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Gustave Moreau's Prized Possessions The Secret Language of Jacques Derrida |
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David Ebony
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To resume again...
Did You Say Bizarre?
Analytical Case
Sex, The Last Thirty Years
Prized Possessions
Surplus-Enjoyment
Rorty and the Orchids
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The link that connects visual art with other forms of expression is often
elusive, like the desert road that turns out to be a mirage. Sometimes, however, the connection is more convincing. It appears to be a kind of sturdy bridge traversing great distances of time and space. It allows one easy access to various cultures, histories and geopolitical realms like a causeway connecting islands in the great archipelago of truth. This enigmatic passageway came sharply and abruptly into focus when a visit to a retrospective of works by Gustave Moreau (1826-1898), at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York,
1 coincided with my reading of Monolingualism of the Other; or, The Prosthesis of Origin, a recently
published English translation of a book by Jacques Derrida.2
The remarkable clarity of the connection between Moreau and Derrida has most to do with the notion of "possession," a pervasive issue in their works. In various ways, each asks the same question: Does one possess language, or is one possessed by language? Derrida in Monolingualism of the Other asserts that if language is able to possess, then it does so by means of a form of aggressive colonialism. Moreau's work reflects just such a colonialist enterprise in which, one might say, the artist aims to seduce the phantoms of language. No doubt, Moreau feared that left at large, these apparitions would likely endeavor to possess the artist's soul. [ ]
1. The exhibition, "Gustave Moreau: Between Epic and Dream," opened at the Grand Palais, Paris, Sept. 29, 1998-Jan. 4, 1999, and traveled to the Art Institute of Chicago, Feb. 13-April 25, 1999 and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, where I saw it several times during its run, June 1-Aug. 22, 1999.
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