Description

The Elm Tree artist book is a small two-sided rectangular weaving with a photograph of an elm tree and a story of looking for an elm tree. To make this work, two copies of the photograph and text were printed on paper. The reverse side of the weaving is scrambled due to the artist’s particular way of weaving.

The Elm Tree (text in the weaving)
One autumn afternoon I headed out for a long bicycle ride. I was looking for two things, reeds and grasses for making paper and elm leaves to use as models for sculpting a series of wooden books that I hoped to make. The day was bright and warm as I took off down a bike trail in the country. There were a multitude of oak trees, maple and pine, but elm seemed much scarcer. As I passed an older couple also on bicycles, I spied at last in the distance on the top of a hill a lone coveted elm tree. I pulled up beside it and stood there admiring its long lean trunk and elegant branches reaching high in the sky, much too high for me to reach its leaves. At that moment, the biker couple crossed my path and the gentleman bellowed out to me, “That’s an elm tree, there’s nothing there!” I turned and said, “There are elm leaves.”



Exhibition History

September 9 – October 7, 2000
Galerie B-312, Montréal, Québec, Canada
Description

In the gallery’s small room, Karen Trask offers us a series of artist’s books where a reflection on the materiality of the object and our relationship to it is developed. The language and the image are found there, but the material qualities of the supports draw and hold our attention to what gives substance to these representations. Curiously, words and images acquire an increased virtuality.

Starting from the book, this work, in its astonishing simplicity, takes us back to its vegetal origin and introduces the tree as a motif. But this tree, even if it is materially present in different forms, is also crossed by language. Conversely, language, although strongly inscribed in the material, retains all its evocative power.
Objects come to us in different appearances and imply different relationships. They are sometimes sculptures to look at and involve displacement, sometimes books to leaf through, to manipulate, to read, sometimes virtual books. This means that they summon us differently, that they do not engage our bodies in the same way. At the heart of the experience to which we are invited, there is a diversity in which our senses are engaged in multiple ways, making us experience our presence through an extended range of sensitive qualities. (source: B-312 website, consulted July 12, 2023)

Dans la petite salle de la galerie, Karen Trask nous propose une série de livres d’artiste où se développe une réflexion sur la matérialité de l’objet et sur notre rapport à celui-ci. Le langage et l’image s’y retrouvent, mais les qualités matérielles des supports attirent et retiennent notre attention sur ce qui donne corps à ces représentations. Curieusement, les mots et les images en acquièrent une virtualité accrue.

À partir du livre, ce travail, dans son étonnante simplicité, nous ramène à l’origine végétale de celui-ci et introduit l’arbre comme motif. Mais cet arbre, même s’il est présent matériellement sous différentes formes, est aussi traversé par le langage. Inversement, le langage, bien que fortement inscrit dans le matériau, conserve tout son pouvoir d’évocation.

Les objets se présentent à nous sous différentes apparences et impliquent des rapports divers. Il sont tantôt sculptures à regarder et impliquent un déplacement, tantôt livres à feuilleter, à manipuler, à lire, tantôt livre virtuel. C’est donc dire qu’ils nous convoquent différemment, qu’ils n’engagent pas notre corps de la même manière. Au cœur de l’expérience à laquelle nous sommes conviés prend place cette diversité où sont engagés nos sens de multiples façons, nous faisant ainsi éprouver notre présence par un registre étendu de qualités sensibles. (source: site web du B-312, consulté le 12 juin, 2023)