Showing posts with label Bruno Schulz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bruno Schulz. Show all posts

Sunday, August 3, 2008

July 10 - August 2, 2008



Everything That Rises A Book of Convergences
Lawrence Weschler
2006 Hardcover
10 cards



I was aware of this book when McSweeney's released it, but at the time I didn't have time to read it. This fall I had time to listen to Weschler's talk from U of M's Penny Stamps lecture series and now by August I've finally finished reading the book. There are four very different sections of this book. I found the first two the most interesting in the connections the essays explore between works of art and other things. One of my favorites is a photo of the moon that Weschler compares to a late Mark Rothko painting. I also appreciate that he also puts forward such observations without trying to tie them up into perfect explanations or lines of influence.



Before this book I've experience synchronicities with material I've read and things in daily life, but this book led to a great one. On page 99 there's a reproduction of Velazquez's Aesop. Unfamiliar with this painting until encountering it here, while reading this book I saw a copy of Aesop's face by John Singer Sargent (a copy of the original Velazquez) at the Ackland Museum of Art. (I also have some photos from when I was younger that look somewhat similar to the photo on page 79 which is just creepy.)

Some excerpts:

15- "What's interesting to me is that history repeats itself, not only in how people arrange themselves but in how the portraits of them stands in relation to them."

22- Joel Meyerowitz: "...one is always carrying a chapbook of images around. ...For a street photographer like myself, randomness is everything, because that's one thin the world has in abundance and I am just passing through it with my share."

33- "The artist's task is not to alter the world as the eye sees it into a world of aesthetic reality but to perceive the aesthetic reality within the actual world."
-James Agee: "how deep and deft creative intelligence must be to recognize, foresee and make permanent [that world's] best moments."
42- Benjamin: "...There is no document of civilization which is not at the same time a document of barbarism."
47- Rothko: "The people who weep before my paintings are having the same religious experience I had when I painted them."
-Rothko "If you are moved by the color relationships then you miss the point."
-"it draws you out and gives nothing back. Its presence, like that of a black hole, is of such density that you might lose your self there."
-"For those Rothkos do not make a statement; rather, they raise a demand, or more precisely maybe, a question."
-"There is a moment in looking at those paintings when we stop looking at them and they start looking at us- and if we are not careful, if there is not enough of us there, straight through us."
-"Rothko keeps bleeding out of aesthetical categories and into ethical ones. Not, is it beautiful? But rather, how should one lead one's life?"
-p. 46 and p. 49
-"And yet on the moon, there was nothing there...A vast interminable emptiness: a howling airless silence. A vacuum of meaning: absolute silence."
-W.H. Auden: "Out apparatniks will continue making/the usual squalid mess they call History:/all we can pray for is that artists,/chefs and saints may still appear to blithe it."
51- Eisenstein
-footnote- Larry McMurty (Lonesome Dove) (forefathers) "What they dreamed, we live and what they lived we dream."
53- "Funny the way mirrors (time or otherwise, canvas or crystal) are constantly doubling and redoubling possible significations in a vertiginous regress."
-Magritte, La reproduction interdite, 1937
54- Diebenkorn- solitary women
-"Abstraction: to be lost in thought, lost to thought transported out of oneself. But out of oneself toward what?"
57- trains- standard time
-Einstein- theory of relativity- trains- "one of the principal motifs in the exploration of simultaneity"
58- Einstein- day job- Swiss patent office- "mindless drudge work, something to help pay the bills while the real work of genius transpired late at night and around the margins."
-Georg Simmel's Philosophy of Money, 1900
-GS: "The meaning of money lies in the fact that it will be given away."
59- "As a tangible item, money is the most ephemeral thing in the external practical world; yet its content is the most stable since it stands as the point of indifference and balance between all other phenomena in the world..."
69- (Edward Snow- Vermeer's Girl with a Pearl Earring) LW- "Has she just turned toward us, Snow asks, by way of entry into the image, or is she just about to turn away?"
-"Capture and release. A punctum."
80- poster tribute to Bruno Schulz
89- (Herb) "He'd be my best reader and I was writing for him."
93 (Vermeer's Lacemaker) "...how everything in it is slightly out of focus, either too close or too far, except for the very thing the girl herself is focusing upon..."
133- Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists Midnight clock [currently it's 5 minutes to midnight]
159- (heart bumper stickers in 1981) "The phenomenon seemed at once naive and a bit hopeless- another American effort to single yourself out, to differentiate yourself (and your car) from the hordes of apparently identical beings and things. At the same time, it seemed like an attempt to reach out across the asphalt to signal your humanity (through what you hearted) to other souls..."
169- Persian proverb- "Fear those who fear you."
182- Rhonda Roland Shearer wrote in 1999 about Duchamp's L.H.O.O.Q.- "Duchamp had subtly superimposed a photo of his own strangely feminine face onto Da Vinci's portrait, before pencilling in the wicked little moustache and goatee."
-decades speculation about Da Vinci superimposing his face on the Mona Lisa
218- Proust
220- every cell in our bodies replaced every 7 years
223- W. G. Sebald's The Rings of Saturn- "The greater the distance, the clearer the view..."
232- Lao-Tzu- "...We shape clay into a pot, but it is the emptiness inside that holds whatever we want..."

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

May 14 - 24, 2008


Fischli and Weiss The Way Things Go
Jeremy Millar
2007, hardcover
18 cards

Fischli and Weiss are amazing. Joel and Amanda told me all about them this past summer after they say an exhibition of their work in Europe. Then MoCAD had their work Questions in the brilliant Words Fail Me exhibition. Their Manifesto is also a great addition to any wall and life. This spring Joel and Amanda saw Fischli and Weiss's The Way Things Go again at the Hirshorn and picked up the DVD version of it (available on Netflix even now). This book focuses on The Way Things Go exploring why and how is fascinates in a way that expands this work in exciting directions. The book starts from observation and experience of the work in museum and people's reactions, a rich terrain upon which to build while never reducing the work's "purposeless purposiveness".

Some brief notes from my cards and reading:
-Opens with a Wittgenstein quote
-Der Lauf der Dinge (The Ways Things Go)
2- clapping
-"Even in our ignorance...it was clear that we had watched something great."
3- "...It was a little frightening, being moved like this..."
4- "what makes it popular also makes it good"
-Laurence Sterne, Tristam Shandy, 1759
-connection to Fischli and Weiss's 1984 Equilibres
8- "Our traditional means of formal analysis seems unable to deal with works, such as those, that are less concerned with external appearance than with 'internal' conceptual coherence."
9- gravity
10- procede- Raymond Roussel
-Roussel, near-neighbor of the Prousts
11- Duchamp- Roussel- The Large Glass
-Robbe-Grillet
-Foucault
12- "As with Fischli and Weiss, a rigorous play is fundamental to Roussel's practice."
-Parmi Les Noirs, 1935- identical phrases- single letter- different meanings
15- Kierkegaard "Boredom is the root of all evil."
17- change
20- anticipation
-"Everywhere things are transformed into actions, nouns become verbs."
21- illustrations by Wiliam Heath Robinson
-Frederick Winslow Taylor
23- Esperanto
24- Futurists
27- "...it seems to be both an anticipation of the birth of time and memory of its end. But where does that place us?"
28- Archytas of Tarentum- 4th c. BCE- treatise on place
29- Focillon- "'a work of art treats space according to its own needs, defines space and even creates such space as may be necessary to it.'"
32- Henri Bergson- Creative Evolution
-the concrete solution
33- Bergson, time
34- waiting- humor
- Creative Evolution- influence on Marcel Proust
36- interventions
37-38- epic and anti-epic
55- "It becomes a part of time not apart from it."
-Bruno Schulz- "Our creators will not be heroes of romances in many volumes. Their roles will be short, concise; their characters- without a background. Sometimes, for one gestures, for one word along, we shall make the effort to bring them to life."
57- Bakhtin- laughter and the epic
59- the Incongruity Tradition
-1981 film, The Least Resistance, rat and bear costumes
60- 1979 sausage series
61- At the Carpet Shop- gherkins
66- Peter Fischli, "Operating on two planes at once is part of our practice."
-Koestler- impersonator
67- Baudrillard, The System of Objects, 1968
-machines and perfection
70- The Way Things Go- "...objects do no more than they need to, no more than they are able."
-simple object, technology
-familiar and unexpected
-Bergson, Le Rire, 1900
71- automatism and life
73- "Balance is most beautiful just before it collapses."
75- rigidity
-hesitate
76- pause
-timing, comedy
77-78- Kant- "laughter as 'an affection arising from the strained expectation being suddenly reduced to nothing.'"
80- "purposeless purposiveness"
81- seeing how it was made
82- "of the smile rather than the laugh"
-"smile of wonder"
83- "This smile is not ours alone, but sits with quiet benevolence on the faces of the artists too... Just as one can hear the smile in the voice of someone talking over the phone, so one can see it in Fischli and Weiss's artworks."
-"one can produce wonder only if one succeeds"
-place of wonder in their practice
84- St. Augustine
107- Fragen (Questions), relationship to Daston and Park Questiones naturals of Adelard of Bath
87- David Weiss, "There is a reason why the Pyramids are famous. When you go there, no matter how many photographs you've seen of them before, you realize that the Pyramids are unique and that you don't understand them..."
-Heidegger
89- the sublime
-"wondrous"
91
92