Irma Blank (1934 – 14 April 2023) was a German-born Italian artist. Her work, based on printed text that she transcribed in ink, has been described as "drawing languages without words" and thus "a form of communication beyond specific language",[1] including sounds.
Life and work
Blank was born in Celle, Lower Saxony.[2][3] In 1955, age 20 and inspired by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's Italian Journey, she traveled to Syracuse, Sicily.[4] Having made the decision to settle in Italy for good, Blank started working as a high school teacher, focusing on her own art at night.[2] In 1973 Blank moved to Milan,[3] where she met with the concrete poetry artists[5] and introduced language into her prints and paintings.[5] In the 1970s she initiated a long-standing collaboration with fellow artist Mirella Bentivoglio. Blank's technique in Trascrizioni, a cycle of works she started in 1973 and concluded in 1979, was to transcribe texts from printed material, such as newspapers, poetry and treatises, in black ink on transparent paper. During the process, she would "read" the material in monotonous sounds with her mouth closed,[2] which she then recorded.[5]
Although Blank's work was exhibited at Documenta 6 in Kassel in 1977 and the 38th Venice Biennale in 1978, her practice experienced a period of relative obscurity until it was reidiscovered and reappraised in the 2010s.[2]
Blank wrote in 2001:
I save writing from its enslavement to sense: writing purified of sense. I return to the zero point, the semantic zero, the semantic void: silence as a germinating source. ...
I give autonomy back to the sign, to the body of writing, in order to give voice to the silence, to the void. To the thoughts unthought. Writing is not linked to knowing, but to being. Writing is the home of being. ...
Nonverbal writing, writing that remains in silence, original truth. ...
Writing, place of perdition and discovery.[6]
^ abcdeCarrier, Johana; Neves, Joana P. R. (9 June 2022). "Irma Blank". ICA Milano. Archived from the original on 20 April 2023. Retrieved 18 April 2023.