16.11.10

Artistic Imagination

by Mariano Akerman


In Greek, mimesis stands for "imitation" • Still Life by Justus Junker


The imaginary often involves fantasy • Then Lilies turned to Tigers


The imaginary may also relate to the fabulous • A Renaissance Gryphon


At times imagination finds expression in terms of grotesqueness • A Fertile Man by Fontanarrosa


Disconcerting is the effect of the grotesque • Object, by Meret Oppenheim


The grotesque is a structure • Italian grotteschi


As a structure, the grotesque is usually a visual paradox • Treu: Enthusiasm is Not Enough


It combines or fuses incompatible elements • Santos Maschen: Dragon


Grotesque strategies literally attack by surprise • Anonymous: Hand


The grotesque frequently violates norms and conventions • Marcelo Bordese: Jonah and the Whale


It involves ambiguity • Bacon: Lying Figure in a Mirror


The grotesque suggests the monstrous • Giuseppe Arcimboldo: Water


Sometimes it relates to black humor • Bacon: Figure with Meat


Although there are some playful grotesques too • Jake Crees: Oops


Thus, a grotesque can be amusing • "Just don't expected it to roar"


But it can be unsettling as well • Carlos Nine: Colored Relief


The grotesque is a game with the absurd • Death and Soap Bubbles


Significantly, the grotesque defies interpretation • Bacon: Study for Figure at the Base of a Crucifixion, detail


As Giordano Bruno puts it, the fictitious image entails its own truth.
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