Strauss & co - 7 March 2011, Cape Town

184 William Kentridge explains that Stereoscope asks “how to maintain a sense of both contradictory and complementary parallel parts of oneself. Since James Joyce, there has always been in modernist writing the notion of a stream of consciousness – floating connections rather than a programmed, clear progression. What I’m interested in,”he explains,“is a kind of multi- layered highway of consciousness, where one lane has one thought but driving up behind and overtaking it is a completely different thought”. i In light of such statements, it is futile to seek fixed meanings in Kentridge’s drawings. Columns of figures may allude to accounting but also perhaps to counting the costs while diagonal lines resembling the hands of a clock or a pair of knitting needles suggest the passing of time. Of the film for which this drawing was made, Lynne Cooke maintains that “although Kentridge had defined the terms of his aesthetic broadly by 1992, they seem nowhere more poignantly realized than in Stereoscope ”. ii Delve and Stroke resembles a film’s storyboard in which the artist has rapidly sketched ideas for drawings for animation. Water, a central 320 William Joseph Kentridge SOUTH AFRICAN 1955- Delve and Stroke signed and inscribed with the title mixed media on paper 50 by 65cm R180 000–240 000

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