Mark as
That Which Is Not Drawn
For more than three decades, William Kentridge has been exploring the most vexing questions of our time. While doing so, his work has pushed the boundaries of the media in which he poses these questions, allowing viewers to reflect with him on the tasks and the limits of representation, the traditions of landscape and self-portraiture, the possibilities for animated drawing and the labour of art. For five days, Kentridge sat with Rosalind Morris to talk about his work. In this book, the result of that conversation, they probe as deeply into the techniques by which Kentridge works as the...
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