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Pulmo Marina is a film and it is a publication. It is the story of a living creature that was raised for display behind a window in the tank of an aquarium. Then it has been filmed and projected onto the big screen and now it is fractioned in discrete units printed on paper. It is the story of a living form which is always the same, always different. It is the first book in the series In Alphabetical Order.
An illustrated collection that takes stock of current knowledge and proposes a new way of reading indigenous art. For thousands of years, nomadic hunter-gatherers assigned a fundamental role to the visualization of the animals who shared their lives. Some, such as the Cape eland, the largest of antelopes, were the object of a fascinated gaze, as though the graceful markings and shapes of their bodies were the key to secret knowledge safeguarded by the animals’ unsettling silence. Renaud Ego posits that the artists sought to steal the animals’ secret through an act of rendering visible a vitality that remained hidden beneath appearances. In this process, the San themselves became the visionary animal who, possessing the gift of making pictures, would acquire far-seeing powers. Thanks to the singular effectiveness of their visual art, they could make intellectual contact with the world in order better to think and,ultimately, to act. They gained access to the full dimension of their human condition through painting scenes that functioned like visual contracts with spiritual and ancestral powers. Their art is an act that seeks to preserve the wholeness of existence through a respect for the relationships linking all beings, both real and imaginary,who partake of it. The fundamentally ecological dimension of this message confers on San art its universality and contemporary relevance.Visionary Animal is a translation of L’Animal voyant, published in France in 2015. This rich collection of essays is beautifully illustrated with the author’s photographs of rock art from across southern Africa.
Sebastien Roch Nicolas Chamfort (1740-1794), whom Nietzsche called
the "wittiest of all moralists," is now known for little more than
brillian aphorisms that captivated a long line of thinkers, from
Stendhal to Cioran, Schopenhauer to Camus. Yet the fascination of
Chamfort's life is barely suggested by the fragments of writing
that have survived him. In Claude Arnaud's captivating biography,
Chamfort the libertine, playwright, journalist, and revolutionary
stands revealed as the most telling emblem of his times.
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