Cursive is the third in a series of William Kentridge’s Lexicon bronzes, an accumulation of elemental symbols within his broader practice. This series of bronze sculptures, functions as a form...
Cursive is the third in a series of William Kentridge’s Lexicon bronzes, an accumulation of elemental symbols within his broader practice. This series of bronze sculptures, functions as a form of visual dictionary. The sculptures are symbols, ‘glyphs’, a repertoire of everyday objects or suggested words and icons, many of which have been used repeatedly acrossprevious projects. The glyphs can be arranged in order to construct sculptural sentences, and rearranged to deny meaning.
“The glyphs started as a collection of ink drawings and paper cut-outs, each on a single page from a dictionary. Previously I had taken a drawing or silhouette and given it just enough body to stand on its own feet - paper, added to cardboard, and put on a stand.With the glyphs I wanted a silhouette with the weight that the shape suggested.
A shape not just balancing in space, but filling space. Something to hold in your hand, withboth shape and heft.”