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Ramusiana
over 7 years ago
over 9 years ago ...more
over 9 years ago
"This installation or performance work puts my own earlier film of the Mona Lisa (1973) through another stage of transformation – my own irretrievable self of some 34 years ago is now also part of the subject I first saw the ‘actual’ ‘Mona Lisa’ when I was about thirteen. Of course I had seen dozens of reproductions in books and postcards by then and the popular mythology of the enigmatic smile was already well engrained in my mind. My strongest impression, as I recall, was how small and unsurprising it was – a heavily protected cultural icon – no longer really a picture – and I was much more excited by the painting of the distant landscape than by the face. My own ‘version’ of ‘la Giaconda’ was never an homage, nor like Marcel Duchamp’s ‘L.H.O.O.Q’, an attack on its cultural power. Instead it came from a fascination with change and transformation – maybe also with arbitrary appropriation." Malcolm Le Grice
Eighteen fragments from Malcolm Le Grice’s After Leonardo
2016
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over 7 years ago
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about 90 years ago
over 84 years ago
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over 97 years ago
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over 30 years ago
about 97 years ago
about 56 years ago
almost 2 years ago
over 27 years ago
about 4 years ago
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over 95 years ago
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almost 11 years ago
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about 24 years ago
over 10 years ago
almost 4 years ago
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over 4 years ago
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over 36 years ago
over 9 years ago ...more
over 9 years ago
"This installation or performance work puts my own earlier film of the Mona Lisa (1973) through another stage of transformation – my own irretrievable self of some 34 years ago is now also part of the subject I first saw the ‘actual’ ‘Mona Lisa’ when I was about thirteen. Of course I had seen dozens of reproductions in books and postcards by then and the popular mythology of the enigmatic smile was already well engrained in my mind. My strongest impression, as I recall, was how small and unsurprising it was – a heavily protected cultural icon – no longer really a picture – and I was much more excited by the painting of the distant landscape than by the face. My own ‘version’ of ‘la Giaconda’ was never an homage, nor like Marcel Duchamp’s ‘L.H.O.O.Q’, an attack on its cultural power. Instead it came from a fascination with change and transformation – maybe also with arbitrary appropriation." Malcolm Le Grice
Eighteen fragments from Malcolm Le Grice’s After Leonardo
2016
No image available
over 7 years ago
No image available
about 90 years ago
over 84 years ago
No image available
over 97 years ago
No image available
over 30 years ago
about 97 years ago
about 56 years ago
almost 2 years ago
over 27 years ago
about 4 years ago
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over 95 years ago
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almost 11 years ago
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about 24 years ago
over 10 years ago
almost 4 years ago
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over 4 years ago
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over 36 years ago