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Colm Tóibín Interview: On Giacometti 

Louisiana Channel
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Watch as the award-winning Irish writer Colm Tóibín shares his thoughts on Giacometti’s iconic ‘Homme qui marche’. A timeless and inspirational sculpture, which has been interpreted as a wish to come to terms with the Second World War.
“It works in a number of ways, constantly ambiguously.” There’s no answer to where the figure is going, as Giacometti was not interested in the figure in society or in the political figure: “It is in a way the figure stripped of all those concerns, down to the very thingness of a self.” The figure then represents man in the larger and universal sense, which was also what the contemporary playwright Samuel Beckett was occupied with. In continuation of this, Tóibín argues that the space surrounding the sculpture is equally important and suggestive.
The sculpture series ‘Homme qui marche’ was made in the beginning of the 1960s, which meant that Giacometti and his contemporaries - including Beckett - were “living in the shadow of the Second World War” and trying to come to “philosophical terms” with that. The figure, Tóibín claims, is symptomatic of this as it’s both realistic and not realistic, epitomizing a character but also nullifying it: “You’re playing a game - but it's a serious game - between the idea of the spirit, of the inner self, and the idea that the self is only the physical self. And you’re working between those things.”
Colm Tóibín (b. 1955) is an Irish novelist, short story writer, essayist, playwright, journalist, critic and poet. Among his novels are ‘The Heather Blazing’ (1992), ‘The Story of the Night’ (1996), ‘The Blackwater Lightship’ (1999), ‘The Master’ (2004), ‘Mothers and Sons’ (2006), ‘Brooklyn’ (2009), ‘The Empty Family’ (2010) and ‘Nora Webster’ (2014). He is the recipient of numerous prestigious awards including the 2004 Lambda Literary Award (for ‘The Master’), the 2006 International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award (for ‘The Master), 2009 Costa Novel Award (for ‘Brooklyn’) and the 2011 Irish PEN Award for contribution to Irish literature. Tóibín has also been shortlisted for the Booker Prize several times. He works as a professor at the Humanities at Columbia University in the U.S.
Colm Tóibín was interviewed by Kasper Bech Dyg in connection to the Louisiana Literature festival at the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Denmark in August 2015. The sculpture discussed in the interview is ‘Homme qui marche’ (Walking Man) (1960) by Italian Swiss artist Alberto Giacometti (1901-1966) from the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art's collection.
Camera: Mathias Nyholm
Edited by: Klaus Elmer
Produced by: Marc-Christoph Wagner
Copyright: Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2015
Supported by Nordea-fonden

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2 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 30   
@dimkilago2958
@dimkilago2958 Год назад
The first thing I said when I saw his works was that he definitely influenced Bacon (with the only difference being that Bacon presents expressive and violent monsters and a brutality in general that is visible everywhere). When I noticed more closely the positions of the faces, eyes and bodies in his works the first thing that came to my mind was Beckett and then I learned that they were friends .2/2. Beckett's characters have a hell around them and they do not at the same time within their unrealistic character and the schizophrenia that is art in its fake form, they have a characteristic stoicism and militancy of "I will not do you the favor of dying". The figures are tortured, hungry and stoic. There is a hell around them. I don't know if they had discussed this or if they caught the spirit of the time at the same time, however, the connection seems to be there.
@johnore6297
@johnore6297 Месяц назад
You're talking about my three favorite artists and I agree with everything you said.
@glassarthouse
@glassarthouse 2 года назад
I don't know, having heard Giacometti talk about his work, I don't think that Giacometti was looking to be metaphorical or explanatory. He swaw sculpting as working out a problem in order to see it clearly and to see its potential answer. He would often talk about how he didn't think he would ever be done because it was just a project each time to see if he could see something new in the form of a human.
@cliffdariff74
@cliffdariff74 Год назад
BUT of course , a good, excellent or famous artist never has the final interpretation. That's what makes a great piece of work.
@hdjadajfdjhkfshfks4087
@hdjadajfdjhkfshfks4087 3 года назад
Colm: the space representing the lonliness of th.... Giachommeti: i like playing with clay bro
@xX88B88Xx
@xX88B88Xx 5 лет назад
Such a beautiful explanation! More Colm please!
@cliffdariff74
@cliffdariff74 7 лет назад
this is a fabulous explanation
@louhawk559
@louhawk559 3 месяца назад
What was it made of...????? The peaces look as if they were carved out of a rock..........
@AlexanderVerney-Elliott-ep7dw
@AlexanderVerney-Elliott-ep7dw 5 месяцев назад
Peppiatt stated: "I didn't dare go and knock." But why not? Why couldn't Peppiatt just go and knock on Giacometti's door and talk to him? I was looking at my most recent sculptures and it was obvious that they were far superior to the sculptures of Giacometti which are so embarrassingly bad, and no one really likes them, but art critics have to pretend to because they are obliged to just as they pretend to like de Kooning because they are obliged to. I am still waiting for Peppiatt to knock on my door but I don't think he dare knock: but it is his loss, not mine.
@musikalitet
@musikalitet 7 лет назад
I think it look so much like our Shadow.... and at the same time like a kind of inner ....
@musikalitet
@musikalitet 7 лет назад
or the shadows on the wall in the cave
@musikalitet
@musikalitet 7 лет назад
our shadows get this different shapes ....
@dees9502
@dees9502 3 года назад
Ummmmmmmmm 🙄
@daryjohnmizelle
@daryjohnmizelle 6 лет назад
superfluous words
@christianegonbarnthaler1426
@christianegonbarnthaler1426 7 лет назад
super
@amir-xh3mw
@amir-xh3mw 8 лет назад
i wish i get to a point where i understand how this is worth 74 million
@cliffdariff74
@cliffdariff74 7 лет назад
amir ask the guy who bought it....
@amir-xh3mw
@amir-xh3mw 7 лет назад
i'd ask him how he got so rich to be able to piss away this kind of money. dont get me wrong, the sculpture is amazing, but 74 million is a little steep
@cliffdariff74
@cliffdariff74 6 лет назад
@@amir-xh3mw basically for the very wealthy, it's a place to park your money, until time to sell for more.
@indigodelight
@indigodelight 3 года назад
Context
@pumpkin1901
@pumpkin1901 3 года назад
16M pounds for a Banksy piss take this week. It's beyond me how these buyers have the brains to even function on a daily basis.
@zthetha
@zthetha 8 лет назад
"The first thing Giacometti did was to suggest a great deal of space around the figure" proclaims this pretentious pundit. Well, there is a great deal of space within us and without us - the space of the cosmos surrounds us all, dunnit? One could say Giacometti was more or less conscious of the fragility of the ego and more or less consciously expressed it in his figures and drawings. The first thing that struck me 60 years ago when I saw Giacometti's stick men was that they were comic. The painter Lowry had made a name for himself with his matchstick men and dogs which had finally caught on after a lifetime in near obscurity as a council rent collector. For whatever reason - probably because they were different - they became popular and collectible. Leaving all the arty farty psuedo philosophical clap trap aside for one moment - better still shoveling it into the garbage where it belongs - the only test of a piece is 'do I like it or don't I?' Art is such a nebulous thing that an observer might be moved by something the artist never intended - or was even aware of. Moreover, the viewer may see different things in the work at different times.
@22grena
@22grena 8 лет назад
willie otoole o you are so wise dun na but an extreme saddo loyalist too
@cliffdariff74
@cliffdariff74 6 лет назад
Of course we are all surrounded by space, that's not a distinction here. What's distinct is the phsychological space the sculpture presses against. This space is not evident without the relationship of the viewer, because the space does not exist in absentia. It requires a bit of thoughtful reflection though, and is difficult to negate. Thus whether one 'likes it or not' isn't really a point of criticism, but rather of taste ☺️0
@gattbe5611
@gattbe5611 6 лет назад
a bunch of castings gone wrong,and they say its now art..pure bullshit as fine art....sell for millions,,great business..i think this CALKUM GUY has been in therapy too long...have a nice dayy.
@billwatt3775
@billwatt3775 Год назад
But how do you really feel. Good rant!
@cliffdariff74
@cliffdariff74 Год назад
You're having a lousy day, we can tell.
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