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1981
Volume 9, Issue 1
  • ISSN: 2040-3682
  • E-ISSN: 2040-3690

Abstract

Abstract

Of the most recent turn to literary practices in contemporary art, this article studies one facet: that which relates to the lyric tradition. It hopes to make a case for ‘lyric images’, drawing on the works by artists Tacita Dean, Day for Night (2009), and Roni Horn, Still Water [...] (1999). Read around poems by Emily Dickinson, John Fuller and Margaret Atwood, how these artworks utilize photography’s natural capacity to mirror both the recursive syntactic structure and the blending of instantaneity with immortality common to the lyric poem is explored. Particularly, the article considers notions of cyclical seriality – as composed of singular moments, yet tending towards the infinite – both formally and referentially. Whether these qualities provoke an imaginative and/or emotive looking that contrasts with our response to previous assumptions of the written form in conceptual art practices (e.g. Art and Language) is also reflected upon, in order to contemplate why this particular hybridising may be current in photographic practice.

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/content/journals/10.1386/pop.9.1.22_1
2018-04-01
2024-12-14
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  • Article Type: Article
Keyword(s): allegory; immortality; lyric poetry; repetition; Roni Horn; Tacita Dean
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