60 bananów i 127 trumien Titusa-Carmela
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Autor:
Siatka, Krzysztof
Źródło: Annales Universitatis Paedagogicae Cracoviensis. 217, Studia de Arte et Educatione 11 (2016), s. [122]-132
Język: pl
Słowa kluczowe:
Gerard Titus-CarmelJacques Derrida
The Pocket Size Tlingit Coffin
conceptualism
Data: 2016
Metadata
Pokaż pełny rekordOpis:
Dokument cyfrowy wytworzony, opracowany, opublikowany oraz finansowany w ramach programu "Społeczna Odpowiedzialność Nauki" - modułu "Wsparcie dla bibliotek naukowych" przez Ministerstwo Nauki i Szkolnictwa Wyższego w projekcie nr rej. SONB/SP/465103/2020 pt. "Organizacja kolekcji czasopism naukowych w Repozytorium UP wraz z wykonaniem rekordów analitycznych".Streszczenie
The works of French artist Gerard Titus-Carmel in the late 1960s and 70s met with great
interest in critical and philosophical thinking. Jacques Derrida devoted one of his most important
essays, entitled Carthage, to one of Carmel’s works. The cycle of 127 drawings, entitled
The Pocket Size Tlingit Coffin, is the documentation of an enigmatic and symbolic box which
purpose is not entirely known. The artist used a variety of techniques and drawing manners
to create a variation on the image of a strange object every day. In the course of the accumulation
of representations, the source of the inspirational cycle has moved away. The series,
conceived as a research process aimed at learning nature, could be the destination of a Pocket
Coffin, resulting in narrative thickening and, in fact, budding ignorance of the paradigm that
was to be resolved, clarified, and explored at the beginning. The Titus-Carmel project, located
in the Parisian Pompidou Center collection, is a forgotten example of conceptual flow in visual
arts and a very important model of the work that highlights the process of creation over the
final physicality of the object. It is a great reflection on the meaning of gestures of repetition,
multiplication or reproduction, so important for the philosophy of contemporary art. The
Pocket Size Tlingit Coffin inspired Jacques Derrida to create an analogue textbook-diary that
in subsequent chapters, written daily with reference to subsequent drawings, deconstructs
concepts such as original and copy, the beginning and the end, or imagines possible paradoxes,
such as the existence of copies without original, or secondary of the original with respect
to the copy. The dialogue of the artist and philosopher is one of the most interesting interdisciplinary
speculations in the art of the second half of the 20th century. Both creators have
expanded the genre of dialogue and journal to deconstructive method of cognition.