drawing, paper, ink, pen
drawing
hand written
script typography
hand-lettering
hand drawn type
hand lettering
paper
personal sketchbook
ink
hand-drawn typeface
sketchbook drawing
pen
sketchbook art
small lettering
Copyright: Rijks Museum: Open Domain
André Jolles penned this letter to Jan Veth in 1902. Its visual field is dominated by the formal elements of script set against the off-white paper, presenting a study in contrasts between line and ground. The evenness of the writing creates a rhythmic pattern, almost like musical notation, suggesting a carefully considered composition. The letter as a form destabilizes conventional categories of communication. It is both a personal expression and a constructed text. The handwritten nature adds an intimate quality, yet the structured arrangement of words and sentences reveals an effort to convey meaning. It's a semiotic system where language and handwriting intersect, complicating a clear reading. Ultimately, the letter exists as a dynamic interplay between Jolles and Veth. The formal arrangement of text invites ongoing interpretation of cultural and philosophical discourse.
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