Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/26383
Appears in Collections:Communications, Media and Culture Journal Articles
Peer Review Status: Refereed
Title: Charcoal Matter with Memory: Images of Movement, Time and Memory in William Kentridge's "Charcoal Drawings for Projection"
Author(s): Fleming, David
Keywords: Kentridge
Deleuze
Bergson
Time
Space
Duration
Crystal-images
Time-Images
Movement-images
Animation
Issue Date: 2013
Date Deposited: 15-Dec-2017
Citation: Fleming D (2013) Charcoal Matter with Memory: Images of Movement, Time and Memory in William Kentridge's "Charcoal Drawings for Projection". Film-Philosophy, 17 (1), pp. 402-423. http://www.film-philosophy.com/index.php/f-p/article/view/355
Abstract: In his temporal philosophy based on the writing of Henri Bergson, Gilles Deleuze describes duration (durée) as a becoming that endures in time. Reifications of this complex philosophical concept become artistically expressed, I argue, in the form and content of South African artist William Kentridge's series of 'charcoal drawings for projection.' These exhibited art works provide intriguing and illuminating 'philosophical' examples of animated audio-visual media, which expressively plicate distinct images of movement and time.   The composition of Kentridge's films at once illuminate a regime of animated 'movement-images' that can trace their aetiological roots to classical forms of film and animation, whilst concurrently folding in complex philosophical expressions of time as duration which invoke the crystalline 'time-image' concepts of philosophers such as Bergson and Deleuze, as well as literary authors like Marcel Proust. Over and above these co-existent regimes of movement and time, Kentridge's artistic technique and exhibition practices further expose a multifarious 'geology' of other embedded time lines that serve to enrich/complicate these temporal expressions. I argue here that diegetic time- and movement-images ostensibly co-exist alongside different 'archaeologies' of time relevant to the context and creation of the artworks. For this reason, the animated drawings formulate intriguing artistic/philosophical expressions that muse on the nature of matter, memory, time and space.
URL: http://www.film-philosophy.com/index.php/f-p/article/view/355
Rights: This article is published under a CC-BY-NC licence https://creativecommons.org/licenses/ in Film-Philosophy by Edinburgh University Press. You may use, reproduce, disseminate or display the article provided you credit the author(s) of the Contribution and provide full citation.
Licence URL(s): http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

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