Coverbild Ruth Wolf-Rehfeldt
A side-by-side view of a book's table of contents in German and English on a solid pink background. The left column, titled INHALT, lists chapters in German with their page numbers. The right column, titled CONTENTS, provides the English translations. Both lists feature authors like Paola Malavassi and Marie Gerbaulet.
A two-page spread from an art book. On the left is an abstract painting from 1973 titled In Sich Gefangen, showing a large brown organic shape enclosing smaller, interlocking biomorphic forms in red, cream, blue, and yellow. On the right is a painting from 1975 titled Balance, featuring three golden-yellow ring-like shapes stacked vertically amidst undulating forms in green and rust orange.
A two-page spread displaying two abstract artworks from the 1970s created with a typewriter. On the left, a symmetrical hourglass shape with a dense central column and branching, jagged lines of characters. On the right, an asymmetrical, curved form, also composed of typed characters, sweeps gently to the left.
A two-page spread from an art book. The left page shows two preparatory drawings on aged paper with German handwriting. One features a red squiggly line contained within a square, and below, the line overflows the square's borders. The other shows a red line contained by a border made of the typed word restriction. The right page shows a collage of a dark female sculpture with outstretched arms against a geometric, crown-like pattern of black characters.
A two-page spread, pages 46 and 47, of an article in German by Marie Gerbaulet. The black text is laid out in columns on a light cream background. The large headline on the left asks, OB DIE NATUR SICH NICHT ÜBERNAHM, ALS SIE SICH DEN MENSCHEN LEISTETE? followed by (EPISODE II).
A two-page spread from an art book. On the left, a concrete poem in the shape of an hourglass is formed from typed German words. On the right are two works: a black-and-white collage of a hand beneath a pattern of tiny trees, and a shape resembling a dragonfly or a leaf with a long stem, created from typewritten symbols.
A two-page spread from a book. On the left, page 80, is a black and white mail art piece from the 1980s. The artwork shows a hand holding a ripped paper sign with the word PEACE on it, set against a patterned background. On the right, page 81, pink text on a light grey background reads, in German and English, MAIL ART FOR OVERCOMING THE BORDERS OF SYSTEMS AND COUNTRIES. Below is the text A Conversation with Kornelia Röder.
A two-page spread from a book displaying several examples of mail art created with a typewriter. On the left page, a large black and white artwork from 1987 shows an abstract cityscape and sun composed of typed letters. The right page features three smaller pieces: a red stamp-like square labeled MAIL ART, a postcard with a large, blocky arrow, and a red artwork from 1980 showing a grid of rooms, all formed from repeating characters.
A book page featuring a black-and-white photograph of the artist Ruth Wolf-Rehfeldt on the left, with her biography in German and English on the right. In the photo, Wolf-Rehfeldt has dark hair with bangs and a single braid, and she is looking off to the side. A building with the word POSTAMT is visible in the background.
Ruth Wolf-Rehfeldt
Nichts Neues
€ 34.00
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By (artist): Ruth Wolf-Rehfeldt
Designed by: Fasson Freddy Fuss
Edited by: Paola Malavassi
February 2023, 112 Pages, 100 Photos
Paperback
248mm x 286mm
ISBN: 978-3-7757-5419-4

HATJE CANTZ VERLAG
Mommsenstr. 27
10629 Berlin
Germany
E-Mail: contact@hatjecantz.de


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| More than Letters
Working as a self-taught artist, and employed as an office manager in the former GDR, Ruth Wolf-Rehfeldt used her typewriter to create patterns and abstract compositions with characters and letters at the junction of Concrete Poetry, graphic design and Conceptual Art. Her linguistic explorations, which she further developed into collages later on, are often based on ambiguity. Published on the occasion of the large retrospective at MINSK Kunsthaus in Potsdam, Nichts Neues explores her typewritings, prints, collages, and paintings in thematic episodes. Although Wolf-Rehfeldt discontinued her artistic practice after the fall of the Berlin Wall, her art has lost none of its relevance. In a poetic, idiosyncratic, and often humorous way, this nonconformist artist explored themes such as environmental issues, intellectual freedom, community, and communication. Her sometimes subtle, sometimes more literal play with words, meanings, and forms continue to reveal the unexpected.

RUTH WOLF-REHFELDT (*1932, Wurzen, Saxony) arrived in East Berlin in 1950. From the 1960s, she created paintings, pastels, drawings, and, from about 1970, her so-called "Typewritings." She actively participated in the international Mail Art program, sending her works across the globe. Only in recent years has her work been rediscovered. In 2017 she was both a newcomer and a senior star of documenta 14.
EXHIBITION
DAS MINSK Kunsthaus in Potsdam
February 11-May 7, 2023
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