2020年11月9日 星期一

Richard Hamilton's Ulysses Illustrations

  transmogrification.Richard Hamilton's Ulysses Illustrations

Richard William Hamilton CH (24 February 1922 – 13 September 2011) was an English painter and collage artist. 

From the late 1940s Richard Hamilton was engaged with a project to produce a suite of illustrations for James Joyce's Ulysses.[citation needed] In 2002, the British Museum staged an exhibition of Hamilton's illustrations of James Joyce's Ulysses, entitled Imaging Ulysses. A book of Hamilton's illustrations was published simultaneously, with text by Stephen Coppel. In the book, Hamilton explained that the idea of illustrating this complex, experimental novel occurred to him when he was doing his National Service in 1947.[citation needed] His first preliminary sketches were made while at the Slade School of Art, and he continued to refine and re-work the images over the next 50 years. Hamilton felt his re-working of the illustrations in many different media had produced a visual effect analogous to Joyce's verbal techniques. The Ulysses illustrations were subsequently exhibited at the Irish Museum of Modern Art (in Dublin) and the Museum Boijmans van Beuningen (in Rotterdam). The British Museum exhibition coincided with both the 80th anniversary of the publication of Joyce's novel, and Richard Hamilton's 80th birthday.


Pop Modern: Richard Hamilton's Ulysses Illustrations

Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content: Richard Hamilton Exhibition in London, © Rune Hellestad/Corbis View full resolution In 1947, while doing National Service with the Royal Engineers, the future founding father of Pop Art, Richard Hamilton, read a two-volume paperback of James Joyce’s Ulysses published by Odyssey Press. “I had heard it was a book that only six people in the world had managed to read. But I thought it was wonderful—it was funny, the language was magical.” Hamilton became an abiding Joyce fan and recalled that the novel liberated him, allowing him to see how to paint without self-conscious gesture and use parody and pastiche while mixing styles. He was also struck by Joyce’s facility with language—his ability to borrow styles and tones of voice from everywhere. Bronze by gold II, 1985–1987, soft-ground, lift ground aquatint, engraving, scraper and burnisher, © R. Hamilton, DACS and ARS 2013 View full resolution Representing Ulysses in a different medium became a lifelong project. He found the novel wildly vivid but strangely nonvisual, which captured his imagination even more. While Leopold Bloom, the book’s central figure, is never physically described, there is plenty to characterize his mental state. Hamilton had an intuitive sense of what Bloom looked like: a thickly built, balding man with a world-weary air. Other scenes and characters—two coquettish barmaids, Bloom lying in the bathtub and Leopold and Molly dreaming in their brass bed—were equally vivid in his mind’s eye. He simply had to translate the images to the blank canvas. The transmogrification of Bloom, 1984–1985, soft-ground etching and aquatint, © R. Hamilton, DACS and ARS 2013 View full resolution While a student at Slade School of Art, he began to work rigorously on the series, eventually taking the sketches to T. S. Eliot at Faber and Faber. The poet-turned-editor was discouraging. He told young Hamilton that the project would be too expensive and that no publisher would be interested in the work of an unknown student. Hamilton kept working on his illustrations but never showed them to another publisher. Often frustrated, he stopped and restarted the project a number of times over a nearly sixty-year period. In 2002, Hamilton’s labor of love was ready for public showing. Imaging Ulysses: Richard Hamilton’s Illustrations to James Joyce opened at the British Museum in February for a double eightieth anniversary: of the publication of the novel and of Hamilton’s birthday. Viewers were delighted by his seriocomic approach to a novel that since its first serialized publication in 1918 has become iconic. Bronze by gold II depicts two flirty barmaids of Ormond Bar, Joyce’s sirens of seduction from chapter 11. Flame-haired Miss Lydia Douce and blond Miss Mina Kennedy with their bedroom eyes seductively handle the beer pulls. He foresaw his pale body renders Bloom lying in the bath from chapter 5: “He foresaw his pale body reclined in it at full, naked, in a womb of warmth, oiled by scented melting soap, softly laved.” The transmogrification of Bloom, with its crowded, packed forms that free-float and overlap, plays with the transmutability of character as Hamilton captures Bloom in a number of impersonations and guises. In The heaven tree of stars, Molly and Leopold slumber sweetly in their bed with the jangling knob while constellations float above their heads. Hamilton, who died in 2011, had a long and illustrious career. His 1956 time-capsule collage titled Just what is it that makes today’s homes so different, so appealing? is considered by some critics and historians to be the first work of Pop Art. He came to be known as much for his prints as his paintings and as much for conceptual art as for Pop. His series Swingeing London 67, based on the arrest of his art dealer Robert Fraser and Mick Jagger for drug possession, captures the spirit of the times. His association with the pop-music scene continued when he designed the cover of the Beatles’ White Album in 1968. He had also been a tutor of Bryan Ferry and Nick de Ville while teaching in Newcastle, and his influence became evident in the...


transmogrification
   often humorous
UK 
 
/ˌtrænz.mɒɡ.rɪ.fɪˈkeɪ.ʃən/
 US 
 
/trænˌsmɑː.ɡrə.fəˈkeɪ.ʃən/
the act or process of changing or being changed completely:
We are witnessing one of those bizarre transmogrifications that can happen in politics.
This was less a fashion makeover and more a transmogrification.

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