Dr. Falke's Oraculum: An Unbound Book of Images and Texts for Augury and Bibliomancy Nicholas Kahn and Richard Selesnick
Dr. Falke's Oraculum: An Unbound Book of Images and Texts for Augury and Bibliomancy Nicholas Kahn and Richard Selesnick
Kahn & Selesnick’s latest book project “Dr. Falke's Oraculum” continues the adventures of the Truppe Fledermaus, a cabaret troupe of anxious mummers and would-be mystics who catalogue their absurdist attempts to augur a future that seems increasingly in peril due to environmental pressures and global turmoil.
During these journeys to such far flung places as the coastal cliffs of Ireland, the remote island of Fogo off the coast of Newfoundland, the sandy wastes of Cape Cod, and the muddy, muddy banks of the swollen Delaware, the artists considered circular structure of time and our attempts to make sense of the present by projecting our minds into the future, then mapped these various methods of prognostication onto the distant landscapes in which they sojourned. The results of these meditations were then transcribed onto the images of the Truppe's performances to produce a sort of personal Oraculum. As a result, this volume does not purport to be an instruction manual so much as a mindset that one might adopt while attempting to think about Augury.
Published by Candela Books in conjunction with the Fledermaus Workshop, this beautifully produced 8.5” x 11” volume features 84 unbound pages with a circular image on one side, and associated text on the verso, held in a folder with an interpretations chart printed on it, and then housed in a continuous band printed with two different panoramas inside and out. Dr. Falke’s Oraculum is an oracle, a guidebook to that oracle, an art book, a box of prints, a compendium of interpretive dance moves, and an absurdist meditation on our current age, all presented in a sumptuous package designed by the artists themselves.
Kahn & Selesnick are a collaborative artist team who have been making narrative card decks, staged narrative photographs, figurative paintings, handmade books, and sculptural installations since the early 1980s. They specialize in alternative historical narratives that may also be futures. The artists have participated in over 100 solo and group exhibitions worldwide, have work in the collections of over 20 museums and public institutions in addition to numerous private collections, and have been the recipients of grants from NASA and the Pollock Krasner Foundation. Their work has been featured in well known publications such as the New York Times and Huffington Post, and has been the subject of documentaries by PBS and Voom; they have published monographs and projects with Aperture and Candela Books.