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Created: May 31, 2008
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What Is Non-Affirmative Painting All About?

Much of our information comes in today's world from sound bites. Bits of information that we can assimilate in a few minutes, in between the advertisements that earn profit for the news.

Backup of Michel Foucault. This is Not a Pipe (1968)
By Michel Foucault
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Highlights and commentary by jeanne.

6. Non-affirmative Painting.*

Magritte pipe This is a surrealist plumber>

Separation between linguistic signs and plastic elements; equivalence of resemblance and affirmation. These two principles constituted the tension in classical painting, because the second reintroduced discourse (affirmation exists only where there is speech) into an art from which the linguistic element was rigorously excluded. Hence the fact that classical painting spoke – and spoke constantly – while constituting itself entirely outside language; hence the fact that it rested silently in a discursive space; hence the fact that it provided, beneath itself, a kind of common ground where it could restore the bonds of signs and the image. Magritte knits verbal signs and plastic elements together, but without referring them to a prior isotopism. He skirts the base of affirmative discourse on which resemblance calmly reposes, and he brings pure similitudes and nonaffirmative verbal statements into play within the instability of a disoriented volume and an unmapped space. A process whose formulation is in some sense given by Ceci n’est pas une pipe.

  1. To employ a calligram where are found, simultaneously present and visible, image, text, resemblance, affirmation and their common ground.

  2. Then suddenly to open up, so that the calligram immediately decomposes and disappears, leaving as a trace only its own absence.

  3. To allow discourse to collapse of its own weight and to acquire the visible shape of letters. Letters which, insofar as they are drawn, enter into an uncertain, indefinite relation, confused with the drawing itself – but minus any area to serve as a common ground.

  4. To allow similitudes, on the other to multiply of themselves, to be born from their own vapour and to rise endlessly into an ether where they refer to nothing more than themselves.

  5. To verify clearly, at the end of the operation, that the precipitate has changed colour, that it has gone from black to white, that the “This is a pipe” silently hidden in the mimetic representation has become the “This is not a pipe” of circulating similitudes.

A day will come when, by means of similitude relayed indefinitely along the length of a series, the image itself, along with the name it bears, will lose its identity. Campbell, Campbell, Campbell. [1]

Warhol's image of Campbell Soup cans, taken from http://foucault.info/documents/foucault.thisIsNotaPipe.en.html, Warhol's image of Campbell Soup cans, taken from http://foucault.info/documents/foucault.thisIsNotaPipe.en.html, Warhol's image of Campbell Soup cans, taken from http://foucault.info/documents/foucault.thisIsNotaPipe.en.html, Warhol's image of Campbell Soup cans, taken from http://foucault.info/documents/foucault.thisIsNotaPipe.en.html,


[Footnotes:]

* Translator’s note: the original title of this chapter is “peindre n’est pas affirmer” literally, “To Paint is Not to Affirm”.

[1] Foucault’s reference is not to Magritte but to Andy Warhol, whose various series of soup cans, celebrity portraits and so on Foucault apparently sees as undermining any sense of the unique, indivisible identity of their “models.” See Foucault’s comments on Warhol in the important essay “Theatricum Philosophicum” reprinted in Language, Counter Memory, Practice (Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 1977).

Discussion Questions

  1. How does this article of Foucault's relate to context?

    Consider that the image of a pipe, entitled "This is not a pipe," right on the painting itself, confounds reason. That is because we have taken the image of a pipe to be a pipe. In order to understand this we must take into account the context of an artist who saying that the painting of a pipe is not the same thing as the actual pipe. jeanne

  2. So what does the painting mean?

    Consider that an icon gains its meaning from the context in which it occurs. Flowers, simply picked, will always remind some of us of the hippies of the sixties. Flowers, simply picked, will have a different meaning for those of a different cohort who grew up in a very different context after the Vietnam War,

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