“To be human,” Scanlan offers at the end of his book, “is to produce a world as an excess of meaning, or as something that leaves a remainder that is beyond meaning and comprehension.”
“To be human,” Scanlan offers at the end of his book, “is to produce a world as an excess of meaning, or as something that leaves a remainder that is beyond meaning and comprehension.”
on the list of things to listen to instead of the news:
the blacksmiths, the flowers –– 'Their dynamic is summed up best by a phrase of Moten’s in the maelstrom towards the music’s climax: “quantum-mechanical reproduction.”'
www.readinggroup.co/rg30.html
"All art, he insisted, offers us more than what it could itself convey. It always gestures beyond itself, toward everything it can’t say, opening back up everything that is closed off by the comforting illusion of conceptual mastery."
"In his film as well as in painting, Lynch wanted to remind us that the value of language as a means of communication often lies in its ability to flaunt its own inadequacy."
www.thenation.com/article/cult...
"I suggest that art offers us an opportunity to be quiet and still and to allow, in that stillness, for a connection to form ... I think the superpower that art has is this distance it affords us, this capacity to be still and to allow resonances to arise from inside." #TildaSwinton