Monday, 17 May 2010

Manuel Alvarado


A sign stands there saying, this is the village you are entering.

The sign names the place, speaks it as it were (an electronic voice could, these days, simulacrally speak it, as our 209 bus from Hammersmith to Barnes speaks its stops; but the orthographic sign 'speaks', I guess, in a voice that's in my head, thanks to my grasp of written language even in a language I do not know [this wouldn't work for me in Japanese, Mandarin, Arabic or Cyrillic]


Saturday, 15 May 2010

British Library: The Shelf as Spectacle


Serried ranks of books: stacks.




British Library Bachelard / More Clare Rae

A video exhibition at Bus Gallery

Powers of Google:

'The Rise and Fall is a new [2009] video work by Clare Rae, depicting the artist moving in a circle in mid air. The video is looped, the subject remains locked in an endless cycle floating through space. The Rise and Fall deals with ideas surrounding contemporary feminism and femininity, whilst investigating the relationships between gender, staging and performance.'

or:

'Good Girl and the Other
Clare Rae / Australia / 2007 / 2min / TBA
Synopsis:
Good Girl and the Other is a looped video work depicting the artist chasing her doppelganger
over and under a kitchen table. Set in a domestic interior, the repetitious movement and
soundtrack infer a psychological tension to create an emotive work that becomes fatiguing, as
any kind of resolution is avoided. This video is made by utilizing a stop motion technique,
which uses photographic stills, allowing for a precise overlapping of frames to create motion.
The resulting aesthetic and concept is unique and unconventional.
Biography:
Clare Rae graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Art degree in RMIT University in Melbourne.
She has done eighteen exhibitions in Australia and Singapore, and has won a Special
Commendation RMIT/ Siemens Fine Art Prize in 2007.'
This from: Inaugural Experimental Film Forum 2010, 22 May 2010, Saturday. I.e., a screening happening a week today! far away!

*

Google as ultimate Association Machine: 'this next to' / 'this leads to' that.

The weight of the two words: Search. Engine.

Friday, 14 May 2010

Bachelard, library days

An image by Clare Rae

“To withdraw into one’s corner is undoubtedly a meager expression. But despite its meagerness, it has numerous images, some, perhaps, of great antiquity, images that are psychologically primitive. At times, the simpler the image, the vaster the dreams.”

Gaston Bachelard


Clare Rae. 'Untitled' from the series 'Climbing the Walls and Other Actions' 2009

Monday, 10 May 2010

Ekphrasis, 1

And googling for 'images' using words or phrases brings up 'interesting connections'

Henri Matisse


Henri Matisse, Sala vermelha, 1908
Óleo s/ tela, 93x73,5cm
Museu do Ermitage, S. Petersburg, Rússia

(source: http://antologiadoesquecimento.blogspot.com/2005/10/ut-pictura-poesis-25-o-vermelho.html)


The yellow / orange frame separates red from green.
The trees against green match the apples against red, in point (!) of circularity.

The google here was ut picura poesis, which raises the ekphrasis question.

Gaston Bachelard is useful here, his late 'space' volume.



Sunday, 9 May 2010

Parergon, 1

(dé)limitations du soi by Zazou_.
"Le parergon inscrit quelque chose qui vient en plus, extérieur au champ propre [...] mais dont l'extériorité transcendante ne vient jouer, jouxter, frôler, frotter, presser la limite elle-même et intervenir dans le dedans que dans la mesure où le dedans manque." - J. Derrida, La vérité en peinture, p. 65

The exploration of the frame is essential to any consideration of metonymy broadly considered, that is of contiguity as operating within the work of art.

Serried Ranks, 1

In viewing Annabel Elgar's wonderful current photography show at Wapping Project Bankside, the phrase 'serried ranks' kept coming into my mind to describe one of the 'resources' she puts into play.

I decided to try my Google luck at the phrase, especially since, strangely enough, in extensive quotations s.v. 'serried' and related trades in the OED the phrase itself fails to turn up. Here is the first result.

In Serried Ranks

This is from John L. Stoddard's lectures on Japan, and is indeed labelled 'Serried Ranks'.

Here is a rather different 'serried ranks' image.

Piles of pennies

More on both of these later!