WILLIAM KENTRIDGE (B. 1955)
WILLIAM KENTRIDGE (B. 1955)
WILLIAM KENTRIDGE (B. 1955)
WILLIAM KENTRIDGE (B. 1955)
3 更多
WILLIAM KENTRIDGE (B. 1955)

Phenakistoscope

细节
WILLIAM KENTRIDGE (B. 1955)
Phenakistoscope
kinetic multiple comprised of two vinyl records with lithographs in colors, on atlas map pages Chine collé to Arches paper, with brass armature and wooden handle, 2000, signed in blue crayon, incised 'ed. 2/40' on the reverse (there were also ten artist's proofs numbered in Roman numerals), published by the New Museum, New York, in good condition
Overall: 21 1/2 x 11 x 11 7/8 in. (545 x 280 x 300 mm.)
出版
Krut pp. 89

荣誉呈献

Emma Santucci
Emma Santucci Junior Specialist

拍品专文

"A phenakistoscope was an early pre-cinematic optical device, exploiting the natural phenomenon of persistence of vision to transform static images such that they appear to be one image in movement. To test the principle of the device I cut crude holes into gramophone records, attached a dowel stick and spun them. And when it came to making the final edition, gramophone records still seemed a good scale and material to work with. Of course by now gramophone records are obsolete, prized by collectors of vinyl in the same way as old optical devices are sought by collectors. The maps on the Phenakistoscope come from Bacon's Popular Atlas of the World (1893) and The Oxford Atlas (1951). I wanted the Phenakistoscope to work in reverse. When you turn the handle slowly, the whole procession moves around the spindle. When you look through the gaps in the second (front) record and turn the handle, the figures should appear to stay in place, only passing their burdens from one to another."

更多来自 当代版画:纽约呈献Kenwal Steel 珍藏收益拨捐GLAAD

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