Tettix

Tettix Art Gallery

11/9/2013 – 8/10/2013. Dialetti 3-Tsimiski.

www.tettixgallery.com

Projects:

 

Objective correlative

     The visual and audio collage is the second part of a project which deals with search, acquisition, management and use of information. This project is the result of the experiential relationship between the artist and the music and artistic field, as a commonplace, channel of utterance of complementary power of visual and musical substance and their mutual interaction in the production of meaning.
The visual and audio collage was triggered and inspired by Anestis Logothetis’ music. He was an important pioneer composer of the 20th century, with radical proposals coupling image, sound and speech in his work. He evolved the system of notation and music scores and created the so-called “polymorphic graphical notation.”
While the artist uses the disparate materials with discipline and allegiance, what she achieves -through accidental interruption and final synthesis of the audio by audience’s movement in space- is to encourage improvisation. Doing so, she underlines the multiform entity of art and its conceptual dimension – something that A. Logothetis aims for in his work.
The artist, through free association of ideas, achieves the departure from the restrictive confines of the metric, the expression of emotions, the special function of composer’s extended time and space and suggests what Eliot intuitionally invented and named “objective correlative” [1], explaining that the only way of expressing emotion in the form of art is finding an ‘objective associative’.
Through audible sound and juxtaposition of eyes as recipient’s main points of reception, the artist attempts to stimulate reflective mood, triggering a subversive attitude to the mechanisms of the human unconscious, suggesting ultimately what Beckett calls the “primacy of internal vision “[2] while Auguste Rodin puts it as:” the art only begins with the inner truth “[3].

[1] Thomas Stearns Eliot, Hamlet and His Problems, 1919, essay.
[2] Samuel Beckett, Le monde et le pantalon, 1989, Les Editions de Minuit, trans. Maria Papadema, Epsilon, 2005, p.33
[3] Auguste Rodin, Testament, trans. Alexandros Adamopoulos, Agra, p. 15

Kenanidou Maria [Art Historian]