tiramisu
Q They do a dance together, a dance of paper and ink and type and words, a
dance that melds message with form. Out on the floor they whirl and spin until they blur ... into books.

These books are beautiful, striking and, above all, whole. They are not just words plopped in a pretty house, but a form of art that communicates through the sizzle of synergy.

The dancers are husband and wife: Ivan Soll, a professor of philosophy at the University of Wisconsin - Madison,
and Marta Gomez, acting director of book conservation at the University's library. Apart from their positions but tied to the same professional passions, they own and operate the Tiramisu Press,
which they founded in 1985 to produce letterpress books in limited editions. (Tiramisu is a Tuscan dessert, literally meaning "pick-me-up.")

More than anything, intimacy and integration characterize their creations. The ties between Gomez and Soll and their books are intimate indeed: He writes the text; she sets type, prints and binds; and together they design the visual aspects.

She used to make the paper too but now buys it, mostly from Japan, since papermaking consumes so much time.

But that rough division of labor doesn't do justice to the complexity of their collaboration. "Sometimes I propose a book structure to Ivan for his ideas of appropriate text, and sometimes he shows me text for my ideas of a structure," says Gomez, a native of Colombia. "Then we talk back and forth about everything as we produce a book."

A book, unlike a painting, demands collaboration. But most often that merely means a writer hands words to a publisher, who then pays people to build a house (book) for it. And the house often looks like a plain three-bedroom ranch, compared to the abodes Tiramisu builds.

"We like to produce books that open up to readers in surprising ways as they discover the content," says Gomez. Pages may fold out, for example, or the covers overlap, and each book nestles in its own custom-designed box.

In fact, everything about a Tiramisu book is up for creative grabs, including the binding, size and shape of pages, and placement of text. One book, "What goes around, comes around," has its pages radiating out from a binding of vertical copper rods fixed in a wooden base. And another, "Colombo/C:o:l:o:n/Columbus," reveals itself in parts through a triptych
construction.

"The book itself is part of the message," says Soll. "It is more than
just a means to the meaning of words." In turn, Soll's words take on new
meaning because he integrates them into the book's design.

In "Tryangulations," a triangular-shaped book, he takes delight in playing with words and exploring parallels between geometry and life: "Brought to despair by the confines of the pair, some try triangles. But trying triangles often results in trying triangles."

In that book, Gomez prints Soll's text in a square, rectangle and parallelogram. And when he uses the words Otis Redding sang - "Don't
know much about geometry, don't know much about trigonometry, but if
only you'd be with me, what a wonderful world this would be" - the book seems a perfect home for them.

Soll incorporates ideas from great philosophers in Tiramisu books, but not in an academic way. On the contrary, a prominent American poet has called his texts "lyric philosophy."

"I work in a field of hyper-rationalism where I have to be very analytical and clear," says Soll. "So it's a great feeling of freedom to express philosophical ideas without academic constraints."

Make no mistake, this is book art, not puttering with paper. Tiramisu books have been shown in solo-press exhibitions in Germany and Hungary and can be found in the collections of the Library of Congress, La Bibliotecca Nazionale Centrale in Florence, Italy, and the Kohler Art Library at the University in Madison.

Another marker of accomplishment came this summer, when Gomez and Soll were invited to teach for two weeks on the art of the book at the famed Haystack Mountain School of Crafts in Maine.

Perhaps, when you come down to it, they have done well for a simple reason: They are head-over-heels in love with the book.

"You can experience a book on so many levels - visually, tactilely, intellectually," says Gomez as she caresses the air with her fingers.
"Even paper alone can be so sensual."

And every once in awhile, their love of the book leads them to a place or zone or state of mind where they forget about even their limited editions, which range from four to 60. Instead, they decide to produce a one-of-a-kind, like "Peeramids," a gorgeous book of walnut-stained paper that recombines images with each flick of a page, a book that exists nowhere else on earth.

After all, says Soll, even in a world awash in electronic information, "the book is an end in itself."

Images of Soll and Gomez, along with samples of their books, are available for downloading at:
www.news.wisc.edu/newsphotos/tiramisu.html

(University of Wisconsin - Madison Press Release, Sept. 6, 2000)
000906
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daxle I never read entries that range more than a paragraph, so I won't feel out of place saying that I would kill for tiramisu, and quite enjoy mascarpone plain even 000906
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