Tamas Dezsö

Pinus Sylvestris (Scots Pine)


2019

Pigment ink print

Signed, titled, dated and editioned verso

50 x 40 in. image and mount
Edition of 5 + 2 APs

60 x 48 in. image and mount
Edition of 5 + 2 APs

The works concerning the internal, microscopic structure, the “flesh” of trees were inspired by the last work of Maurice Merleau-Ponty. Here Merleau-Ponty goes beyond his earlier concept, which rejected the transcendental ego and placed the body in the focus of experience, and introduces the radical notion of “Flesh” (“la chair”). This collective flesh is simultaneously our own flesh and the flesh of the world. "Where are we to put the limit between the body and the world, since the world is flesh?" (MP, 1968, p.138) From here on, the perception at the centre of Merleau-Ponty’s postulation essentially involves the community between our body and the world – all perception is the direct result of the ancient connection with Being – as well as their fusing in each other. We can perceive matters because we are also organic parts of the world: flesh of flesh. The world perceives itself through us. Merleau-Ponty first returns transcendence to the body, then gives back the body to the world’s Flesh-texture.

The deep ecological interpretation of the concept of Flesh raises the entwined nature of all forms of living, the mutual dependence, the vulnerability of the ecological system as a whole, and the interwoven character and awareness of all human, animal and vegetal modes of living. As an effect of Flesh replacing the concept of “lived-body”, nature is no longer an irresponsive, numb set or decoration separated from the human being and observed from afar. “… that the things have us, and that it is not we who have the things… That it is being that speaks within us and not we who speak of being.” (MP, 1968, p.194)

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