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Tacita Dean, Still Life (still), 2009, 16 mm black and white film, mute. Courtesy the artist, Frith Street Gallery, London and Marian Goodman Gallery, New York / Paris. 

Tacita Dean, Still Life (still), 2009, 16 mm black and white film, mute, 5:30 minutes. Courtesy the artist, Frith Street Gallery, London and Marian Goodman Gallery, New York / Paris. 

CONTEXTS

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Tacita Dean 

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Tacita dean’s compositions are often characterised by a fascination with the artist and the creative places which artists make work.  

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In Tacita Dean’s Still Life (2009), the artist documented the marks and measurements left by the Italian artist Giorgio Morandi, in the apartment turned studio, in which he made the majority of his sublime work. She captured the artist’s tabletops, still heavily demarcated by the traces of still-life arrangements the artist experimented with throughout his life1. Very similar to Dean, I am also intrigued by the understated spaces of making that underpin works of art, that capture something of the story of making. Her “signifiers” - the various relics of making such as scraps of writings, materials and especially marking making are very much what I am also trying to bring back to life and celebrate. There is a “cryptic quality” to these markings, that act almost like a puzzle, with various fragments inviting the viewer to try and solve its mystery2. This kind of effect on the viewer, akin almost to an abstract drawing, is something I am also enthralled by and wish to incorporate into my work. As is the idea of them being like “unintentional...found drawings”. 

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Dean’s work here is based on what she describes as the deliberate and thought-out traces of mathematical markings that Morandi left. She describes these as being like “unintentional...found drawings”, showing the agency of the artist. This begs the question in my own practice of how my own marks gain the same level of agency and value, based upon the more chance movements of creation that they are illustrating. I feel the answer may lie in the inherent ability for the development of the image that printmaking and other process afford. 

 

Dean’s championing of the analogue3 is also of significance to me in terms of the projector work that I am using4.  Her opinion that the digital world  "does not have the means to produce poetry” got me thinking about what the analogue gives in the 21st century and collided nicely with the seminar discussion that was happening at this time. We asked what digital lacks, on such programmes as Procreate or even just being viewed on a screen. What resonated with me was that the digital lacks the haptic experience of drawing, the raw physical tangibility of the medium. It also lacks scale, becoming flat and unintelligible to the actual sizes of things. Using an overhead projector to play with scale and rotation in real physical space is one way in which analogue is still more adaptable and creative than purely digital. Dean goes on to say that digital is ”intangible and impenetrable" and concludes by talking about the joys of physical production in her chosen medium of analogue film. Her argument is one for the championing of physical art making itself.

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Foot Notes

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  1. Center for Italian Modern Art. (2016). Tacita Dean’s Still Life: The Artist in His Studio. [online] Available at: https://www.italianmodernart.org/still-life-the-artist-in-his-studio/ [Accessed 25 Jan. 2022].

  2. Kearney, F., Packer, M., Lewis Glucksman Gallery and Letterkenny Regional Cultural Centre, Ireland (2012). Motion capture : drawing and the moving image. Cork: Glucksman Gallery. p 14

  3. Dean, T. (2018). Tacita Dean : 1992-2018, Selected writing. London Royal Academy Of Arts. p253. See Also; Vischer, T., Dean, T. and Schaulager Basel (Münchenstein (2006). Tacita Dean - analogue : drawings 1991-2006. Göttingen: Steidel.

  4. Drawing Centre's Drawing Papers 60, Selections Spring 2006, Analog Animation.

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