Anima Animus
Anima Animus
Anima Animus
By Dr Jeni Williams
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ANIMA/ANIMUS
By Dr Jeni Williams
market place, it is a means by which it may address a different public and in so doing
rediscover an older place of interchange.
When the enlightenment turned its back on religious art, it invented the public space
where the riches of a culture might be freely shared: the newspaper that informed its
readers of events in the world, the cafe as a place to share and discuss, the library where
great books could be read by all, the museum and of course, the art gallery. Today, with
the enlightenment in dust around us, education is translated into ‘training’ for jobs that
don’t exist, art into commodity within the religion of capitalism, the policed spaces of the
shopping mall as the new Cathedral. In the age of the internet with its relentless pressure
to trivialise and dissipate attention, the newspaper becomes salacious entertainment,
reinforcing fear and prejudice to keep its readers hooked through emotion rather than
reason. Libraries, museums and art galleries are closing - not because they are not
attended but because the public space is being squeezed out of existence. There is the cult
of privatisation - a mantra that suggests that all that is public is bad, that all that is private
is efficient and good even when we've seen the profit motif generate no more sense of
responsibility than those other favoured crusaders looting and pillaging for their own
enrichment.
The contemporary artist risks belatedness, relegation to entertainment or decoration,
unless he or she discovers a place from which to make an art that stands outside time. In
Anima/ Animus WE have created a work that incorporates self and other through
foregrounding doubleness, rather than the commodification to which the postmodern self
seems reduced. Repurposing the sacred space of the Cathedral does not lead to its
desacralisation but to a rediscovery of a transformational space in which art, time, and
self can be seen differently.
In Anima/Animus, WE’s quest for a place and art of serious transformation seems
fulfilled.
1 Rebecca Solnit, A Field Guide to Getting Lost, (London: Canongate, 2006), p.5
2 Ibid
3 N. Bourriard, Relational Aesthetics (Les Presses du Reel, 2002), p 15
4 Kate Davey, ‘Kye Wilson: Self-Perception and Site Specific Art’ (unpublished). Available online:
http://www.kyewilson.co.uk/docs/Kye%20Wilson%20Self-Perception%20and%20Site-
Specific%20Art%20By%20Kate%20Davey.pdf
5 Available as video: http://helenaeflerova.com/happydays.html
6 Available as video: http://helenaeflerova.com/trimester.html
7 10 days Creative Collisions 2013; interview with Kye Wilson https://vimeo.com/73250265
8 Ibid
9 Jonathan Harris Byzantium and the Crusades, (London: Bloomsbury, 2006); chapters 8, 9 for the Fourth
Crusade; see also M. Angold, The Fourth Crusade: Event and Context (London: Longman, 2004)