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Conveyor Editions is pleased to launch our third artist book - Stranger with Joy Drury Cox. The entire set, Old Man and Sea (2012), and Or, Some of the Whale(2013), and Stranger (2014), will also be available as a very limited edition with a newsprint poster!
StrangerJoy Drury Cox Hardcover with Jacket & Foil Stamp130 Pages on Mohawk Superfine EggshellEdition of 100
$40.00 (Purchase)
Signed Artist Books SetLimited Edition Newsprint Poster Edition of 25 
$80.00(Purchase)
Past Present Future Featuring Joy Drury Cox

via apastpresentfuture:

image

Joy Drury Cox is an artist living and working in North Carolina. Her work deals with the aesthetics of standardized objects and experiences in everyday life and has been shown in various galleries and contexts from New York to Miami to Paris. In 2012, Conveyor Arts published her artist book, Old Man and Sea, which is currently included in the show 1XX at Launch F18 gallery in New York.

www.joydrurycox.com

www.joydrurycox.tumblr.com

Copies of Old Man and Sea are available here: www.conveyoreditions.com

(Source: apastpresentfuture)

LAUNCH PARTY
AND BOOK SIGNING 
WITH JOY DRURY COX

THIS FRIDAY,
JUNE 8TH, 2012
FROM 6:00 - 8:00PM

DASHWOOD BOOKS
33 Bond Street
New York, New York

 

ABOUT THE PUBLICATION

In her serene interpretation of Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea, Joy Drury Cox offers a fresh understanding of time and language. By simplifying this quintessentially American tome to its most basic construction, Old Man and Sea evokes the literal and metaphorical elements of the trace.

Honoring the original form of Hemingway’s novel, Cox has replicated the exact dimensions of her own well-worn paperback edition. Using Hemingway’s periods as a guide, Cox creates new patterns and possibilities for understanding his familiar language. Admittedly this new reading of the work is at first primarily visual. Though, by preserving only the pauses and allowing us to make the journey between them, our sense of Hemingway’s pace enters a new dimension, and elements of meter and tempo begin to work their way onto the page.

Periods are typically designated to denote conclusion. However, in this edition, lines elegantly replace the author’s swirling current of words; the period becomes a gateway. These abstract constellations function as a guide through Hemingway’s universe, while forming on each page a tiny cosmos. The patterns vary from subtle rhythms of sweeping strands to frantically acute angles that communicate urgency. Through her intervention in the text, Cox inserts her own voice in a form reminiscent of a melodic composition. Her pristine ghostly drawings elevate Hemingway’s original moments of pause to the peak of the dramatic arc.

Joy Drury Cox is a native of Atlanta, GA. In 2001, she graduated with a B.A. in English from Emory University. And later earned her M.F.A. from the School of Art and Art History at the University of Florida. Her work has been exhibited at various places in the greater New York area, including The Center for Book Arts, The Drawing Center and Mixed Greens. Her projects are included in two upcoming exhibitions Small Works, curated by amani olu and Jon Feinstein, at The Magenta Flash Forward Festival in Boston and Hidden in Plain Sight, curated by David Andrew Frey, at numberthirtyfive in Manhattan, NY.