Vivienne Binns Untitled 1966 gouache and felt pen on paper National Gallery of Australia, Canberra |
Vivienne Binns Untitled 1966 gouache and felt pen on paper National Gallery of Australia, Canberra |
Vivienne Binns Vag Dens 1967 acrylic and enamel on board National Gallery of Australia, Canberra |
Vivienne Binns Repro Vag Dens 1975-76 vitreous enamel on steel National Gallery of Australia, Canberra |
Duane Michals There Was Something Between Them (series, Homage to Cavafy) 1978 gelatin silver print National Gallery of Australia, Canberra |
Duane Michals The Son Came Home (series, Homage to Cavafy) 1978 gelatin silver print National Gallery of Australia, Canberra |
Duane Michals Two Friends Are Playing Cards (series, Homage to Cavafy) 1978 gelatin silver print National Gallery of Australia, Canberra |
Duane Michals When He Was A Young Man (series, Homage to Cavafy) 1978 gelatin silver print National Gallery of Australia, Canberra |
Kasimir Malevich Red Square on Black Ground ca. 1922 oil on canvas Museum Ludwig, Cologne |
Kasimir Malevich House under Construction ca. 1915-16 oil on canvas National Gallery of Australia, Canberra |
Kasimir Malevich A Game in Hell 1914 lithograph (book cover) National Gallery of Australia, Canberra |
Kasimir Malevich for Dulevo Manufactory (Soviet Union) Cup and Saucer ca. 1925-30 porcelain National Gallery of Australia, Canberra |
Walter Crane for Minton Hollins & Co. (Staffordshire) A Little Cock Sparrow sat on a High Tree ca. 1880 glazed ceramic tile National Gallery of Australia, Canberra |
Walter Crane for Minton Hollins & Co. (Staffordshire) Jack and Jill ca. 1880 glazed ceramic tile National Gallery of Australia, Canberra |
Walter Crane for Minton Hollins & Co. (Staffordshire) The North Wind Doth Blow ca. 1880 glazed ceramic tile National Gallery of Australia, Canberra |
Walter Crane for Minton Hollins & Co. (Staffordshire) Sur le Pont d'Avignon ca. 1880 glazed ceramic tile National Gallery of Australia, Canberra |
from For the Time Being
O where is that immortal and nameless Centre from which our points of
Definition and death are all equi-distant? Where
The well of our wish to wander, the everlasting fountain
Of the waters of joy that our sorrow uses for tears?
O where is the garden of Being that is only known in Existence
As the command to be never there, the sentence by which
Alephs of throbbing fact have been banished into position,
The clock that dismisses the moment into the turbine of time?
O would I could mourn over Fate like the others, the resolute creatures,
By seizing my chance to regret. The stone is content
With a formal anger and falls and falls; the plants are indignant
With one dimension only and can only doubt
Whether light or darkness lies in the worse direction; and the subtler
Exiles who try every path are satisfied
With proving that none have a goal: why must Man also acknowledge
It is not enough to bear witness, for even protest is wrong?
Earth is cooled and fire is quenched by his unique excitement,
All answers expire in the clench of his questioning hand,
His singular emphasis frustrates all possible order:
Alas, his genius is wholly for envy; alas,
The vegetative sadness of lakes, the locomotive beauty
Of choleric beasts of prey, are nearer than he
To the dreams that deprive him of sleep, the powers that compel him to idle,
To his amorous nymphs and his sanguine athletic gods.
How can his knowledge protect his desire for truth from illusion?
How can he wait without idols to worship, without
Their overwhelming persuasion that somewhere, over the high hill,
Under the roots of the oak, in the depths of the sea,
Is a womb or a tomb wherein he may halt to express some attainment?
How can he hope and not dream that his solitude
Shall disclose a vibrating flame at last and entrust him forever
With its magic secret of how to extemporise life?
– W.H. Auden (1941-42)