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About this work-.
    The False Fiction Fractured Fact series started in 2001 with a 
diary/journal of 219 pages. Worked on throughout the blank bound 
purchased book pages in and out of order, MRR often returned to pages 
and to work on them again, as she still does in other new 
bookworks/artists' books. Related, are False Fiction Fractured Fact- THE
 OTHER SIDE, in 2008, a visual/asemic poem published 2009, on Michael 
Jacobson's’ web/ blog http://thenewpostliterate. blogspot.com/  .
There is False Fiction Fractured Fact: take it with you, 2008 at https://the-otolith.blogspot.com/search?q=False+Fiction+Fractured+Fact%3A+take+it+with+youl 
And other works, including an asemic computer collage, False Fiction Fractured Fact: THE OTHER SIDE in 2008, on http://thenewpostliterate. blogspot.com/  
    Concept started here with a new irritation, a bite of memory, and a 
triggered reference as a glimpse, with a ghost of an old idea. FICTION FRACTURED FACT ALTERED 
 can be read, continuing in both directions, and so has two beginnings 
and possibly no end, spiraling around, as do most of MRR’s bookworks, 
and can be read in more than one direction. So seeing is both forward and backward, up, down and around. 
     Broken unity, and hesitations in continuity, are so often concretely expressed by the fragmented circle. But, the complete circle does convey the absence of interruption, and many circles, whole and part circles are here. There are fish in various places, which for decades are the metaphors for groups, family or specific personalities. The name of a fish, the type of fish, gives the clue to its reason for being in the space it occupies. 
      Calligraphic marks can recount one side of abstract conversations. Sometimes
 the open folio is one thought, but most often the facing pages are in 
dialogue, sometimes in heated contrast and possibly interacting or 
playing with the pages before and those pages ahead. Calligraphic drawing marks, indecipherable language, Ideogrammatic language, asemic poetry, is the language without known language, before written language, the language beyond any language. Varieties of Ideogram languages/ asemic narratives, tell abstract stories, of course. Interacting within themselves and with the viewer/reader, the pages do ask- are we filled with drawings or poems? Altered
 and added marks, layered, have hints of depth, space, and sometimes of 
darkness. Images of objects, and new marks together with those from this
 earlier series, develop new  groups of visual and asemic 
poems/drawings. 2018 computer collages are 90, or so, pages in this edition artists'  book -
FALSE FICTION FRACTURED FACT ALTERED by Marilyn R. Rosenberg
FALSE FICTION FRACTURED FACT ALTERED is available at Amazon.
FALSE FICTION FRACTURED FACT ALTERED is available at Amazon.
BRIEF BIO -  Marilyn R. Rosenberg
Born
 in Philadelphia Pa, MRR is second generation in the USA and all of her 
family came from the Ukraine while it was under Russian rule. She and 
Bob have two daughters, 5 grand sons and one grand daughter. Through the
 years MRR has had a varied education, then in 1978, a Bachelor of 
Professional Studies in Studio Arts at Empire State College, State U of 
NY.  In 1993 MRR graduated with a Master of Arts in Liberal Studies from
 the Graduate School of Arts and Science, New York University, NY, NY. 
Marilyn
 R. Rosenberg, as usual, with actual and virtual collage, with pen and 
brush, stencils, ink, and gouache is making unique and edition images 
often in bookworks or artists' books. And using the mouse, the Mac, and 
scanner MRR makes marks, images and words. Since 1977 MRR has been in 
some one person exhibitions and very many international group exhibits. 
MRR’s works are part of early mail art, and in current interactions. 
Ongoing MRR makes artists’ stamps, bookmarks, artists’ books, visual and
 asemic poetry. A small percentage are created with collaborators. Many
 unique sculptural bookworks, and published edition works, and works in 
catalogs, zines and anthologies can be found in university, college and 
museum library collections.


