Treatise of a Coat gathers for the first time works on paper by international artist Helen Marten. Featuring coloured pencil, watercolour, ink, airbrush, acrylic and graphite, alongside other more unusual media like sand, silicone or olive oil, this book is a sumptuous, visual document of Marten's paper-based drawing and painting practice. Designed as an unruly "artist's book", Treatise of a Coat has multiple physical and linguistic folds. The title is a forcing of the homonymic similarities of coat: the literal jacket that is unfurled to expose the naked and unruly shame of human forms; the fur or hair of an animal; the verb-function of to coat, with its intentional building up of visual desire - the acts of lacquering, spreading, enclosing, flooding, directing, or husking that line and colour expedite when creating an image. The constituent materiality of this book is designed with the physicality of making a work on paper in mind.
Ed.: Sam Agnew, Helen Marten, Matthew Stuart, Jeffrey Rowledge. Text: Felix Bernstein, Claire Gilman, Elfriede Jelinek, Eve Esfandiari-Denney.