7 research outputs found
Zmysły, ściana i dziura
SENSES, WALL AND HOLELiterature and art are bound together based on words used in the context of different senses. Firstly: hearing. How literature is connected with music? Considering poetry, it is a simple problem: poems include rhythm, so they are a form of music score. Prose, however, includes images, scenes, therefore the pieces of prose rather resemble scenography. Soundless images are music-like when they are connected with psychological entanglements, too difficult or too subtle to talk about them in simple terms. Music reveals their innocent, almost self-evident ordinariness. Therefore, without going into the theory, in the section on hearing I’m talking rather about non-hearing and incompatibility of music and poetic/prosaic ‘scores’. I refer to the natural white spots or ‘holes’ connected with hearing and feeling as they were discussed by Norwid, de Sade and Kafka. It is impossible to express them through an established medium – words, sound or video.Second: sight. A piece of literature, when ‘translated’ to images, becomes integral illustration of the text as in Winnie the Pooh, The Little Prince and Alice in Wonderland. Writers and illustrators reveal their deeper, not necessarily conscious, psychic reality. Alice reveals includes the deformation of character as the result of the real internalized pressures of cultural control. This ‘oppressed’ sphere in Alice and then in its film adaptation by Disney was connected with sexuality, therefore the analysis concerns deformation the artist is influenced by external pressure and mitigation he accepts or conceals the existence of pressure.Thirdly – touch. Touch is erotic. Touching walls built into the nature by culture is erotic, although the fact may horrify and sicken us.Fourth – intuition sixth sense or sensus sacralis. This is the digression towards the art of describing metaphysics, which originally was mathematics.Fifth: balance. Art-pieces ‘speak’ while revealing their ‘fullness’ or also through the symbolic connotations of their appearance, and the circumstances in which perception occurs. As example, I chose poetic book by Andrzej Bednarczyk entitled Temple of the Stone.Sixth and final: the taste. Taste is the ultimate factor in the process of perception of art. Can we literally understand that statement? Is taste really a part of the perception of literature? Referring to the Bible, the Book of Ezekiel, I try to find confirmation for my presumption that from the moment of putting it in writing and thus alienating literature from its organic aspect, we are dealing with something fragmentary, incomplete, mutilated.SENSES, WALL AND HOLELiterature and art are bound together based on words used in the context of different senses. Firstly: hearing. How literature is connected with music? Considering poetry, it is a simple problem: poems include rhythm, so they are a form of music score. Prose, however, includes images, scenes, therefore the pieces of prose rather resemble scenography. Soundless images are music-like when they are connected with psychological entanglements, too difficult or too subtle to talk about them in simple terms. Music reveals their innocent, almost self-evident ordinariness. Therefore, without going into the theory, in the section on hearing I’m talking rather about non-hearing and incompatibility of music and poetic/prosaic ‘scores’. I refer to the natural white spots or ‘holes’ connected with hearing and feeling as they were discussed by Norwid, de Sade and Kafka. It is impossible to express them through an established medium – words, sound or video.Second: sight. A piece of literature, when ‘translated’ to images, becomes integral illustration of the text as in Winnie the Pooh, The Little Prince and Alice in Wonderland. Writers and illustrators reveal their deeper, not necessarily conscious, psychic reality. Alice reveals includes the deformation of character as the result of the real internalized pressures of cultural control. This ‘oppressed’ sphere in Alice and then in its film adaptation by Disney was connected with sexuality, therefore the analysis concerns deformation the artist is influenced by external pressure and mitigation he accepts or conceals the existence of pressure.Thirdly – touch. Touch is erotic. Touching walls built into the nature by culture is erotic, although the fact may horrify and sicken us.Fourth – intuition sixth sense or sensus sacralis. This is the digression towards the art of describing metaphysics, which originally was mathematics.Fifth: balance. Art-pieces ‘speak’ while revealing their ‘fullness’ or also through the symbolic connotations of their appearance, and the circumstances in which perception occurs. As example, I chose poetic book by Andrzej Bednarczyk entitled Temple of the Stone.Sixth and final: the taste. Taste is the ultimate factor in the process of perception of art. Can we literally understand that statement? Is taste really a part of the perception of literature? Referring to the Bible, the Book of Ezekiel, I try to find confirmation for my presumption that from the moment of putting it in writing and thus alienating literature from its organic aspect, we are dealing with something fragmentary, incomplete, mutilated
Orfeusz w Nigdy (wykład w Muzeum Teatru we Wrocławiu)
Art does not exist without myth. It is what gives meaning to an artwork. It is thinking in its own, and art, always impressing something on some- one, avoids strict, rational, but also prone to pressure norms path when we reach sacrum; art is the only language to speak about sacrum. The char- acter of Orpheus has inspired artists of different genres for centuries, but it seems to be seen from only one side. The mythical hero does not break a formal order, but an authentic norm, because he personifies a fact that norms do not exhaust human nature, only regulate life of societies. Thereby an “innocent” hero cannot be mythical. I searched for Orpheus’ guilt and Euridice’s counterparts in other myths, or even different mythologies. One of them is, then, Lot’s wife. I admit, I was inspired by Wisława Szymbor- ska’s poem about her
Orfeusz w Nigdy wykład w Muzeum Teatru we Wrocławiu
Orpheus in Never Lecture in the Museum of the Theater in Wroclaw Art does not exist without myth. It is what gives meaning to an artwork. It is thinking in its own, and art, always impressing something on someone, avoids strict, rational, but also prone to pressure norms path when we reach sacrum; art is the only language to speak about sacrum. The character of Orpheus has inspired artists of different genres for centuries, but it seems to be seen from only one side. The mythical hero does not break a formal order, but an authentic norm, because he personifies a fact that norms do not exhaust human nature, only regulate life of societies. Thereby an “innocent” hero cannot be mythical. I searched for Orpheus’ guilt and Euridice’s counterparts in other myths, or even different mythologies. One of them is, then, Lot’s wife. I admit, I was inspired by Wisława Szymborska’s poem about her.Orpheus in Never Lecture in the Museum of the Theater in Wroclaw Art does not exist without myth. It is what gives meaning to an artwork. It is thinking in its own, and art, always impressing something on someone, avoids strict, rational, but also prone to pressure norms path when we reach sacrum; art is the only language to speak about sacrum. The character of Orpheus has inspired artists of different genres for centuries, but it seems to be seen from only one side. The mythical hero does not break a formal order, but an authentic norm, because he personifies a fact that norms do not exhaust human nature, only regulate life of societies. Thereby an “innocent” hero cannot be mythical. I searched for Orpheus’ guilt and Euridice’s counterparts in other myths, or even different mythologies. One of them is, then, Lot’s wife. I admit, I was inspired by Wisława Szymborska’s poem about her
Sztuka i polityka, pole dzikie
ART AND POLITICS: WILD FIELDUrszula Benka describes Russian interference in publishing Polish poetry in the seventeenth century. What are the criteria for censorship? What is work of art from the point of view of a censor? The futility of censorship as a reversal of art-promoting. Distrust of censored culture is connected with promoting myths and with ignorance. If someone considers politics as manifestations of spiritual culture, and if he/she considers its legal and military language in the context of sacral-psychological phenomena, the same person must also consider the process of producing myths in the context of social pathology. ART AND POLITICS: WILD FIELDUrszula Benka describes Russian interference in publishing Polish poetry in the seventeenth century. What are the criteria for censorship? What is work of art from the point of view of a censor? The futility of censorship as a reversal of art-promoting. Distrust of censored culture is connected with promoting myths and with ignorance. If someone considers politics as manifestations of spiritual culture, and if he/she considers its legal and military language in the context of sacral-psychological phenomena, the same person must also consider the process of producing myths in the context of social pathology
ART AND POLITICS: WILD FIELD
Urszula Benka describes Russian interference in publishing Polish poetry
in the seventeenth century. What are the criteria for censorship? What is
work of art from the point of view of a censor? The futility of censorship
as a reversal of art-promoting. Distrust of censored culture is connected
with promoting myths and with ignorance. If someone considers politics
as manifestations of spiritual culture, and if he/she considers its legal and
military language in the context of sacral-psychological phenomena, the
same person must also consider the process of producing myths in the
context of social pathology