sábado, 30 de novembro de 2013

AUGUSTUS VINCENT TACK



Augustus Vincent Tack's Spirit of Creation, 1944.
(George Washington University’s Lisner Auditorium). 
In 1944, as a commissioned project facilitated by Duncan Phillips, Tack created a beautiful mural, called Time and Timelessness (Spirit of Creation),  to be used as a fire curtain in the university’s new auditorium.  Tack fell ill during the creation of the mural and only completed half of the panels himself. The remainder were carried out by longtime assistant, Carl Lella.
The design for the fire curtain is closely related to the painting Liberation, in the Phillips’s permanent collection. The painting Time and Timelessness  is a sketch for the mural.
Tack, a deeply spiritual and philosophical artist, truly took the university’s commission to heart. 

Photos: Sarah Osborne Bender.




sábado, 16 de novembro de 2013



Ante-metamorfose
Jorge de Sena


Ao pé dos cardos sobre a areia fina
que o vento a pouco e pouco amontoara
contra o seu corpo (mal se distinguia
tal como as plantas entre a areia arfando)
um deus dormia. Há quanto tempo? Há quanto?
E um deus ou deusa? Quantos sóis e chuvas,
quantos luares nas águas ou nas nuvens,
tisnado haviam essa pele tão lisa
em que a penugem tinha areia esparsa?
Negros cabelos se espalhavam onde
Nos braços recruzados se escondia o rosto.
E os olhos? Abertos ou fechados? Verdes ou castanhos
no breve espaço em que o seu bafo ardia?
Mas respirava? Ou só uma luz difusa
se demorava no seu dorso ondeante
que de tão nu e antigo se vestia
da confiada ausência em que dormia?
Mas dormiria? As pernas estendidas,
com um pé sobre outro pé, e os calcanhares
um pouco soerguidos na lembrança de asas;
as nádegas suaves, as espáduas curvas
e na tão leve sombra das axilas
adivinhados pelos...Deus ou deusa?
Há quanto tempo ali dormia? Há quanto?
Ou não dormia? Ou não estaria ali?
Ao pé dos cardos, junto à solidão
Que quase lhe tocava do areal imenso,
Do imenso mundo, e as águas sussurrando -
– ou não estaria ali?… E um deus ou deusa?
Imagem, só lembrança, aspiração?
De perto ou longe não se distinguia.


Originalmente publicado como “Metamorfose” (Fidelidade , 1958), o poema é renomeado “Ante-metamorfose” em 1963, passando a primeiro poema, ou “ante-poema”, do livro Metamorfoses.

sexta-feira, 15 de novembro de 2013

aviso - alteração data tutorias

As tutorias por mim marcadas para próximo dia 19, passam a ser no dia 20, pelas 14.30h em Almada. O Manuel Caldeira estará presente e veremos os trabalhos que mais justificarem atenção imediata (começando pelos novos alunos). Outras datas se juntarão, consoante o ritmo a que se processar esta primeira conversa mais extensa. Alunos que não tenham ainda trabalho devem fazer-me chegar essa informação, quer seja eu o tutor designado ou não.

Manuel Castro Caldas

segunda-feira, 11 de novembro de 2013

Ciência das Imagens Imagens da Ciência

15 de Novembro | ANTÓNIO COUTINHO | Escolas e indivíduos: Lamarck vs Darwin

Pequeno Auditório da CULTURGEST
Rua Arco do Cego 1, Campo Pequeno, 1000, Lisboa
Levantamento de senha de acesso 30 minutos antes do início da sessão, no limite dos lugares disponíveis. Máximo: 2 senhas por pessoa.
Informações | 21 790 51 55 | culturgest.bilheteira@cgd.pt

domingo, 10 de novembro de 2013

Hanns Schimansky










































































(John Yau, "What Happens When There is No Center and It Cannot Hold?", 2012, in Hyperallergic)



This is from an essay I wrote about Schimansky’s drawings in 2010:

Instead of using a pencil or crayon to make a quick or delicate line across the surface, he will roll, twirl, or push the tip of the medium against the paper. The changing tension and friction between medium and surface becomes unpredictable, causing the means to become something that the artist cannot completely control. In fact, I feel there are moments when the artist functions as a conduit between means and medium, when he must be attentive to the give and take between the drawing tool and the paper’s topography.
By establishing a particular, often awkward orientation between the medium and the surface, the artist goes a long way toward denying any kind of fluidity or mastery. By holding the instrument at an acute angle to the surface in order to make downward moving lines or rolling the drawing tool to make a twisting, rough-edged line, Schimansky undermines the movement of a pencil or paint stick across the paper. Within these and other processes, he often stops and starts, with each stop signaling a transition from one kind of line or shape to another. In some drawings, it’s as if different abstract hieroglyphs have invaded each other’s territory, forming a new hybrid language.  Schimansky’s drawings aren’t unitary; they don’t resolve themselves into an easily consumable composition. They demand to be scrutinized, to be disassembled and recombined in the mind’s eye. And it is this connection between eye and mind, and the visual and the tactile, which lifts Schimansky’s drawings and “Foldings” into their own resonant realm.




Schimansky’s drawings are notable for their breaks and transitions in conjunction with different kinds of forms, marks and linear signs. These shifts and ruptures result in a collection of polysepalous fragments in which family resemblance is tenuous at best. Instead of investigating the more familiar path in which repetition and variation are paired, the artist brackets repetition and its seeming opposite, rupture. This surprising combination results in drawings unlike anyone else’s. The viewer senses that the logic unfolding in the drawing, and to some extent governing its outcome, is neither singular nor discernible. Even when the drawing feels incremental, the result of the artist repeating similar marks, he always introduces a different order of marks. In counterpoint to Minimalism, and its emphasis on paring down, Schimansky works incrementally, but seldom along a single trajectory. It’s as if one thought or perception interacts with another and another in no predictable way.




In the above-quoted passages, I did not pay enough attention to the “foldings, which Schimansky began making in 1980. The finished “folding,” as presented, includes sections that have been drawn over as well as parts that are still folded over and thus remain hidden, giving the paper a layered, sculptural dimension — it is both a drawing and a shallow relief, a hybrid.
Because we are unable to see the entire sheet of paper, we become acutely aware that our view is both complete and partial, and that the relation between the two eludes our grasp. It is an experience that resonates with our current understanding of the universe, and of the existence of things and forces (dark matter, for example) that remain partially hidden in the realm of conjecture.
Schimansky’s “foldings” are unlike anyone else’s drawings. They advance a world that is simultaneously visible and unseen. Some forms are connected;  others seem to be untethered to what’s around them. And yet, the drawings never strike me as arbitrary. Decisions have been made at every step of the process. They just don’t add up in ways that we are used to, and find comfort in. I suspect that Schimansky recognizes such comforts are an illusion, that we can never construct a sanctuary that is perfect for every occasion.
*   *   *
Is it getting harder to believe in something, anything? Is this why so many young artists settle for parody and citation?
 


When Hanns and I talk about a “free line,” he often asks why an artist would want to submit to an external system. Systems aren’t just theories about art — they are repressive ideologies which offer a false sense of security. In this regard, he agrees with Richter and Rauch. He doesn’t agree, however, with their use of oil paint and the large scale of their works.
Hanns doesn’t make drawings because he is modest, though modesty in this day and age is not necessarily a bad thing. Look at Raoul De Keyser or, closer to home, Thomas Nozkowski, both of whom the artist admires.
Hanns’ has a voracious appetite for art. There are four tall piles of art books on a table in his studio. In one pile, a Barry Le Va monograph lies on top of one devoted to Gaston Chaissac. He loves their work, but has no desire to be like either. Hanns’ drawings are recognizably his, but he doesn’t have a style.  And, in that sense, he doesn’t have a product. Perhaps that is one thing he is after when he asks, “What is a free line?”