Robert Morris Untitled 1965-72
Four mirror cubes
30 x 30 x 30 cms
1990
Four mirror plated cubes aged and tarnished to look weathered.
Exhibitions
- Negotiation of Purpose, Grenoble - Magasin, 2007
- Who What When Where How and Why - Newport Street Gallery, 2016
Essays
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Plato's Cave - Rachel Newsome
SHOW
Plato's Cave - Rachel Newsome
The allegory of Plato’s Cave, as told by the Greek philosopher in The Republic (approx 360 BC) goes right to the heart of human existence by seeking to answer the question: what is truth? The story of the philosopher-poet-king’s ascent from the ignorant pit of humanity to the sun, followed by his subsequent return to share the knowledge, it deals with ideas about consciousness, perception, perspective, representation and truth and has influenced thought in philosophy, psychology, art, sociology, science and education.
The story begins with a cave in which man is imprisoned. His neck and legs are chained in a way that he cannot move while he can only see what is before him. Behind the chained prisoners, a fire burns providing a degree of light with which they are able to see. On a shelf in the cave between the prisoners and the fire, a series of marionettes in the shape of animals and plants are moved by an unseen carrier. The shadows of the marionettes are cast by the fire onto the wall directly ahead of the prisoners in order to create a series of moving images in the manner of a primitive cinema.
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