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1 - The Image of Thought

from Third Variation: Multiplicities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2012

Jean-Clet Martin
Affiliation:
Independent
Constantin Boundas
Affiliation:
Trent University Canada Emeritus
Susan Dyrkton
Affiliation:
Independent
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Summary

Rembrandt, Philosopher in Meditation, Amsterdam, 1631. Emerging from a pitch-black wall, a half-open window admits the diffusion of an uncertain glow. We can see nothing beyond the window. And yet, coming from it there is plenty of light, ample incandescence, illumination, a whole world of fires and glowing embers – a diaphanous and yet impenetrable burst of universal light reflected on a white façade. Here, in the hollow of this artificial opening, the eye witnesses something brilliant, each particle of which explodes in the vicinity of all the others. In the centre of the room, a flight of stairs unfurls its shell-like helix in silence. Positioned between the intangible light and the spiral staircase that carves out the space of the ascending steps, the philosopher composes himself – folded hands resting on legs covered by his dimly lit coat. We do not know whether this person is dozing or lost in thought. Could he, perhaps, be contentedly fixated on the wrinkled lines leading from one hand to the other over his interlaced fingers? Or, perhaps, with unfocused eyes, he is absorbed by any point whatever on the intersecting slabs of the floor. At any rate, the angle of his head reflects a redistribution of shade and light upon his face that exactly mirrors those chiaroscuro areas that shape the curve of the staircase. From bottom to top, towards the vaulted summit of this peaceful room, a crack contorts the visible space. Its S-shape arabesque unfolds as it exhausts the entire spectrum of light that diagonally expands.

Type
Chapter
Information
Variations
The Philosophy of Gilles Deleuze
, pp. 121 - 145
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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