This work is a confession in front of both myself and the one who reads my words
and looks at my images. It is unusual to confess with images, because they
uncover what we hide with words.
Through a body of visual arts practice completed between 2000 and 2007 and
its accompanying written commentary and critical account, I have attempted to
address notions of the "unknown". In this enquiry, the "unknown" is understood
to be hidden between "what I say and what I mean", where, for example,
consciousness has no access between drawing and intention, or between
prediction and intuition.
This enquiry has proceeded through a multiplicity of media and modalities.
In the - Personal Introduction - I describe some of the social, religious, political
and artistic conditions of Poland in the 1980's and 90's, and the way this context
has influenced my ideas and practice.
In the early chapters- 'Beginnings'- 'Confessions'- 'Architectural Objects'-
"Drawings on the Wall' - I trace the development of work between 1987 and the
beginning of the research period in 2000. I identify the way that the making of
these works enabled me to filter the major strands of concern that I later
recognized as the fundamental conceptual and thematic elements of my current
practice. In these chapters I describe the development of a sequence of works
which lead from early interactive performances, installations, objects, through
"altered" wardrobes, into architectural objects and wall drawings. I identify
a number of key aspects emerging from these works to do with absence and
presence explored through languages of light and darkness, spatial ambiguity,
linear illusion, motion and trace.
The central chapters are concerned with the work of the research period 2000 -
7. These chapter headings - 'Video' - 'Photographic Works' - 'Scores - the
Drawing Concerts' - 'Obituaries' - 'The Unknown - Negatives - Black Light - are
organized around the various modes of work that contribute to the research
period. Although these modes might be seen as discrete they are in fact highly
interwoven, dialogic and interdependent. Throughout, themes and concepts
born in earlier work are identified and developed. In - 'Video' - relationships to
drawing are identified, whilst repetition, looping and transposition open up
questions of time, duration and eternity, thus initiating the discourse of the
"unknown". 'Photographic Works' examines questions of the "still" and of
"doubling" where both work to displace the human figure into hyper-natural
environments where a meeting with the unknown might occur. 'Scores -
Drawing Concerts' how these concerts are based on the power of line, as
a consequence of honest, organic movement of hand and body in a response
to kinetic impulsion and the rules of necessity in live action. Connections are
made between this work and repetitive movement in the video works.
The relationship between sound and the act of drawing is considered.
'Obituaries' describes a series of works in which death announcements, as they
appear in a number countries and cultures, are put into a new context and
transformed. With the destruction of the message of the obituary, the presence
of the "unknown" is tested in both its personal and universal aspects.
'The Unknown - Negatives - Black Light' is a chapter that includes the most
recent work. The work described in this chapter draws together multiple strands
from across the whole body of previous work and is strongly related to other
artists whose work deals with the absence of light. This work became the
strongest bridge to the mystics who describe darkness as the most secure
condition for a meeting with the "unknown".
'Mystics and Teaching' - examines the relationship between notions of mystics
and my experience of what occurs between myself and students in a pedagogical
context. It examines how procedures described by mystics, while facing the
unknown, can be employed as methods to provoke appearance of the "unknown"
for each individual in the creative process. 'Artists and Curatorial Work' attempts
to locate my research in a wider context of artist's practice.
In conclusion, the following text will seek to demonstrate how the body of work
produced between 2000 and 2007 has engaged the viewer in a distinctive felt
communion with the ineffable and the "unknown". This body of work has sought
to visualize and manifest the "unknown" in a direct, physical and sensual
engagement between artist, artwork, and viewer. In other words, the central
premise of the work is set within a personalised relation to the "unknown" rather
than an objectivised "understanding" of the "unknown".
Date of Award | 2008 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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THE UNKNOWN That what I say is not what I mean
Wendland, T. (Author). 2008
Student thesis: PhD