Lady Lazurus: viver da morte, morrer da vida. Da poesia de Sylvia Plath e das imagens de Janieta Eyre

This paper explores the relationship between the poem “Lady Lazarus” by Sylvia Plath, on the one hand, and two photographs of Janieta Eyre, on the other hand, which are part of the exhibition Lady Lazarus, presented at the Diane Farris Gallery in 2001. Both artistic processes are intrinsically linke...

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Main Author: Ana Barroso
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de Los Andes 2018-01-01
Series:Hart
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.uniandes.edu.co/doi/full/10.25025/hart02.2018.05
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spelling doaj-e98140165343411791f82476123309ab2020-11-25T02:56:38ZengUniversidad de Los AndesHart2539-22632590-91262018-01-0129310510.25025/hart02.2018.05Lady Lazurus: viver da morte, morrer da vida. Da poesia de Sylvia Plath e das imagens de Janieta EyreAna Barroso0Faculdade de Letras da Universidade de LisboaThis paper explores the relationship between the poem “Lady Lazarus” by Sylvia Plath, on the one hand, and two photographs of Janieta Eyre, on the other hand, which are part of the exhibition Lady Lazarus, presented at the Diane Farris Gallery in 2001. Both artistic processes are intrinsically linked to the experience of death, conditioning their work by the intensity that this experience spurs in the construction/deconstruction of the Self, engaging the reader/spectator in the experience of death, not merely as a necessary and final stage of life, but as a revelation of an emotional, creative, and liberating inner energy. Thus, death also becomes a staging experience, a celebration of art over the mortal physical condition, surpassing real space and time: the artist looses herself from her personality imprisoned in physical and moral constrictions, dies of inner energy, multiple and excessive, to reborn into some aesthetic immortality, and to create a powerful and fantastic imagery capable of expanding the artist and her work to eternity.https://revistas.uniandes.edu.co/doi/full/10.25025/hart02.2018.05Sylvia PlathJanieta Eyredeathexperience of deathsubjectivity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ana Barroso
spellingShingle Ana Barroso
Lady Lazurus: viver da morte, morrer da vida. Da poesia de Sylvia Plath e das imagens de Janieta Eyre
Hart
Sylvia Plath
Janieta Eyre
death
experience of death
subjectivity
author_facet Ana Barroso
author_sort Ana Barroso
title Lady Lazurus: viver da morte, morrer da vida. Da poesia de Sylvia Plath e das imagens de Janieta Eyre
title_short Lady Lazurus: viver da morte, morrer da vida. Da poesia de Sylvia Plath e das imagens de Janieta Eyre
title_full Lady Lazurus: viver da morte, morrer da vida. Da poesia de Sylvia Plath e das imagens de Janieta Eyre
title_fullStr Lady Lazurus: viver da morte, morrer da vida. Da poesia de Sylvia Plath e das imagens de Janieta Eyre
title_full_unstemmed Lady Lazurus: viver da morte, morrer da vida. Da poesia de Sylvia Plath e das imagens de Janieta Eyre
title_sort lady lazurus: viver da morte, morrer da vida. da poesia de sylvia plath e das imagens de janieta eyre
publisher Universidad de Los Andes
series Hart
issn 2539-2263
2590-9126
publishDate 2018-01-01
description This paper explores the relationship between the poem “Lady Lazarus” by Sylvia Plath, on the one hand, and two photographs of Janieta Eyre, on the other hand, which are part of the exhibition Lady Lazarus, presented at the Diane Farris Gallery in 2001. Both artistic processes are intrinsically linked to the experience of death, conditioning their work by the intensity that this experience spurs in the construction/deconstruction of the Self, engaging the reader/spectator in the experience of death, not merely as a necessary and final stage of life, but as a revelation of an emotional, creative, and liberating inner energy. Thus, death also becomes a staging experience, a celebration of art over the mortal physical condition, surpassing real space and time: the artist looses herself from her personality imprisoned in physical and moral constrictions, dies of inner energy, multiple and excessive, to reborn into some aesthetic immortality, and to create a powerful and fantastic imagery capable of expanding the artist and her work to eternity.
topic Sylvia Plath
Janieta Eyre
death
experience of death
subjectivity
url https://revistas.uniandes.edu.co/doi/full/10.25025/hart02.2018.05
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