Ruining Image and the Image as Ruin: William Kentridge’s Trionfi e Lamenti in Rome

The essay examines South African visual artist William Kentridge’s monumental erase graffiti frieze Trionfi e Lamenti in Rome (2016), focusing on the artwork’s palimpsestic reworking of a visual archive of Rome and Roman triumphal iconography. Kentridge’s disturbing and ghostly procession along the...

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Main Author: Erika Mihálycsa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université du Sud Toulon-Var 2024-12-01
Series:Babel: Littératures Plurielles
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/babel/16517
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author Erika Mihálycsa
author_facet Erika Mihálycsa
author_sort Erika Mihálycsa
collection DOAJ
description The essay examines South African visual artist William Kentridge’s monumental erase graffiti frieze Trionfi e Lamenti in Rome (2016), focusing on the artwork’s palimpsestic reworking of a visual archive of Rome and Roman triumphal iconography. Kentridge’s disturbing and ghostly procession along the banks of the river Tiber exploits collage techniques and shows history as a site of continual disasters. The choice of medium for the work – erase graffiti, where the image is literally made of the material of time, the dirt and pollution that accumulate on stone surfaces -– means that the frieze not only (meta)thematizes but also realises finitude and endingness, in so far as the image itself submits to erasement by time, as dirt accumulates. The essay argues that Kentridge’s frieze, an example of radical political art without a clear agenda, allows the image to be submerged in the same partial readability and undecidability that is the condition of ruins and archaeological finds.
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issn 2743-2742
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publisher Université du Sud Toulon-Var
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series Babel: Littératures Plurielles
spelling doaj-art-ad90bc3294154cccbf3673a2c0a5cc152025-08-20T03:44:35ZengUniversité du Sud Toulon-VarBabel: Littératures Plurielles2743-27422263-47462024-12-0150577010.4000/14e18Ruining Image and the Image as Ruin: William Kentridge’s Trionfi e Lamenti in RomeErika MihálycsaThe essay examines South African visual artist William Kentridge’s monumental erase graffiti frieze Trionfi e Lamenti in Rome (2016), focusing on the artwork’s palimpsestic reworking of a visual archive of Rome and Roman triumphal iconography. Kentridge’s disturbing and ghostly procession along the banks of the river Tiber exploits collage techniques and shows history as a site of continual disasters. The choice of medium for the work – erase graffiti, where the image is literally made of the material of time, the dirt and pollution that accumulate on stone surfaces -– means that the frieze not only (meta)thematizes but also realises finitude and endingness, in so far as the image itself submits to erasement by time, as dirt accumulates. The essay argues that Kentridge’s frieze, an example of radical political art without a clear agenda, allows the image to be submerged in the same partial readability and undecidability that is the condition of ruins and archaeological finds.https://journals.openedition.org/babel/16517collageruinerase graffitipalimpsestcontemporary artRoman triumphal art
spellingShingle Erika Mihálycsa
Ruining Image and the Image as Ruin: William Kentridge’s Trionfi e Lamenti in Rome
Babel: Littératures Plurielles
collage
ruin
erase graffiti
palimpsest
contemporary art
Roman triumphal art
title Ruining Image and the Image as Ruin: William Kentridge’s Trionfi e Lamenti in Rome
title_full Ruining Image and the Image as Ruin: William Kentridge’s Trionfi e Lamenti in Rome
title_fullStr Ruining Image and the Image as Ruin: William Kentridge’s Trionfi e Lamenti in Rome
title_full_unstemmed Ruining Image and the Image as Ruin: William Kentridge’s Trionfi e Lamenti in Rome
title_short Ruining Image and the Image as Ruin: William Kentridge’s Trionfi e Lamenti in Rome
title_sort ruining image and the image as ruin william kentridge s trionfi e lamenti in rome
topic collage
ruin
erase graffiti
palimpsest
contemporary art
Roman triumphal art
url https://journals.openedition.org/babel/16517
work_keys_str_mv AT erikamihalycsa ruiningimageandtheimageasruinwilliamkentridgestrionfielamentiinrome