Science fiction in yet another sense, one in which the weaknesses become manifest. How else can one write but of those things which one doesn’t know, or knows badly? It is precisely there that we imagine having something to say. We write only at the frontiers of our knowledge, at the border which separates our knowledge from our ignorance and transforms the one into the other. Only in this manner are we resolved to write. To satisfy ignorance is to put off writing until tomorrow—or rather, to make it impossible. Perhaps writing has a relation to silence altogether more threatening than that which it is supposed to entertain with death.
Gilles Deleuze, Difference and Repetition
Gilles Deleuze, Difference and Repetition
Hilma af Klint, The Ten Largest; Childhood (1–2), Youth (3–4), Adulthood (5–6), Old Age (7-8)