3

Since 2011, every day a dialogue, typed on whatever is at hand: a page from a book, an envelope, a receipt, a police report. Language creates image. I am not claiming anything new with that. With just a few words, you can see a complete scene before you. A dialogue is the perfect tool for those few words. A very short excerpt – two sentences – taken from a dialogue is enough to unfold an entire scene. The minutes before and after the cut you can easily fill in yourself; these are things you know, things you’ve heard on the street, in the shop, at work, at home, among friends. Remarks, arguments, boredom, jealousy. These are always the most everyday dialogues. Everyday dialogues are simple. We never use a word too many. People will not use ten words when five will do. We respond to a question with a question, that’s how we are. Scenes plucked from the street, the tram, the supermarket, the neighbors, the table. Recognizable. It doesn’t need to be a film or a painting to represent it vividly. It all lives in the mind. Here and now, not painted, not staged as a film scene, but typed, a few words. Since February 2011. Every day a small scene.

Gallery Item one
Gallery Title Here
Gallery Title Here
Gallery Title Here
Gallery Title Here
Gallery Title Here
Gallery Title Here
Gallery Title Here