These boards were always only meant to be the start of the project, eventually he wanted to create some kind of book to explain his theories. This never happened as he died and then the boards were lost when his colleagues were fleeing the Nazi's; as with Kurt Schwitters' lifelong project the Merzbau, only the photographs remain.
While working on this BAO project I have been drawn back to Warburg's project and the way it shows how a researcher thinks and works; making connections between seemingly unrelated images, events, theories, ideas etc... So as a 'page' of this archive book I want to stage a photograph of Miss Emma Robinson, my made up researcher at her research desk, behind the desk will be her research wall, looking very similar to one of Warburg's Mnemosyne panels. Here it is so far; I am building it up in my studio as we speak:
7 comments:
Your project is so interesting... I'm fascinated!
thanks Sara; its getting a bit out of control but its good too, im so excited about it all the time, plus its the start of something big in my practice so I am going with it! will be a very useful start to my MA!
I am mesmerized by your whole approach...
You are giving us a wide open window into the scholarly world of the researcher-historian-artist.
As a member of the BAO group I feel ever so fortunate to be among the members receiving one of these works in the future!
ahhh abigail you're a girl after my own heart!
I am fascinated by knowledge systems - and networks (and how different things are connected)... and of course ephemeral arty things (that now just a memory and picture remains) are central to my practice - soooooo I'm loving everything you're up to right now...
I haven't heard of the Mnemosyne Atlas but you've made my day with this post!
This is a fascinating post and I feel privileged to be following your processes as your BAO 'book' takes shape. I hadn't heard of the Mnemosyne Atlas either but I'll be going to explore.
Yeah I only heard of Warburg's project last year; its inspired many artists before, which I hadn't realised - very intriguing though isn't it?! There is an article in which is talking about a current library who want to organise their book art collection in a different way; using systems not thought of before, I think this Mnemosyne thing was mentioned in that. If anyone is interested I could find the exact issue and page no.s for you, or even photocopy it...
that is meant to say "there is an article in The Blue NOtebook" !
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