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The Course of Human History Personified
Marcel Dzama
Jason Rosenfeld
Jason Daniel Tougaw
出版
D.A.P./Distributed Art Publishers
, 2005
主題
Art / General
Art / Techniques / Drawing
Art / History / General
Art / Individual Artists / General
Art / Subjects & Themes / General
ISBN
0976913615
9780976913610
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=J8LIPQAACAAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
註釋
Bats, nurses, Marlene Dietrich, a malevolent figure in a bear suit, two cowboys playing king-of-the-mountain on a rosebush, a group of men placidly eating babies at a makeshift picnic table, while, above them, a tree grows more babies: Marcel Dzama is back. As readers will learn in
The Course of Human History Personified
, he's a sleepwalker, a sleepdrawer--"I draw during the day, but the ideas come at night." Dzama records his visions in a bedside-table notebook. The finished work, in ink and watercolor, in a limited color scheme, against empty backgrounds, stripped of narrative context, offers many possible interpretations. Its cast of characters is expansive and in each drawing their roles become more complex and defined. Dzama's artistic influences include Blake, Goya, Botticelli and James Ensor and his sources encompass native mythology, Inuit art, Dante's
Divine Comedy
, medieval paintings and American folklore. The title,
The Course of Human History Personified
, is borrowed from Dante and recalls the grand artistic and literary cycles of the nineteenth century such as Thomas Cole's 1836
The Course of Empire,
where nature plays as large a role as humans. Here nature is personified--imagined characters and trees and beasts assume base human characteristics. If it's a dark view of the world, it's also an entrancing one.