![]() "Ideas don't come without limbs, and so these are no longer ideas but limbs, limbs fighting among themselves. / The mental world was never anything but that which remains from a hellish trampling of organs while the man who had them is no more." --Antonin Artaud, Suppôts et Suppliciations "[A]nd as I was swirled along I heard a voice over my head cry, 'The mirror is broken in two pieces,' and another voice answer, 'The mirror is broken in four pieces,' and a more distant voice cry with an exultant cry, 'The mirror is broken into numberless pieces.'" --William Butler Yeats, "Rosa Alchemica" (1897) ![]() Take, for example, the remarks: "The theater still remains the most active and efficient site of passage for those immense analogical disturbances in which ideas are arrested in flight at some point in their transmutation into the abstract." Could not the same be said for landscape, which is always on the edge of immense disturbance anyway and profoundly tied up with our whole apparatus of perception and concept building? The ravages of the contemporary built environment (that "unhandsome term"), a de facto theater of cruelty, are deployed to make of life a prison-house. The point of Artaud's Theater of Cruelty is to de-stabilize and prevent the formation of built ideology. The world as prison-house is also a battlefield -- the place where ideas wage war with "limbs" (metonym for the human condition). Landscape architecture - as the meeting-place of architecture, landscape, and ideology -- is the foremost place to mount the necessary counter-insurgency. I invite you to read this book in this light. It was published in translation by Grove Press, in 1958, and remains in print to this day. Gavin Keeney PS - And, circling round, perhaps it is useful to quote Heidegger on Hölderlin -- or Heidegger "answering" Hölderlin's question "Is there a measure on earth?": "If we merely attempt, on our own authority, to set or seize upon measure, then it becomes measureless and disintegrates into nothingness. If we merely remain thoughtless and without the alertness of an intimate scrutinizing, then we will again find no measure. Yet if we are strong enough to think, then it may be sufficient for us to ponder merely from afar, that is, scarcely, the truth of this poetry and what it poetizes, so that we may suddenly be struck by it." --Martin Heidegger, Hölderlin's Hymn "The Ister" (Bloomington/Indianapolis, IN: Indiana University Press, 1996), p. 167 "A dream it becomes for him who would Approach it by stealth, and punishes him Who would equal it with force. Often it surprises one Who indeed has scarcely thought it." --Hölderlin, "The Journey" PLEASE NOTE: Miraculously (perhaps), and regarding all of the above (and more), a documentary film appeared in 2004 tracing the philosophical/geo-terrestrial path of "The Ister" (the Danube), from the Black Forest to the Black Sea (with excurses, along the way, into the discursive territories of Heideggerian and post-Heideggerian 'readings' of this topological terrain vague ne plus ultra ...) ... / For details of this documentary film, cliquez ici ... / Regarding a possible-impossible return to philosophical aesthetics, see Infinity Doubled: Double-Black Cat ... ![]() Antonin Artaud, Watchfiends & Rack Screams: Works from the Final Period, edited and translated by Clayton Eshleman, with Bernard Bador (Boston: Exact Change, 1995) *Jacques Derrida & Paule Thévenin, The Secret Art of Antonin Artaud (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1998) Jacques Derrida, "The Theater of Cruelty & the Closure of Representation", Writing & Difference, trans. Alan Bass (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1978), pp. 232-250 Julia Kristeva, "From One Identity to an Other", Desire in Language: A Semiotic Approach to Literature & Art, edited by Leon S. Roudiez, translated by Thomas Gora, Alice Jardine & Leon S. Roudiez (New York: Columbia University Press, 1980), pp. 124-147 "Three Essays on Antonin Artaud", October 64 (Spring 1993), pp. 57-105 Stephen Barber, Antonin Artaud: Blows & Bombs (London: Faber & Faber, 1993) Gilles Deleuze & Felix Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism & Schizophrenia, translated by Brian Massumi (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1987) Jane Goodall, Artaud & the Gnostic Drama (New York: Oxford University Press, 1994) Margit Rowell (ed.), Antonin Artaud: Works on Paper (New York: MoMA/Abrams, 1996?) OUTTAKES Artaud and Mise-en-Scène (Semantikon / PDF) Antonin Artaud (Art Minimal & Conceptual Only) Artaud Archive (Levity) More Artaud (Hydra) Suppots et Suppliciations (Web del Sol) ![]() |
/S/O(MA) / LANY - 2002/2006