CaGeWeB
  • bibliotheken
  • achtergrond
  • partners
  • historiek
naar

MARC Record

Leader
005 20231122114843.0
008 230412s2021 r 000 0 eng d
020
  
  
a| 9789526938943
040
  
  
a| HG
080
  
  
a| 655.14 2| KASK
245
1
0
a| Fake Star : b| A book about an Exhibit in a National Pavilion in the Paris World Exposition 1900. / c| Ahmed Al-Nawas & Minna Henriksson ; Illustrations by Ott Kagovere.
250
  
  
a| 500 ex.
260
  
  
a| Helsinki : b| Rab-Rab Press, c| 2021.
300
  
  
a| 58 p. : (ill.) ; c| 28 x 21 cm.
505
  
  
a| Fake Star is a story about a plaster copy of a meteorite and its original, about an emerging nation aiming to prove its worth at the Paris World Exposition 1900, about encounter of King Oscar II of Sweden, and the Russian representative at the pavilion of Finland, Prince Tenisheff.
500
  
  
a| In March 1899, a fireball flew over Helsinki, and for a while it was thought that the end of the world had come. The meteorite hit the ice in Bjurböle Bay in Porvoo. The newspapers wrote that the meteorite was a message sent from the civilised West, portending liberation of the country from Russian rule. The interpretation was based on the ancient Swedish word for beaver, bjur (bobr in Russian). Speculation was fuelled by the name of the site of impact, Bjurböle (Bobrikovo in Russian), and it was inferred that the nearby villa of the Russian Governor-General Bobrikov must have been the intended target of the meteorite. Once the meteorite was lifted from the bottom of the sea, a plaster copy was made of it, which was presented at the crucial appearance in the country’s history, the 1900 Paris World’s Fair. The copy was placed on display in the heart of the Finnish Pavilion, surrounded by achievements of Finnish art, industry, education and science. The idea was to convince the rest of the world that Finland was indeed one of the civilised nations of the West. The book is an outcome of an artistic investigation into the relation of the copy and original in the context of construction of the nation in Finland and the colonialist logic of the World Fairs. It is a story, aimed at children and adults alike that narrates the encounter of King Oscar II of Sweden and the Russian representative at the pavilion of Finland, Prince Tenisheff. Part children book, part exhibition catalogue Fake Star is conceived and written by Ahmed Al-Nawas and Minna Henriksson, with illustrations and design work by Ott Kagovere. (provided by publisher)
600
1
4
a| Al-Nawas, Ahmed
600
1
4
a| Henriksson, Minna
690
  
  
a| Kunstenaarsboek, Speciale edities, Beperkte oplage
600
1
4
a| Kagovere, Ott
920
  
  
a| boek
852
4
  
b| KASK c| KUB j| KB-80/3 / AL-NAWAS / 2021 p| 000050656145
001 smk01:000750266
500
  
  
a| boek
  • CaGeWeB vzw

    p/a Bagattenstraat 174, 9000 Gent

    voorzitter: Hendrik Defoort
    bestuurders: Frea Vancraeynest, Brigitte De Meyer, Ellen Ryckx, Kim Robensyn