelings of longing and not-belonging – can be experienced on the other as interconnectedness, an undeniable presence and surrender to the universal condition of constant change.

    This book is an invitation to travel with the mind. It is a record of Eimermacher’s observations, an attempt to communicate what is perceived and to materialise the fleetingness of perception on paper.

    Including essays by Sybrandt van Keulen and Harry Huisman

    222 × 297 mm
    400 pages
    English
    Otastar softcover