The painter plays with his camera
and projector, using himself
as image, as subject, as object
to realize what a film can do
to express art by altering
reality. He learned that film
doesn’t express art but simply
exchanges one image for another,
an artistic bartering of image,
of self.
Photograph: Self-portrait by Edvard Munch (1930).
Wow!
ReplyDeleteThis is pretty profound!
There was a fascinating show, "Snapshot", a few months back at The Phillips Collection that explored how artists from Bonnard to Vuilard used the earliest Kodak hand-helds to record their private and public lives. (We, of course, can only imagine what those artists might have done with today's digital cameras.) Interestingly, the photographs they took often served as inspiration for paintings.
ReplyDeletePondering this one for awhile ...
ReplyDeleteI love this self-portrait. What an interesting piece. And your poem? It pegs the process. Well done, Glynn.
ReplyDeleteimage
ReplyDeleteself
image
self
image