wie geht kunst
http://www.wiegehtkunst.com/?p=599
[From a 2009 interview with
Mladen Dolar]
WgK: Is there an artwork that
had a lasting effect on you?
Dolar: The work of Samuel
Beckett – if I have to single out just one. It is both the importance it had
for me and for the particular historic moment of the end of the twentieth
century. I think he is the one who went the furthest in a certain way. There
are various reasons for this, and one of them has to do with an enormous will
to reduction. What Beckett did was to create an infinitely shrinkable world.
There is never little enough. You can always take away more.
Take the The Trilogy: Molloy,
Malone Dies, The Unnamable. In the Beginning there is some sort of plot and
some sort of characters. Then in the second novel you have just Malone, who is
dying alone in his room and who is inventing stories as he is waiting for
death. The space has shrunk, there is no more travel. And then you have the
third novel, where you don’t even have this. You don’t even have a space, you
don’t even have a character, you just have a voice. A voice which just rambles
on and continues, and it doesn’t matter what it says in the end. It’s just the
sheer thrust of perseverance, of persistence, which carries the whole thing. So
just persist. You have to go on. And you know how this ends, it ends in the
most beautiful way: “I must go on, I can’t go on, I will go on.”
[…]
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