Benjamin and excavation

I suspect you are all a bit quoted out, but this is Walter as only Walter can.

Language shows clearly that memory is not an instrument for exploring the past but its theater. It is the medium of past experience, as the ground is the medium in which dead cities lie interred. He who seeks to approach his own buried past must conduct himself like a man digging. This confers the tone and bearing of genuine reminiscences. He must not be afraid to return again and again to the same matter; to scatter it as one scatters earth, to turn it over as one turns over soil. For the matter itself is only deposit, a stratum, which yields only to the most meticulous examination what constitutes the real treasure hidden within the earth: the images, severed from all earlier associations, that stand – like precious fragments or torsos in a collector’s gallery – in the prosaic rooms of our later understanding. True – for successful excavations a plan is needed. Yet no less indispensable is the cautious probing of the spade in the dark loam, and it is to cheat oneself of the richest prize to preserve as a record merely the inventory of one’s discoveries, and not this dark joy of the place of the finding itself. Fruitless searching is as much a part of this as succeeding, and consequently remembrance must not proceed in the manner of a narrative or still less that of a report, but must, in the strictest epic and rhapsodic manner, assay its spade in ever-new places, and in the old ones delve to ever-deeper layers.

Berlin Chronicles in Benjamin, W. 1978, Reflections: Essays, Aphorisms, Autobiographical Writings, Edited and with an Introduction by Peter Demetz, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Inc. New York, pp.25-26.

Courtesy of Bagryana Popov.

seeking the openings

Maxine Green says that art can’t change things, but it can change people, who can change things. She talks of the imagination as the place where the possible can happen; a place of ‘resisting fixities, seeking the openings,’ where ‘we relish incompleteness, because that signifies that something still lies ahead” (2003, p. 22-23).

— Graeme Sullivan, Art Practice as Research (2005, p. 115)

slience

Inside it he inscribed a few lines of poetry, portraying us as the gypsy and the fool, one creating silence; one listening closely to the silence. In the changing swirl of our lives, these roles would reverse many times.

— Patti Smith Just Kids p.53

Also:

We needed time to figure out what all of this meant, how we were going to come to terms and redefine what our love was called. I learned from him that often contradiction is the clearest way to the truth.

p.200