JE SUIS CONTRE TOUT ET TOUS'
I.K. Bonset (Theo van Doesburg), 1921
I.K. Bonset was one of many alter ego's Van Doesburgs used during his lifetime. It allowed him to create a new personality that could declare the exact opposite of what Van Doesburg was known to stand for. They gave him the liberty to escape the dogma's that he in part created himself.
I.K. Bonset (Theo van Doesburg), 1921
I.K. Bonset was one of many alter ego's Van Doesburgs used during his lifetime. It allowed him to create a new personality that could declare the exact opposite of what Van Doesburg was known to stand for. They gave him the liberty to escape the dogma's that he in part created himself.
“I cannot die any longer.”
— Ingeborg Bachmann, from In the Storm of Roses: Selected Poems; Songs of Flight.
— Ingeborg Bachmann, from In the Storm of Roses: Selected Poems; Songs of Flight.
Sept 7th, 1956:
Before going out into the yard this afternoon we had to wait for Hess. When he arrived at last, Doenitz said to him, "If I had a mark, Herr Hess, for every quarter of an hour I've had to wait for you in the past eleven years, I'd be a rich man." Hess retorted without hesitation, "And if I, Herr Doenitz, had only a single pfennig for every useless word you've addressed to me in these eleven years, I'd be much richer than you."
Lately Doenitz has formed the habit of posting himself ten paces in front of Hess and staring at him for minutes at a time. Sometimes I then post myself beside Hess and stare back, which makes him stop his rudeness.
- Albert Speer, the Spandau Diaries.
Before going out into the yard this afternoon we had to wait for Hess. When he arrived at last, Doenitz said to him, "If I had a mark, Herr Hess, for every quarter of an hour I've had to wait for you in the past eleven years, I'd be a rich man." Hess retorted without hesitation, "And if I, Herr Doenitz, had only a single pfennig for every useless word you've addressed to me in these eleven years, I'd be much richer than you."
Lately Doenitz has formed the habit of posting himself ten paces in front of Hess and staring at him for minutes at a time. Sometimes I then post myself beside Hess and stare back, which makes him stop his rudeness.
- Albert Speer, the Spandau Diaries.