„Francis Bacon czyli Diego Velázquez na fotelu dentystycznym” – malarskie i inne cytaty jako „dodatek” do rozpraszającego się życia
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Wydawnictwo Naukowe UAM
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“Francis Bacon or Diego Velázquez in a dentist’s chair” – pictorial and other kinds of quotations as an addition to a disintegrating life
Abstract
The mature poetry of Tadeusz Różewicz seems to be at odds with both modernist and postmodern
literary tenets. It undeniably makes abundant use of intertextuality (including self-quotations), but
in spite of this [post]modernist tendency it does resist self-referential impersonality. Różewicz
again immerses allusions to images, texts and other artifacts – which, according to formalist and
structuralist interpretations, should disengage themselves from an artist’s biography in order to
achieve aesthetic autonomy – in the current of life, devoid of an innate sense and always identical
to itself. In fact, life cannot be apprehended by art, and precisely, Różewicz tries to thematize this
impossibility by producing texts or rather poetical acts that could be classified as self-effacing
artifacts. He even succeeded in discrediting the modernist epiphany (which has a double status,
i.e. as a poetical device and a window on the transcendent) by replacing it with loquacious anticlimaxes.
The fragmentary, disintegrating form of his later poetry (the long poem “Francis Bacon
or Diego Velázquez in a dentist’s chair” is a perfect – or rather consciously imperfect – implementation
of this form) does not pretend to be a representation of a human being’s disintegrating
existence. This poetry is, above all, an existential act, or – in other words – a performance, and
not a self-sufficient work of art.
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Przestrzenie Teorii, 2014, nr 21, s. 59-76
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978-83-232-2740-3
ISSN
1644-6763