Stark_BicornateBicornous-ThatwhichisBelowcorrespondstothatwhichisAboveandthatwhichisAbovecorrespondstothatwhichisBelowtoaccomplishthemiracleoftheOneThing
Frances StarkBicornate Bicornous (That which is Below corresponds to that which is Above, and that which is Above corresponds to that which is Below, to accomplish the miracle of the One Thing), 2013.
Photo : courtesy of the artist and Galerie Buchholz, Berlin/Cologne/New York

The Sketch in the Work of Frances Stark, Jacolby Satterwhite, and Sue Tompkins

Emily Rosamond
What are the temporalities of sketching, and what happens to the immediacy of the sketch in a highly mediated context? What happens, in other words, when the temporality of the sketch becomes engulfed in the complex temporalities of other media, in which the quickness and immediacy of the sketch have not been directly presented to audiences but, rather, have been indirectly represented using other media? What happens when the fetish of immediacy — the fabled closeness of the sketch to thought — becomes frozen, even reified, with the help of film, animation, photographs, art markets, audiences, and performers?

Here, I’d like to briefly consider how three contemporary artists — Frances Stark, Jacolby Satterwhite, and Sue Tompkins — rethink the temporal logic of the sketch, both accelerating and decelerating its imagined speed by extending it into photography, animation, and performance.

This content is available with a Digital or Premium subscription only. Subscribe to read the full text and access all our Features, Off-Features, Portfolios, and Columns!

Subscribe (starting at $20)

Already have a Digital or Premium subscription?

Log in

Don’t want to subscribe? Additional content is available with an Esse account. It’s free and no purchase will ever be required. Create an account or log in:

My Account

This article also appears in the issue 93 - Sketch
Discover

Suggested Reading