MAY 2019
Erling Kagge
Walking – One Step at a Time
Viking, 2019
DEAR FRIEND OF 8 BOOKS A YEAR,
I’ve just started walking again. To our office. I live in Berlin-Kreuzberg and it takes me about 35 minutes to arrive at the door of our library, located close to the Nollendorfplatz. Most of my way leads me through a beautiful park and I’ve no idea why I missed out on the opportunity to start my day like this for so long. There’s one thing you experience as a walker, though: even in the park you’re an absolute minority. For 1 walker you see about 20 cyclists, a lot of them riding in a rush not unlike the one we know from car drivers. Break. It was in the context of art where I first heard about Erling Kagge. He started collecting contemporary art over 30 years ago – and then wrote a book about his passion: “A Poor Collector’s Guide to buying Great Art”. Independent Collectors – the art platform I founded in 2008 – did a short interview with Erling 3 years ago that you can still look up online. In the end we asked him to tell us the best advice he’s ever received about collecting art. He explained that it was actually the same advice he got early on as an explorer: “Think ahead, travel light and leave your fears behind.” I think it’s not presumptuous to say that Erling Kagge has actually made the most out of this small and simple piece of wisdom. He walked to the North Pole. Then he walked to the South Pole. Finally he climbed Mount Everest. Fortunately it’s not the goal of this book to make us into some kind of extreme pedestrians. In an unagitated and unpretentious style, Erling shares his insights about something we take so much for granted that we even forget to think about it. I’ll continue to walk to my office.
All my best,
Christian Kaspar Schwarm
Erling Kagge
Walking – One Step at a Time
Viking, 2019
Read InscriptionDEAR FRIEND OF 8 BOOKS A YEAR,
I’ve just started walking again. To our office. I live in Berlin-Kreuzberg and it takes me about 35 minutes to arrive at the door of our library, located close to the Nollendorfplatz. Most of my way leads me through a beautiful park and I’ve no idea why I missed out on the opportunity to start my day like this for so long. There’s one thing you experience as a walker, though: even in the park you’re an absolute minority. For 1 walker you see about 20 cyclists, a lot of them riding in a rush not unlike the one we know from car drivers. Break. It was in the context of art where I first heard about Erling Kagge. He started collecting contemporary art over 30 years ago – and then wrote a book about his passion: “A Poor Collector’s Guide to buying Great Art”. Independent Collectors – the art platform I founded in 2008 – did a short interview with Erling 3 years ago that you can still look up online. In the end we asked him to tell us the best advice he’s ever received about collecting art. He explained that it was actually the same advice he got early on as an explorer: “Think ahead, travel light and leave your fears behind.” I think it’s not presumptuous to say that Erling Kagge has actually made the most out of this small and simple piece of wisdom. He walked to the North Pole. Then he walked to the South Pole. Finally he climbed Mount Everest. Fortunately it’s not the goal of this book to make us into some kind of extreme pedestrians. In an unagitated and unpretentious style, Erling shares his insights about something we take so much for granted that we even forget to think about it. I’ll continue to walk to my office.
All my best,
Christian Kaspar Schwarm