“The house we were born in is more than an embodiment of home, it is also an embodiment of dreams. Each one of its nooks and corners was a resting-place for daydreaming. And often the resting-place particularized the daydream. Our habits of a particular daydream were acquired there. The house, the bedroom, the garret in which we were alone, furnished the framework for an interminable dream, one that poetry alone, through the creation of a poetic work, could succeed in achieving completely. If we give their function of shelter for dreams to all of these places of retreat, we may say, as I pointed out in an earlier works that there exists for each one of us an oneiric house, a house of dream-memory, that is lost in the shadow of a beyond of the real past.”
— Gaston Bachelard, The Poetics of Space
— Gaston Bachelard, The Poetics of Space
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“[…] Here we find ourselves at a pivotal point around which reciprocal interpretations of dreams, through thought and thought through dreams, keep turning. But the word interpretation hardens this about-face unduly. In point of fact, we are in the unity of image and memory, in the functional composite of imagination and memory. The positivity of psychological history and geography cannot serve as a touchstone for determining the real being of our childhood, for childhood is certainly
greater than reality.”
— Gaston Bachelard, The Poetics of Space
greater than reality.”
— Gaston Bachelard, The Poetics of Space
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Franz Erhard Walther, Zentriert, 1965 / Über Arm, 1967
Franz Erhard Walther, Kope zu Kopf über Kopf, 1967 / Kopf Leib Glieder, 1967
[x]
Franz Erhard Walther, Kope zu Kopf über Kopf, 1967 / Kopf Leib Glieder, 1967
[x]
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