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March 2009 to august 2009
“We die from the moment of our birth and are being born until we die.” (Martin Heidegger)
As we enter the third millennium the death instinct is the order of the day. This, our hypothesis, is in no way pessimistic or sinister: our desire for death has a teleological goal (to be reborn).
“Life is a constant struggle against extinction, a violent yet fleeting deliverance from ever-lurking night, this death is no external enemy, it is his own inner longing for the stillness and profound peace of all-knowing non-existence, for all-seeing sleep in the ocean of coming to be and passing away.”
(Carl Gustav Jung)
The death instinct does not lead necessarily or directly to self-destruction or murder. It may take unforeseen detours and pass through reversible states, if we agree that in sleep, play, dreams, or orgasm, we temporarily take leave of life.
The complex modalities of the death instinct include the power of negation, of subverting reality, the faculty of temporarily removing oneself or disconnecting from it. In this sense, artistic creation the in essence favors shadow over light and the imaginary over the real. Derives from the death instinct,- just as language and a fortiori intelligence do.
“Art begins where life leaves off.” (Richard Wagner)
Over the course of a few months (March-August 2009), we will try to assure the triumph of the death instinct which drives us to retreat, to retrench the spectacular, and to play on Maurice Blanchot’s paradox: if death is the real, and the real is the impossible, we are approaching the thought of the impossibility of death. In terms of the site, the surrounding, and the hosts will strive to curb the syndrome of Bartleby who “would prefer not to” and organized an encounter with the real based on ephemeral, yet fundamental, gestures.
Béatrice Josse
Director of Frac Lorraine / Metz, France
You can download the program as pdf here.
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This program is funded by:

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.This program is supported by:
