Author
Gwenaël RattkePublishers
Visible PublicationsInfo
104 pages
2025
280mm × 210mm
Softcover
SKU
AB8272
,
of 7
Tecnocreto, Gwenaël Rattke’s third book for Visible Publications, began during an extended stay
in Mexico City in 2019. Collecting images and graphics, Rattke made daily collages in a large
blank book to form a long, continuous montage. Upon his return home to Berlin, geometric
shapes were airbrushed onto old, porous East German paper and incorporated into the work.
Much of the book’s initial inspiration came from a 1970s construction company directory Rattke
found in a second-hand bookstore in Xalapa, Veracruz. Advertising contractors, building
techniques, and concrete and steel suppliers, this publication presented information in a visually
ground-breaking, experimental and poetic way. Tecnocreto, like so much of Rattke’s work, pays
homage to this sort of anonymous, innovative, pre-digital commercial graphic design.
Another touchpoint was the public sculpture projects initiated by German-Mexican artist and
architect Mathias Göritz. These include the monumental concrete towers Göritz created in 1958
with architect Luis Barragán in Ciudad Satélite, on the periphery of Mexico City, as well as La
Ruta de la Amistad, conceived as part of the Cultural Program of the 1968 Mexico City
Olympics. Imposing in both scale and scope, La Ruta de la Amistad is a 17km-long sculpture
corridor running along the southern ring road, surrounding the megalopolis. It showcases 19
large-scale concrete sculptures painted in vibrant colors made by artists from five continents.
Göritz described his practice as “emotional architecture,” and his interdisciplinary approach had
a profoundly spiritual nature. This work also resonated deeply with Alejandro Jodorowsky, a
central figure of Mexico City’s 1960s/70s avant-garde. Jodorowsky used the Ciudad Satélite
towers in his seminal 1973 film The Holy Mountain, where the site represents a point of entry
towards a metaphysical voyage of self-transformation.
Building on these antecedents and investigations, Tecnocreto brings together Rattke’s many
interests: industrial construction processes, commercial graphic design, and the idea of Mexico
City as a place of exile and refuge (both Göritz and Jodorowsky were émigrés). In this book,
Rattke assembles an argument for the poetic and transformational potential of art when it is
understood as a form of healing.
Gwenaël Rattke is a French-German graphic artist living in Berlin. He works primarily in
collage, printmaking, and independent publishing, and privileges hands-on, analog approaches
and techniques. His book projects include Mechanical Fantasy Box, The Homoerotic Journal of
Patrick Cowley (2019), San Francisco Reverberation (2018) and Patterns and Perspectives
(2017) for Visible Publications, and Edgewise: A Picture of Cookie Mueller (2014) with Chloe
Griffin. He has designed numerous album covers for Patrick Cowley and others on the Dark
Entries label, and recently designed the sleeve and zine for the label’s 2021 release Back Up:
Mexican Tecno Pop 1980-1989 which shares a similar cover image with Tecnocreto. Rattke’s
work is represented by Romer Young Gallery of San Francisco. - Visible Publications