Sayings and meditations of Lily Pute.
LOUIS-COMBET Claude, SENECA Roland (ill.).

Sayings and meditations of Lily Pute.

Fata Morgana
Regular price €14,00 €0,00 Unit price per
N° d'inventaire 23689
Format 14 x 22
Détails 55 p., paperback.
Publication Saint-Clement-de-Rivière, 2016
Etat Nine
ISBN 9782851949523

"The figure of Lily Pute, a mad virgin, lilial and libidinal, in love with herself and subject to the desire of others, was probably slumbering, like a precipitate of old concupiscences, in some recess of my subconscious, when, in 1983, Roland Sénéca sent me five or six untitled engravings intended to provoke spasms of imagination through a grapho-poetic correspondence. The perception of forms which, in themselves, carried no other intention than that of being there, immediately and joyfully put me in a state of dialogue. Thus were formed four albums of drawings. For the writer, a long-term prose writer, this brief poetic breakthrough in tune with the rhythm of a few powerful images, was one of those happy moments of attentive distraction which, with the air of frolicking, never stray far from the center, but on the contrary touch it very closely." Claude Louis-Combet.

"The figure of Lily Pute, a mad virgin, lilial and libidinal, in love with herself and subject to the desire of others, was probably slumbering, like a precipitate of old concupiscences, in some recess of my subconscious, when, in 1983, Roland Sénéca sent me five or six untitled engravings intended to provoke spasms of imagination through a grapho-poetic correspondence. The perception of forms which, in themselves, carried no other intention than that of being there, immediately and joyfully put me in a state of dialogue. Thus were formed four albums of drawings. For the writer, a long-term prose writer, this brief poetic breakthrough in tune with the rhythm of a few powerful images, was one of those happy moments of attentive distraction which, with the air of frolicking, never stray far from the center, but on the contrary touch it very closely." Claude Louis-Combet.