A SINGULAR NOTATION Peter Heidenwag
explores the intricacies of Harald
Stoffers' use of language and poses questions
about the wider context of his work.
Excerpt:
Before he begins to write, Harald Stoffers first draws
freehand guide-lines, each aligned with the preceding
ones. The effect is reminiscent of the constant repetitions
that occur in nature in the form of wave movements,
wood grain or rock strata. Within the lines he writes,
in the form of a letter, everyday notes, memos, schedules,
or comments about the circumstances in which he is working.
Sometimes he tears away a sentence and starts it again
from scratch using the rest of the sheet of paper or
the back of another piece on which he has already written.
From time to time this means that he tears in half a
longer sentence on the other side of the paper.
Stoffers mainly writes about things he is going to
do, detailing matters such as which trousers he will
wear the following day when he goes to work in the art
studio at the Elbe-Werkstätten GmbH (an employment and
rehabilitation centre in Hamburg, Germany for people
with disabilities, mentioned in almost all his letters),
at what time he will leave and from which platform,
and how much money he will need to pay for a cup of
coffee. Sometimes he refers to what is happening at
the time of writing, for example the fact that the coffee
machine has to be switched on: 'Eine Kaffee Pause Machen
Wasser Aufsetzen' ('HaveCoffeeBreakBoilWater'). In this
way the letters take on the quality of a performance.
Stoffers follows a set procedure in his letters which
allows him do as he pleases and provides scope for the
development of new ideas on impulse. This lends his
work considerable variety and it also leaves it open
to interpretation in different ways. It is questionable
whether the words should be considered separately from
the design, or whether text and imagery can only be
interpreted as a single whole. What is the message,
and to whom is it directed? Are letters as such not
private in any case?
Writing occupies a large space in Stoffers' day-to-day
life. He has been writing letters every day for more
than fifteen years. Most are addressed to his mother,
but he rarely actually gives them to her. Instead, he
leaves them lying around for display, or he gives them
to other people. Maybe they never were intended to be
delivered; perhaps the letter format serves solely as
a medium for recording Stoffers' thoughts. They can
be seen as a diary which could be continued indefinitely,
both as individual letters and as a daily need as vital
for Stoffers as eating, drinking or sleeping. Stoffers
writes to give himself time and space; to structure
and shape his everyday life. He does this in two senses:
in building a schedule for himself; and through the
actual process of creating the letters.
left: Letter
57, 2004, ink on paper, 11.6 x 11 ins., 29.5 x 28
cm, courtesy abcd, Paris.
right: Letter 60, 2004, ink on paper, 39.4 x 27.5
ins., 100 x 70 cm, courtesy abcd, Paris.