‘I Look In The Mirror, I Know What I Need’ (2024) is a powerful new lithograph by William Kentridge, created with Idem in Paris. The print relates to the artist’s video series and exhibition, ‘Self-Portrait As A Coffee-Pot,’ on view in Venice until 24 November. The nine-episode series is also available to stream exclusively worldwide on MUBI.
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I Look In The Mirror, I Know What I Need
‘You can either do a self portrait in terms of doing a drawing that looks like a face, the proportion of the eyes, the mouth, the nose, or you can say cumulatively, the works you draw over a lifetime become another way of describing yourself. In which case it really doesn’t matter what it is that you’re drawing, whether it’s a tree, a face, a house, or a coffee-pot, in the end it reveals who you are. So, ‘Self-Portrait As A Coffee-Pot,’ could have been Self-Portrait as a rhinoceros, but it ended up as the coffee pot.’
William Kentridge, 2024
Over the past four decades, Kentridge has had a keen attention to printmaking as a part of his wider artistic practice. Since the early to mid-1970s, Kentridge has made thousands of prints and holds a deep understanding of the different processes, working in intaglio, etching, lithography, woodcut, aquatint, drypoint and photogravure—and variations of each of these. He pushes these traditional printmaking techniques to new areas, advancing his own language of drawing and image making within the medium, while treating the processes without a hierarchy within printmaking or other forms of artistic expression.
At times humorous, philosophical, mythical, personal, and meditative, ‘Self-Portrait as a Coffee-Pot’ is a moving tour-de-force that reveals the inner workings of Kentridge’s mind and his processes of creation. Themes, images, and even artworks themselves appear and reappear throughout the nine episodes, uniting the episodes in one collective self portrait of the artist.
The present work is a large stone lithograph produced in collaboration with Idem in Paris. This historic workshop is a continuation of workshops began in the 1880s in Paris, where lithography has been an important process since it came into regular use. William has been working with Idem Paris for 20 years, and they have produced 15 lithographs together in total.
For his exhibition at Arsenale Institute for Politics of Representation in Venice, Kentridge collaborates with curator Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev, friend and author of the foundational monograph on his work published in 1998, to premiere his intriguing new nine-episode video series, ‘Self-Portrait as a Coffee-Pot.’
William Kentridge’s extraordinary, expansive nine-episode film series ‘Self-Portrait As A Coffee-Pot’ is now available to watch worldwide exclusively on the global film distributor and streaming service MUBI, following special previews at Toronto International Film Festival and BFI London Film Festival and its presentation at the Arsenale Institute for Politics of Representation, curated by Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev, during the Venice Biennale of Art 2024.
William Kentridge is internationally acclaimed for his artworks, theater and opera productions. His method combines drawing and erasing, tearing, gestural painting, collage, weaving, casting, writing, film, performance, music, theater and collaborative practices to create works of art that are grounded in politics, science, literature and history, yet maintain a space for contradiction and uncertainty.