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mono.kultur #40 / Edmund de Waal
  • mono.kultur #40 / Edmund de Waal
  • mono.kultur #40 / Edmund de Waal
  • mono.kultur #40 / Edmund de Waal
  • mono.kultur #40 / Edmund de Waal
  • mono.kultur #40 / Edmund de Waal
  • mono.kultur #40 / Edmund de Waal
  • mono.kultur #40 / Edmund de Waal
  • mono.kultur #40 / Edmund de Waal
  • mono.kultur #40 / Edmund de Waal
  • mono.kultur #40 / Edmund de Waal
  • mono.kultur #40 / Edmund de Waal
  • mono.kultur #40 / Edmund de Waal

#40 / EDMUND DE WAAL: W IS FOR WHITE

“White has this extraordinary possibility, and it’s also profoundly about being at ends.”

mono.kultur #40 / Spring 2016
English / 15 x 20 cm / 44 Pages
Edmund de Waal is a potter. His pots, plates, and vessels are the result of craft and mastership, but they are also so much more than that: they are experiments in form and function, abstractions of thoughts on silence and space, on repetition and failure, on substance and fragility, on memory contained.

Edmund de Waal is an artist. He arranges his objects in complex choreographies that are as mysterious as they are mesmerizing. Displayed in galleries and institutions worldwide, his considered installations play with architectural concerns, integrating ideas of space, light and obscurity.

Edmund de Waal is a writer. In 2010, his intimate memoir of a kind, 'The Hare With Amber Eyes,' intertwined the biography of a collection of netsuke figures with the biography of his family and became a surprise bestseller, winning several awards. His latest book, 'The White Road,' presents a highly personal and engaging research into the history of porcelain.

Whether he sculpts with words or with clay, what Edmund de Waal works with are concepts, ideas, and desires. In a body of work that is at odds with our times and yet oddly successful, his writings and objects overlap and integrate each other in an attempt to understand and transcend our complex relationship with objects and our surroundings.

In an interview with mono.kultur structured like an A-Z of notes and ideas, Edmund de Waal talked about his rules of attachment, the impossibility of repetition, and why ‘doubt’ is the most beautiful word.

Visually, the issue takes inspiration from that most perfect of materials: porcelain. Printed entirely in double-sided splendour, the two finishings of the paper – shiny gloss and smooth matt – evoke the texture of ceramics before and after glazing.

Interview by Mareike Dittmer / Artwork by Edmund de Waal / Design by Designbolaget

“Just a little note to say thank you for the box of mono.kultur magazines that arrived this morning. It’s a beautiful thing!”
— Edmund de Waal

“Another flawless issue from a publishing venture that’s had a flawless concept and vision from the start.”
MagCulture

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