Always.  Anything can look like something else; anything can be associated with 
anything else; anything can stand for something else.
wc



________________________________
From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Tue, January 15, 2013 4:19:43 PM
Subject: Re: Art is money

In a message dated 1/15/13 5:02:49 PM, [email protected] writes:


> On Jan 15, 2013, at 1:29 PM, [email protected] wrote:
>
> > KIT
> > -- But we're not in a kitchen right now --
> > BREN
> > -- No, we're on a battlefield --
>
> How appropriate, a Kit and a Bren on a battlefield. Did you choose those
> names
> for their associations to military life and warfare?
>
> I wonder if any of you visual artists can attest to experiencing anything
like this: I have a number of times found myself using a name or an image and
only later on discovering its unexpected aptness. As a young man I
scribbled for a long time at a novel I never finished. Early on, it came to me
several times to summon up the image of a volcano in some metaphoric way. Near
the end, my characters were on a plateau high in the Appenine mountains. That
night, the darkness is lit red as one character fires a shotgun down into
another guy's tent. (To my youthful imagination it seemed striking that indeed
he kills someone -- he discovers he has shot his own wife in her naked
back.)

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