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Teun Hocks

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Though Dutch artist Teun Hocks--performer, photographer, painter--is widely known and shown around the world, this will be his first English-language book. In it, Hocks plays his signature role, which Janet Koplos describes as "an innocent Everyman in an always strange and often funny world", in scenes that range from burlesque to tragicomic. His lonely Buster Keaton-like persona perseveres through odd and unforgiving environments, struggling to find stable ground in an unstable, even absurd, universe. Life's complications and challenges take the form of impossible Rube Goldbergian contraptions fraught with psychological implications. Each engaging image captures one moment of an implied narrative, triggering questions about how the protagonist ever got himself into such a fix and what in the world will happen next. Hocks begins by sketching out various one-man narratives, and then poses himself in a carefully plotted setup against his own painted backdrop. After photographing the scene, he paints in oil on top of the resulting oversize gelatin silver print. In addition to his painted photographs, Teun Hocks includes drawings, Polaroids and studio shots that illuminate the artist's creative process. The wit, elaborate technique and rich colors of Hocks's images combine to form an irrepressibly original oeuvre.

96 pages, Hardcover

First published April 1, 2006

9 people want to read

About the author

Janet Koplos

29 books

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Author 2 books3 followers
December 3, 2014
utch photographer/painter Hocks creates amusing and bizarre painted photo images. Portraying a generic "everyman" Hocks highlights the absurdities of life. Standing on an ice-flow, his everyman looks concernedly at his briefcase and hat as they float away. Standing on top of a ladder, he shoves his head into a painting as peers around, as though through a window. A most arresting image shows a watering can next to a small sapling. A long rope ending with a nose trails on the ground from the tiny sapling twigs. Sly, witty, sad and surreal.
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256 reviews175 followers
April 26, 2016
Great book on his work. The first few pages are text and illustrations on his process that really help deconstruct how he makes his images both real and unreal-- without photoshop or any other digital manipulation. The rest of the book is images and almost all of my favorites are there.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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