
A while back I won
portlandart.net's Pretentious Art Writing contest. I thought I'd use today's post to share that little gem:
The pop-art (yet neo-minimalist) etchings of Ziggy and Family Circus, both liegemen to the Lichtensteinian legacy, question their own raison d'etre. Are they visual tropes? Are they self-conscious (self-mocking/self-loathing) po-mo nombrilisme? Or are they simply (and solely) stochastic snapshots sans lexical basis? The Family Circus series can best be examined as artistic interventions against the oppressive humor archetype, whereas the unappealingly desperate musings of Cathy Guisewite's eponymous series are truly indebted to Jenny Holzerās oeuvre. Or, as Baudrillard and Guillaume so succinctly state, "What is produced with the romantic turn...is...the...play of...masculine hysteria...of ...sexual paradigms that once again must be reinserted in the more general and universal context of a change in the paradigms of otherness."[1]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[1] Jean Baudrillard and Marc Guillaume, Figures de l'alterite. Paris: Descartes et Cie., 1994.
2 Comments:
Ooooh. That just cuts like a knofe. Too real, too real.
THat's the funniest thing I've seen all day.
Congrats!!
-Lee
Post a Comment
Links to this post:
Create a Link
<< Home