Laura Kerr


An apparition is a dead poem which is believed to appear or 
become manifest to the living, typically as a nebulous image. 2020.

Unlike the works I've shared so far, this week's beguiling and haunting visual poem by Laura Kerr features an image-based strategy containing no text. Her piece (and the accompanying title/epigram) describes a poem as an ambiguous construct that appears in shape-shifting form. The elusive visual syntax of the image, unstable, surreal and contingent both intrigues and unsettles the reader/viewer. Featuring no entry or exit points it is a challenging and uncanny space in which mystery and alternate universes might abound. Like a hall of mirrors that is simultaneously (and strangely) full and empty, it feels like an empty space waiting for a story to arrive.

The framed image of a bedroom within a bedroom (within yet another bedroom > ) is patrolled by a floating dot (masquerading as a period?) that traces its elongated rectangular path through both bedroom spaces and near a translucently emanating cadmium yellow orb. Smoothly morphing in shape and size it courses through the infinitely framed pastel bedroom and across its ghostly doppelganger over and over. Everything is undone, then re-done ad infinitum and like the dot/period the space is in a nebulous and constant state of becoming.

"I would repeat my trust in the contingent, the inauthentic, the whim, the practical, as strategies for finding meaning."
William Kentridge. Interview, 2001.

If you'd like to view the animation in full-browser size please click HERE. You can also check Laura's Twitter feed out to see more examples of her work.

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