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An anthology devoted to mammoth vessels, such as chests and caskets , would constitute an important chapter in psychology. These complex pieces that a craftsman creates are covert adherents to a need for secrecy, of an intuitive sense of hiding places .

Gaston Bachelard, The Poetics of Space 1958, trans. Maria Jolas 1964, Beacon Press, Boston 1969, p 81

November 1994, Kirkland

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And so the old nest enters into the category of objects. The more regular the objects, the simpler the concept. But as our collection of nests grows, our imagination is unleashed, and we lose contact with living nests.

Gaston Bachelard, The Poetics of Space 1958, trans. Maria Jolas 1964, Beacon Press, Boston 1969; Ch 4, "nest", p94

December 1994, Kirkland

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Allegory is consistently repelled by the fragmentary, the imperfect, the incomplete - an affinity which finds its most comprehensive expression in the ruin , which Benjamin identified as the symbolicemblem par excellence. Here the works of man are reabsorbed into the landscape; ruins stand for history as an irreversible process of dissolution and decay, a progressive distancing from the origin

Craig Owens , The allegorical impulse, Toward a theory of Postmodernism "October" 12 Spring 1980, reprinted in "Beyond Recognition", Craig Owens, U Cal Press, 1992

November 1994, Kirkland

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Beauty, as a means and not as an end, is what makes the content of art powerful to the beholder . Because it can be used to deliver almost any payload, from Catholic dogma to sexual outlawry, beauty is impotent and afffirmative.

Peter Plagans paraphrasing Dave Hickey, "The Invisible Dragon: Four Essays on Beauty", LA, Art Issues Press 1993; in Art in America Nov 1994 p 37

December 1994, Kirkland

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Calvin: Look Hobbes, I got a paint-by-numbers kit ! It's incredibly lame.

Hobbes: But you're not painting in the lines and you're not using the colors that correspond to the numbers.

[.......... pause, Calvin thinks]

Calvin: If I did that, I'd get the picture they show on the box!

Hobbes: Ah.

Homicidal Psycho Jungle Cat - A Calvin and Hobbes Collection, Bill Watterson, Andrews & McMeel 1994

December 1994, Kirkland

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every refuge is a prize

Van Morrison, The Eagles, Hotel California; quoted by Craig Mundie

December 1994, Seattle

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Who would think this as a still life ?

JPdV, at Jack's xmas party at St John's in London, with Jack and Isabel, at Jack's insistence; said about a table corner with a plate of ham, bread, chutney and two bottles of wine on white table cloth.

December 1994, London

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"I cannot assemble anything that enters my head ," said Microx. "But on the other hand, not everything enters it. This frees me, as it does you - for we are unable to think of everything there is to think of, and it may well be that some other thing , not the thing we think up and which we make, is worthier of execution! What say you to this?"

Stanislaw Lem, from the short story "How Microx and Gigant made the universe expand", collected in Mortal Engines, Seabury Press, NY 1977

September 1994, Kirkland

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I'll never appear again as long as I live.

Granny T's last words September 1994, after Aunt Julia had been nagging her to eat, and had forced her to have a pear.

October 1994, Kirkland


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[Michel] Foucault and [Louis] Marin do not interpret works of art, if to interpret then is to assign them a meaning. They are interested more in what works of art say , and less in what they do; theirs is a performative view of cultural production.

Craig Owens, "Representation, Appropriation and Power," Art in America May 1982 9-21, reprinted in "Beyond Recognition", Craig Owens, U Cal Press, 1992, p 91

November 1994, La Conner

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Owens denies that the allegorical function of art ought to be to provide a mechanism by which the conflicts which confront societies -"individual well-being vs. general well-being, for example" - may be proposed and then indefinitely deferred .

JPdV's reflections on Craig Owens, The Allegorical Impulse , Toward a theory of Postmodernism Part 2, "October" 13, Summer 1980, reprinted in "Beyond Recognition", Craig Owens, U Cal Press, 1992, p 80

November 1994, Semi-ah-moo

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Sing vir my 'n liedjie wat Mamma nie hoor nie!

JPdV, to Mamma when he was small

December 1994, Stellenbosch

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The mind is the labyrinth which includes in itself its own exits .

Jacques Derrida, Speech and Phenomena, transl. David B Allison (Evanston: Northwestern Univ Press 1978) p 104, quoted in Craig Owens, The Allegorical Impulse , Toward a theory of Postmodernism Part 2, "October" 13, Summer 1980, reprinted in "Beyond Recognition

November 1994, Kirkland

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The work makes public something other than itself; it manifests something other ; it is an illusion. In the work of art something other is brought together with the thing that is made. To bring together is, in Greek, sumballein ; the work is a symbol.

Martin Heidegger, "The Origin of the Work of Art," in "Poetry, Language, Thought", trans. Albert Hofstadter (New York -Harper and Row 1971) 19-20; quoted in Craig Owens, The allegorical impulse, Toward a theory of Postmodernism "October" 12, Spring 1980,

Owens qualifies this quote by saying "Yet in this passage Heidegger is only reciting the litanies of philosophical aesthetics in order to prepare for their re-affirmation. The point is ironic, [...]."

November 1994, Semi-ah-moo

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There is thus a danger inherent in deconstruction: incorporating the very errors it exposes, it will continue to perform what it denounces as impossible and will, in the end, deny itself.

Craig Owens, The Allegorical Impulse , Toward a theory of Postmodernism Part 2, "October" 13, Summer 1980, reprinted in "Beyond Recognition", Craig Owens, U Cal Press, 1992, p 78

Owens then quotes Paul de Man in mitigation: "Deconstructive readings can point out the unwarranted identifications achieved by substitution, and so can prevent their recurrence even in their own discourse, ..."

November 1994, Kirkland

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... there will always be a deeper lonelinessin a closed than in an open, box. To verify images kills them , and it is always more enriching to imagine than to experience.

Gaston Bachelard, The Poetics of Space 1958, trans. Maria Jolas 1964, Beacon Press, Boston 1969, p 81

November 1994, Kirkland

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To deny something in one's judgment is the opposite of saying: "That is something that I would rather repress ."

Sigmund Freud, "Negation", transl. Joan Riviere, in General Psychological Theory (New York: Collier 1963) p 214, quoted in Craig Owens, "Representation, Appropriation and Power," Art in America May 1982 9-21, reprinted in "Beyond Recognition", Craig Owens, U Cal Press 1992, p 90

November 1994, Semi-ah-moo

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Made by Pierre de Vries. Copyright Pierre de Vries 1995 (whatever that means in this context...). Comments to pierredv@microsoft.com

hesis:-

putting, placing; a proposition, affirmation