thurnauer: vt and vi, to paint in the second person

Authors

  • Rod Mengham University of Cambridge

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1515/texmat-2015-0016

Abstract

Many of the figures in Thurnauer’s paintings who fix us with their gaze have been borrowed from the work of Manet, the artist who organized so many of his paintings around a face-to-face confrontation of viewer and work. The painting returns the viewer’s gaze with total impartiality, making us see our own motives and investments more than the illusion that the figure in the painting will accommodate them.

Issues of language often surface literally in paintings by Thurnauer; written language appears sometimes as part of the material fabric in which human figures move or recline. The textual elements are not superimposed on the figures but appear to exist in the world they inhabit, requiring the painter to relate figure to ground in a process of interlacing. When the viewer’s eye traverses the painting it falls under the magnetic influence of the text to the extent that viewing must succumb in some degree to the operations of reading with its specific rhythms and expectations.

In these paintings, visual and verbal languages provide us with different maps of the same territory; and Thurnauer’s hybridized representations argue that the world can only be rendered through a dialogue, an interlocution of different forms, genres, media. We approach her work, not as viewers whose function is predicated through a gaze regulated according to the distorting demands of consumption or control, but as readers engaged in a critical activity seeing around the edges of historically produced versions of the self.

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Author Biography

Rod Mengham, University of Cambridge

Rod Mengham is Reader in Modern English Literature at Cambridge University and Curator of Works of Art at Jesus College, Cambridge. He has published monographs on Dickens, Brontë, Hardy, Henry Green; edited collections of essays on contemporary fiction, violence and avant-garde art, fiction of the 1940s, Australian poetry; anthologies Altered State: the New Polish Poetry (2003), Vanishing Points: New Modernist Poems (2005); poetry, most recently Paris by Helen (Oystercatcher, 2014) and translations, most recently Speedometry with poems by Andrzej Sosnowski (Contraband, 2014). He has also curated numerous exhibitions, most recently “Sculpture in the Close 2013,” featuring the work of Mirosław Bałka, Theaster Gates, Harland Miller, Damian Ortega, and Doris Salcedo; and “You” featuring Agnès Thurnauer (2015), and is the publisher of Equipage poetry pamphlets.

References

Thurnauer, Agnès. “Aujourd’hui Lascaux” (2001). Journal et autres écrits. Paris: Beaux-Arts de Paris, 2014. 133. Print.
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Thurnauer, Agnès. Interview with the author. October 2013.
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Thurnauer, Agnès. Seminar presentation at Yale. 2013. Transcript.
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Published

2015-11-17

How to Cite

Mengham, R. (2015). thurnauer: vt and vi, to paint in the second person. Text Matters: A Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture, (5), 221–230. https://doi.org/10.1515/texmat-2015-0016