Jason Dodge (signed) - I Woke Up. There Was a Note in My Pocket Explaining What Had Happened. - Hatje Cantz 2010 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
Jason Dodge (signed) - I Woke Up. There Was a Note in My Pocket Explaining What Had Happened. - Hatje Cantz 2010 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
Jason Dodge (signed) - I Woke Up. There Was a Note in My Pocket Explaining What Had Happened. - Hatje Cantz 2010 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
Jason Dodge (signed) - I Woke Up. There Was a Note in My Pocket Explaining What Had Happened. - Hatje Cantz 2010 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
Jason Dodge (signed) - I Woke Up. There Was a Note in My Pocket Explaining What Had Happened. - Hatje Cantz 2010 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
Jason Dodge (signed) - I Woke Up. There Was a Note in My Pocket Explaining What Had Happened. - Hatje Cantz 2010 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
Jason Dodge (signed) - I Woke Up. There Was a Note in My Pocket Explaining What Had Happened. - Hatje Cantz 2010 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
Jason Dodge (signed) - I Woke Up. There Was a Note in My Pocket Explaining What Had Happened. - Hatje Cantz 2010 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
Jason Dodge (signed) - I Woke Up. There Was a Note in My Pocket Explaining What Had Happened. - Hatje Cantz 2010 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
Jason Dodge (signed) - I Woke Up. There Was a Note in My Pocket Explaining What Had Happened. - Hatje Cantz 2010 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
Jason Dodge (signed) - I Woke Up. There Was a Note in My Pocket Explaining What Had Happened. - Hatje Cantz 2010 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
Jason Dodge (signed) - I Woke Up. There Was a Note in My Pocket Explaining What Had Happened. - Hatje Cantz 2010 - Saint-Martin Bookshop

Dodge Jason

Jason Dodge (signed) - I Woke Up. There Was a Note in My Pocket Explaining What Had Happened. - Hatje Cantz 2010

For his installations, Jason Dodge (*1969 in Pennsylvania) often combines only several objects with a carefully formulated title in order to evoke a cryptic story. At first glance, the works appear to be rudimentary, incomplete; ordinary objects and materials—such as pants pockets, balls of yarn, flutes, or drainpipes—are taken out of their usual context and presented as fragments. By giving them an expressive title, adding a poem, or tacking on a recipe, they also gain new meaning, become part of a past history, a link that occasionally elicits fabulous associations on the part of the viewer. This is the first publication in which Jason Dodge’s works of art are combined with contemporary American poetry and other literary texts, resulting in a portrait-like compendium that reflects his artistic approach.

216p - GER/EN - 31x24.3cm - softcover - good condition