The exhibition—loosely organized according to themes that appear in Kentridge’s work— includes a quantity of animated shorts (or, as Kentridge dubs them, “drawings for projection”), along with some of the original drawings that were used to make them. There’s also a room full of his set designs for a 2005 production of “The Magic Flute,” plus drawings associated with his latest opera production, “The Nose,” which opens at the Met this Friday. One of the most delightful segments of the show is a collection of films that play with the notion of showing the artist in the act of creation. In one, a blank sheet of paper is the setting, and Kentridge’s moving hands are the only players. They place a coffee cup on the paper, and chase a saucer as it suddenly gains stop-motion life and skitters away; then they pour coffee over the blank page, creating impossibly elegant swirls and plumes.
William Kentridge
Drawing for the film WEIGHING . . . and WANTING [Soho with Head on Rock]. 1997
Charcoal, pastel, and gouache on paper, 48 1/2 x 63” (123.2 x 160 cm)
Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego
That’s because Kentridge’s work is, at its core, deeply human. This is true of his subject matter, which, for many years, delved into the ethical and philosophic toll of apartheid. But it’s also true of his practice. Kentridge draws the images for most of his films using charcoal; he adds to and erases his drawings and films each alteration, often working without a script or storyboard. This laborious stop-motion process makes viewers constantly aware of the artist’s hand at work, but it never takes away from the flow of skillfully rendered images arranged and framed by an expert cinematic eye. When a puff of smoke turns into a bell that Eckstein rings to summon his morning coffee, it feels like a perfectly executed magic trick: We see the magician working, but we also believe the seamless effect he’s produced. While mainstream animation glories in the (often stunning) effects made possible by software, Kentridge shows how much power lies in that suspension of disbelief, and in the hand’s mark on the page. This exhibition presents a rare opportunity to experience his achievement, and to celebrate it.

William Kentridge
Drawing for the film Sobriety, Obesity & Growing Old [Soho and Mrs. Eckstein in Pool]. 1991
Charcoal and pastel on paper, 47 1/4 x 59” (120 x 150 cm)
Collection of the artist
© 2010 William Kentridge. Photo: John Hodgkiss, courtesy the artist

Still from Invisible Mending from 7 Fragments for Georges Méliès. 2003
35mm and 16mm animated film transferred to video, 1:20 min
The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Gift of Kathy and Richard S. Fuld, Jr., Agnes Gund and Daniel Shapiro, Marie-Josée and Henry Kravis, and David Rockefeller in honor of Peter Haas
© 2010 William Kentridge. Photo: John Hodgkiss, courtesy the artist
Nose 13 from Nose. 2008.
One aquatint, drypoint, and engraving from a series of thirty prints, plate: 5 13/16 x 7 13/16″ (14.7 x 19.8 cm), sheet: 13 3/4 x 15 3/4″ (35 x 40 cm).
The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Patricia P. Irgens Larsen Foundation Fund.








For the true origination, source, and aetiology of Kentridge’s forthcoming direction of Shostakovich “The Nose” at Met Opera NYC 2010, (among much other work), see Jennifer Arlene Stone “Freud Futures” on “Kentridge” App on iTunes
http://itunes.com/apps/kentridge
Paperbacks on amazon
http://javari.com
Cybereditor
javari.com
New York NY
http://twitter.com/javari140
For the true origination, source, and aetiology of Kentridge’s forthcoming direction of Shostakovich “The Nose” at Met Opera NYC 2010, (among much other work), see Jennifer Arlene Stone “Freud Futures” on “Kentridge” App on iTunes
http://itunes.com/apps/kentridge
Paperbacks on amazon
http://javari.com
Cybereditor
javari.com
New York NY
http://twitter.com/javari140
For the true origination, source, and aetiology of Kentridge’s forthcoming direction of Shostakovich “The Nose” at Met Opera NYC 2010, (among much other work), see Jennifer Arlene Stone “Freud Futures” on “Kentridge” App on iTunes
http://itunes.com/apps/kentridge
Paperbacks on amazon
http://javari.com
Cybereditor
javari.com
New York NY
http://twitter.com/javari140