He's a very intelligent and well read man who really gets the beauty in chaos and the importance of destruction in the creative process! He has a very complex perspective! I love it!
From ruins springs up hope, tunnels connect us with our roots wherever we live, the process of painting reveals intentions or results which are not conscious to the painter. I shall remember these thoughts. His paintings are powerful. The professor does not read well the intentions of the painter yet the conversation was fruitful.
I love finnegans wake. I wade in it continually, and I think Anselm Kiefer is another colossus, the supreme genius of the visual art of these decades. my thanks to Professor Mengham and to Anselm whose work brings me such deep joy
William Kentridge’s quotation springs to mind, ‘invite the philosopher in for coffee, but when making the work leave him outside’. Unfortunately the ‘academic’ brings him back in after the work is complete and does very little (particularly here) to enhance the felt experience.
Hi Eddie , I hope my comment didn't sound like an invasion of privacy. Your comment tells about a wonderful woman with a beautiful heart which made me write the comment I don't usually write in the comment section but I think you deserve this compliment. If you don't mind, can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….
I'm not clear what enhancing the felt experience would consist of. It seems to me that Rod Mengham, who is a poet and publisher of poetry as well as an academic, does well in encouraging Kiefer to express the enthusiasms which feed his work. Also, the brief views of the exhibition help - particularly as I missed it - to give an idea of the physicality of the work. In any case, I don't share the common distrust of academics: some are good, some aren't, and it's up to the rest of us to decide which is which.
Ive never been so proud to own a copy of finnegans wake.
loved his new movie.. love his work and mind
He's a very intelligent and well read man who really gets the beauty in chaos and the importance of destruction in the creative process! He has a very complex perspective! I love it!
I went to his installation in Berlin back in the early 90s. It was so beautiful.
What an art animal. Love his work
From ruins springs up hope, tunnels connect us with our roots wherever we live, the process of painting reveals intentions or results which are not conscious to the painter. I shall remember these thoughts. His paintings are powerful. The professor does not read well the intentions of the painter yet the conversation was fruitful.
I'm humbled
I love finnegans wake. I wade in it continually, and I think Anselm Kiefer is another colossus, the supreme genius of the visual art of these decades. my thanks to Professor Mengham and to Anselm whose work brings me such deep joy
This is incredible, one of the well-known living artist today. what is odd of witnessing this conversation.
William Kentridge’s quotation springs to mind, ‘invite the philosopher in for coffee, but when making the work leave him outside’. Unfortunately the ‘academic’ brings him back in after the work is complete and does very little (particularly here) to enhance the felt experience.
Hi Eddie , I hope my comment didn't sound like an invasion of privacy. Your comment tells about a wonderful woman with a beautiful heart which made me write the comment I don't usually write in the comment section but I think you deserve this compliment. If you don't mind, can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….
I'm not clear what enhancing the felt experience would consist of. It seems to me that Rod Mengham, who is a poet and publisher of poetry as well as an academic, does well in encouraging Kiefer to express the enthusiasms which feed his work. Also, the brief views of the exhibition help - particularly as I missed it - to give an idea of the physicality of the work. In any case, I don't share the common distrust of academics: some are good, some aren't, and it's up to the rest of us to decide which is which.
A pencil in the pocket. ✏
Podem colocar legendas?
Literature collides with visual art.