EKPHRASIS

 

ekphrasis

The word ekphrasis, or ecphrasis, comes from the Greek for the written description of a work of art produced as a rhetorical exercise, often used in the adjectival form ekphrastic. It is a vivid, often dramatic, verbal description of a visual work of art, either real or imagined. In ancient times, it referred to a description of any thing, person, or experience. The word comes from the Greek ἐκ ek and φράσις phrásis, 'out' and 'speak' respectively, and the verb ἐκφράζειν ekphrázein, 'to proclaim or call an inanimate object by name'.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

T

CUT a person out of a real/ imagined painting/image and PASTE them into a story.

CUT and PASTE different historical known facts about an artist into a NARRATIVE.

Girl with a Pearl Earring is a 1999 historical novel written by Tracy Chevalier. Set in 17th-century Delft, Holland, the novel was inspired by local painter Johannes Vermeer's Girl with a Pearl Earring. Chevalier presents a fictional account of Vermeer, the model and the painting. The novel was adapted into a 2003 film of the same name and a 2008 play. In May 2020, BBC Radio 4 broadcast a new dramatisation of the novel.


Tracy Chevalier's inspiration for the novel was a poster of Johannes Vermeer's Girl with a Pearl Earring. She had bought the poster as a nineteen-year-old and it hung wherever she lived for sixteen years. Chevalier noted that the "ambiguous look" on the girl's face left a lasting impression on her. She describes the girl's expression "to be a mass of contradictions: innocent yet experienced, joyous yet tearful, full of longing and yet full of loss." She began to think of "the story behind that look”, imagining it as directed at the painter.
Chevalier's research included reading the history of the period, studying the paintings of Vermeer and his peers, and spending several days in Delft. Pregnant at the time of researching and writing, she finished the work in eight months because she had a "biological deadline". WIKI

 

 

 

 

Notional ekphrasis

Notional ekphrasis may describe mental processes such as dreams, thoughts and whimsies of the imagination. The expression may also be applied to an art describing the origin of another art, how it came to be made and the circumstances of its being created. Finally it may describe an entirely imaginary and non-existing work of art, as though it were factual and existed in reality. WIKICAN YOU THINK OF OTHER ARTIST'S

 

 

18th November 2021

Magicking, summoning, Calling up

Husserl

Ludwig Wittgenstein (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)

 

Marcel Duchamp’s Absolute Art — Mousse Magazine and Publishing
by Boris Groys


Indra's

Net

BORGES LIbrary of Babel

BORGES The Aleph

 

Hauntology: Derrida, Specters of Marx


Transubstantiation

Unnatural Theology: Religion, Art and Media after the Death of God (Political Theologies):

Gere, Charlie


Walter Benjamin, Theses on the Philosophy of History

 

BORGES The Library of Babel (READ OUT LOUD)

 

STARRY STARRY NIGHT (DON MCLEAN)

 

 

 

Words

Axes
After whose stroke the wood rings,
And the echoes!
Echoes traveling
Off from the center like horses.

The sap
Wells like tears, like the
Water striving
To re-establish its mirror
Over the rock

That drops and turns,
A white skull,
Eaten by weedy greens.
Years later I
Encounter them on the road----

Words dry and riderless,
The indefatigable hoof-taps.
While
From the bottom of the pool, fixed stars
Govern a life.

Sylvia Plath