Hilary Mantel 💗💗💗💗 loves motorways

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Hilary Mantel 💗💗💗💗 loves motorways

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COLETTE: Alison, you ought to go to the police. ALISON: It's years— COLETTE: But some of these men could still be at large! ALISON: It all gets mixed up in my mind. What happened. How old I was. Whether things happened once or whether they just went on happening - so they all rolled into one, you know. COLETTE: So did you never tell anybody? Here. Blow your nose. ALISON: No... You see, you don't tell anybody because there's nobody to tell. You try and write it down, you write 'My Diary', but you get your legs slapped. Honestly… it doesn't matter now, I don't think about it, it's only once in a while I think about it. I might have dreamed it, I used to dream I was flying. You see, you wipe out in the day what happens in the night. You have to. It's not as if it changed my life. I mean, I've never gone in for sex much. Look at me, who'd want me, it'd need an army. So it's not as if I feel... it's not as if I remember...
— HILARY MANTEL, Beyond Black
Pierre Soulages (24 December 1919 – 26 October 2022)
Pierre Soulages is considered a major figure of post-war European abstraction, alongside Hans Hartung, George Mathieu, Serge Poliakoff and Jean-Paul Riopelle.
He’s particularly renowned for his “outrenoir” (“beyond black”) series of paintings, which feature matte and glossy black fields interrupted by ridges, scores, and gashes; the artist is interested in how black paint absorbs and reflects light.
Since making his gallery debut in 1947, Soulages has exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art, The Louvre and the State Hermitage Museum (he was the first living artist to show at the institution), and his work has been acquired for the collections of the Centre Pompidou, The Guggenheim, Tate Modern, and the National Gallery of Art in Washington.
Applying the paint in thick layers, Soulages' painting technique includes using objects such as spoons, tiny rakes and bits of rubber to work away at the painting, often making scraping, digging or etching movements depending on whether he wants to evoke a smooth or rough surface. The texture that is then produced either absorbs or rejects light, breaking up the surface of the painting by disrupting the uniformity of the black.
LITHOGRAPHIE N° 33. Lithograph printed in shades of blue, 1974, signed in pencil and numbered 11/95, on Arches wove paper, framed. Image: 523 by 458 mm 20½ by 18 in. Sheet: 744 by 558 mm 29¼ by 22 in. Courtesy: Sotheby’s
At some point on your road you have to turn and start walking back towards yourself. Or the past will pursue you, and bite the nape of your neck, leave you bleeding in the ditch. Better to turn and face it with such weapons as you possess.
Hilary Mantel, Beyond Black
Pierre Soulages (24 December 1919 – 26 October 2022)
Pierre Soulages is considered a major figure of post-war European abstraction, alongside Hans Hartung, George Mathieu, Serge Poliakoff and Jean-Paul Riopelle.
He’s particularly renowned for his “outrenoir” (“beyond black”) series of paintings, which feature matte and glossy black fields interrupted by ridges, scores, and gashes; the artist is interested in how black paint absorbs and reflects light.
Since making his gallery debut in 1947, Soulages has exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art, The Louvre and the State Hermitage Museum (he was the first living artist to show at the institution), and his work has been acquired for the collections of the Centre Pompidou, The Guggenheim, Tate Modern, and the National Gallery of Art in Washington.
Preferring to suspend the paintings like walls, he uses wires to hang them in the middle of the room, "I always liked paintings to be walls rather than windows. When we see a painting on a wall, it's a window, so I often put my paintings in the middle of the space to make a wall. A window looks outside, but a painting should do the opposite—it should look inside of us"
Untitled, 1977, Vinyl paint on cardboard, 42 9/10 × 28 7/10 in | 109 × 73 cm.

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“My instrument is not black but the light reflected from the black,”
"Mon instrument n'était plus le noir, mais cette lumière secrète venue du noir."
Pierre Soulages
One Cup of Beyond Black