Friday, August 12, 2011

Trilobites:


Drawings of extinct trilobites by Dr. Sam Gon III:







Drawings of extinct trilobites by Dr. Sam Gon III:


Friday, May 13, 2011

Inside/Outside

…perhaps that’s what I feel, an outside and an inside and me in the middle, perhaps that’s what I am, the thing that divides the world in two, on the one side the outside on the other the inside, that can be as thin as foil, I’m neither one side not the other, I’m in the middle, I’m the partition, I’ve two surfaces and no thickness, perhaps that’s what I feel, myself vibrating, I’m the tympanum, on the one hand the mind on the other the world, I don’t belong to either…


Samuel Beckett, The Unnameable Grove Press, New York, 1991, p.283

Friday, March 11, 2011

Thea Djordjadze:

What art is about is the construction of the materials, so the materials then become aestheticised or pleasurable. The pleasure of those materials has to do with the intensification of the body. So this impulse to art is to not make oneself seductive but to made oneself intense, and in the process to circulate some of that eros that would otherwise go into sexuality.

[Elizabeth Grosz interview with Julie Copeland on Radio National 2005]

Artwork by Thea Djordjadze:









Opening abdomens:

Most creatures have a vague belief that a very precarious hazard, a kind of transparent membrane, divides death from love; and that the profound idea of nature demands that the giver of life should die at the moment of giving. Here this idea, whose memory lingers still over the kisses of man, is realised in its primal simplicity. No sooner has the union been accomplished than the male's abdomen opens, the organ detaches itself, dragging with itthe massof the entrails; the wings relax , and as though struck by lightning, the emptied body turns and turns on itself and sinks down into the abyss.

[Maurice Maeterlinck from The Life of the Bee 1901]

Images by Ernst Haeckel:





Monday, February 28, 2011

Simulating death when dead:

The fact is that there are hardly any reactions that it is not also able to perform when decapitated...in this condition, it can walk, regain its balance, move one of its threatened limbs autonomously, assume the spectral position, mate, lay eggs, build an ootheca, and, quite astonishingly, fall down in a false corpse-like immobility when confronted by danger or following a peripheral stimulation. I am deliberately using this indirect means of expressing myself because our language, it seems to me, has so much difficulty expressing, and our reason understanding, the fact that when dead, the mantis can simulate death.

[Roger Caillois on the Praying Mantis, from Space, Time and Perversion by Elizabeth Grosz 1995]


Artwork is by Hany Armanious:








Benjamin Armstrong:


Vision is suggested as the eye's phantom limb, or the compulsive effluence of a beached mollusc clumsily groping in the dark. In certain tableaux visions cut loose from their moorings, glibly pursuing an uncertain trajectory, perhaps with evil intent, ghosts in search of a body once more...perhaps something to eat. Elsewhere visions blindly collide, sag, and bend, becoming deflated...tired.


[George Huon, from Benjamin Armstrong: Gathering Exhibition brochure. Melbourne: Project Space, RMIT University, 2005]








Friday, February 25, 2011

Prosthetics:


Prosthetics: castration complex raised to the level of an art form.

[J.G. Ballard, Project for a Glossary of the Twentieth Century in A Users Guide to the Millennium: Essays and Reviews 1996]




Artwork by Jana Sterbak:





Aimee Mullins, professional Athlete/actor/model:





Aimee Mullins and Alexander McQueen:






Aimee Mullins and Matthew Barney,
Cremaster Cycle: