Tunnel books, also known as peepshow or peephole, widely published in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, are books composed of a series of cut-outs bound together by means of two strips of folded paper.
A hole in the front page makes visible the succession of pages up to the bottom one, allowing to give the scenes a three-dimensional effect and thus obtaining a narrative effect that develops into a one single image.
A hole in the front page makes visible the succession of pages up to the bottom one, allowing to give the scenes a three-dimensional effect and thus obtaining a narrative effect that develops into a one single image.
The front hole allows you to see the scenes-frames in this silent book: not all characters immediately offer themselves to the view; concealed by the wings, they are revealed as a result of movements exercised on the sheets by the reader-spectator.
22 x 15,5 cm, screenprint and letterpress. Handbound.
Limited edition of 300, signed and numbered.
DFRG PRESS, London 2019
Acquired by:
State Library of New South Wales (AU )
Awards and Exhibitions:
- Shortlisted WIA 2020
Bibliography:
- World Illustration Award 2020, The AOI & DI, London 2020
22 x 15,5 cm, screenprint and letterpress. Handbound.
Limited edition of 300, signed and numbered.
DFRG PRESS, London 2019
Acquired by:
Oslo National Academy of the Arts Library (Oslo-Norway)
Swarthmore College (Swarthmore, PA, US)
Lafayette College (UK)
State Library of New South Wales (AU)